On D-Day Anniversary, Google Memorializes… Tetris?

Posted on June 6, 2009

-By Warner Todd Huston

It was June 6, 1944 that the crucial Normandy Landings occurred that formed the spearhead of the Allied invasion of Nazi held Europe. D-Day ultimately led to the victory of the Allies over the despotic Nazi regime. Now here we are on June 6, 2009 and, in its inimitable way, Google has decided to memorialize the important occasion by adding an image on its homepage depicting… the computer game Tetris.

Yes, it’s far more important to Google to celebrate the anniversary of the invention of the video game Tetris than to memorialize D-Day. It just warms the heart, doesn’t it?

I have to say, though, that this is no departure for Google, a firm that finds it nearly impossible to post images celebrating any American holidays or important milestones in American history. So, what we have here is just one more example of Google’s essentially anti-American policies.

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» Filed Under Anti-Americanism, Delusional Dupes and DUmmies, Democrats, Europe, History, Holidays, Internet, Liberal World, News, Revisionism, liberalism


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2 Responses to “On D-Day Anniversary, Google Memorializes… Tetris?”

  1. stu caveney on June 6th, 2009 3:11 pm

    Agree 100% with your google-d day
    sentiment. As for stopping the A.C.L.U.,
    what did you think World War II and
    D day were all about?

    Editor’s note: stu, the ACLU and their agenda are still here and flourishing!

  2. C Clark on June 6th, 2009 3:12 pm

    Couldn’t agree more. Great blog.

    If it weren’t for the sacrifice of those thousands of Allied lives on that day, Google most likely wouldn’t even exist… or if it did, it would be called the German equivalent of “Google.”

    What do you expect from an Internet Search Engine that throws its full weight behind the global warming myth?

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