I wish to remember all who dies in the wars, not just the allies.None of his mates made it. He died about 5 years ago.He was not a bad man, just doing what he was told, or be shot.Discuss, if you wish.
You stole my idea!Yes, we should remember everyone...whether we were fighting with them, or against them. Everyone is the same in death. (Sorry to sound really morbid there!)G.W.K
Sorry for stealing your idea.He was 16 at the time of the photo.
What age was he when he was killed?(I gave you a positive, you can really talk sensibly at times. Usually when you are serious.)G.W.K
He was not killed.He was captured at Normandy.
This is a picture of my Uncle.I wish to remember all who died in the wars, not just the allies.None of his mates made it. He died about 5 years ago.
Sorry...never made that connection! G.W.K
Sometimes I think about it anyway, for longer.My parents still talk about the "blitz" and "doodle-bugs".
I do not wish to intrude in any unwarranted manner here.
but I have to say that I find the entire remembrance tradition thing utterly sickening
Quite how those three surviving British First World War veterans - Harry Patch, Henry Allingham
it must be quite a tribute to them that they can somehow come to terms with how a 9-decade legacy has yet to ensure the permanent cessation of a war-mongering activity whose continued recurrence is something of which we should surely all be thoroughly ashamed.
Maybe because you claim to be a scot?
It's remembering those who sacrificed themselves for those they loved. G.W.K
Quite how those three surviving British First World War veterans - Harry Patch, Henry Allingham and another younger one whose name escapes me right now and who has attained a mere 108 years - can face this legacy and continue to function from day to day I know not; it must be quite a tribute to them that they can somehow come to terms with how a 9-decade legacy has yet to ensure the permanent cessation of a war-mongering activity whose continued recurrence is something of which we should surely all be thoroughly ashamed.Best,Alistair
Well said, have a "brownie point", (not that it will show).And not lets forget the other team, who believed that they were doing the same.
As GWK said, it is a day to remember those who died, not a day for judgement, as the lessons will never be learnt.
True. You got a point for that.G.W.K
It's not there to go on about current wars and how we haven't stopped further wars or learnt any lessons...it's about remembering those who died so we could have the privilage to sit here and type this!It's remembering those who sacrificed themselves for those they loved. Those men and woman who (not just in WW1 but other wars) died protecting us. It isn't a day for us to judge or condemn people that are continuing wars.G.W.K
No - we need to address this in a more positive an constructive manner.Best,Alistair
You evidently misunderstand my meaning entirely. Why should we not at this time (or indeed any other) push under the carpet the fact that the lessons of World War One have yet to be learnt? You seem to think that what I have written on the subject might imply that I am somehow unsympathetic to the outcome of that war, yet the very fact of my concern that more than 900,000 British citizens alone died during that conflict as a direct consequence of their involvement in it should surely persuade you otherwise. I am not seeking to stand in judgement for or against anyone in particular here, but we can surely not just sit and remember those poor souls who suffered and died in that war (and their families who suffered the losses of their loved ones as a direct consequence of this) without considering what that experience - even though we have not gone through it ourselves - has done to people? No - we need to address this in a more positive an constructive manner and this, if anything, is what - in my humble opinion - the continued annual remembrances are for.
You are not supposed to applaud your own point.
Please do, oh, you already have
dropping names again.
You prat.We can not just forget it.
It sounds as if you do disagree with the rememberances. "address this in a more positive and constructive manner"...what, dance around singing songs whilst throwing confetti everywhere? It's national mourning!We cannot learn much now. We know war is wrong...some people fight because they are doing it for thier religion, some are forced, etc.G.W.K
I wasn't applauding...I was emphasising how important my point was. G.W.K
Well said, have a "brownie point", (not that it will show).And lets not forget the other team, who believed that they were doing the same.
I don't think they have come to terms with it and probably never will. They know that war solves nothing and that the following war was a direct consequence of the one they fought in.As GWK said, it is a day to remember those who died, not a day for judgement, as the lessons will never be learnt.Thal
I wish to remember all hundreds of thousands innocent Iraques, Afghanistan and people from many African countries who got killed and still get killed, and conveniently are forgotten by US media and goverment.And yes its abit of a statement but an important one.gyzzzmo
It sounds as if you do disagree with the rememberances. "address this in a more positive and constructive manner"...what, dance around singing songs whilst throwing confetti everywhere? It's national mourning!
Heaven forfend! Clearly I have expressed my thoughts most inadequately - or you and others have misread them fundamentally. This is indeed a most serious matter and what I mean by "addressing" the issues concerned "in a more constructive manner" is trying to learn from those events that are commemorated in services of remembrance so that present and future generations do not end up getting embroiled in similar conflicts and end up being remembered in similar ways decades hence, in some kind of constant self-perpetuating round of horror - no more, no less. Do I now makle myself clear? I hope so.Best,Alistair
We are not celebrating death. We are commemorating sacrifice.
In what way does commemorating the lives of millions of young people who died in horrible circumstances on both sides glorify the stupidity, myopia, and cowardice of their leaders?
World War II is proof that freedom and democracy are worth fighting for. We should commemorate the sacrifice of our grandparents in the defeat of global fascism. Those on the losing side have learned the lesson of supporting bankrupt ideologies.Show some respect.
I don't think that I have done otherwise, although at the same tiome I cannot help but note that even World War II has taught all too few people that this kind of international aggression does nothing but bring about human misery wherever it may manifest itself - and that this fact is in its own right all too ample a proof that the WWI experience had taught this lesson to insufficient numbers of people by 1939 and that those lessons have still to be learnt today...
I'm not sure if I have enough "Brownie Points" for this thread?EDIT: to give out.
Your heart wouldn't bleed so much if your mind was amenable to the actual lessons of history.
Human nature is unchanging throughout history.
r The President of the USA has a duty to serve the self interest of the American people. The president of Russia has a duty to serve the self interest of the Russian people. It is not sensible, and certainly not virtuous for the President of the United States to do what is in the interest of the Russian people, unless these interests happen to overlap. This is why the UN sits with its arms crossed whilst Rwandands and Congolese butcher eachother and why countries have to sometimes form alliances and sometimes take ideological and military stands against eachother.
It so happens that free and democratic nations tend to get along a lot better than unfree and undemocratic nations. These principles are worth fighting for and worth dying for given the right circumstances.
sorry...buthe was a NAZI ?
If you had a choice of becoming a Nazi or being shot, what would you do??Thal
Although we consider the Nazi's as enemies, they believed they were fighting for a good cause. They thought the same as us, just slightly differently.Thal made a good point, if they didn't become Nazi's then they (and probably their families) would be killed, whether they went to P.O.W. camps. If you had to make a choice between your life and those you love...I think you would probably choose to save yourself and your family. Wouldn't you?G.W.K
it's not the question ok ? most of nazis were nazy because they agreed with hitler !!!!! not because hitler told them "if u don't want to be a nazi, then i'll kill you" !!!sorry, if everyone thought like u...then the nazis would be still here. -_-'
I understand what you are trying to say.But, it's hard to imagine what you would do when put in that situation, especially if you were brought up to believe that it was correct, by your country.I don't think that you can condem a man for doing what he thinks is his duty.Many French people joined and/or helped the Nazi's.We were lucky too, to have the sea between us and mainland Europe.EDIT: Most of the people that you say were Nazi's were only wearing the uniform of their country.
your just mad because they f*cked your country up