Originally posted by P. G. Tipps
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The Remembrance Day thread
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostEveryone, yes - including those who deplore war in all its forms and wish overtly to take whatever stand they can against it on account of the massive human and economic waste to which it invariably and inevitably gives rise - or is my definition of "everyone" too - er - comprehensive for your convenience, PGT? - in other words, by "everyone", do you actually mean only "everyone who appens to share your own 'right-thinking' view"? (and you may interpret "right" here in whichever way you choose)...
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostWhat we are remembering or, better still, reflecting upon is the sacrifice that was made by the young men of earlier generations that we may enjoy the freedoms we do today. That is as valid now as it ever was. By the time of the Armistice in 1918 there could not have been a family untouched by the dreadful conflict (though my own seems to have been one such). We may also reflect upon the fact that our own generation has not been called upon to make such a sacrifice.
My own late parents lived through the Second World War and my father fought in it as a member of the Royal Air Force. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that their lives were for ever dominated by what happened in those years and by extension my own upbringing as well.
All of our lives have been touched in some way by the great conflicts of the 20th century. It is this that we need to remember along with the great sacrifice of previous generations.
The line between this remembrance and the 'glorification of war' has become increasingly blurred in recent years, especially with the rise of the 'heroes industry' and I am concerned about this as it detracts from what Remembrance Sunday should represent. The ceramic poppies at the Tower of London I find to be a sickly sentimentalising of the tragedy and the horrors of war.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostLooks like even ahinton can't explain what he posted, Flosshilde, so I await your revelation with no little interest!
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostI mean EVERYONE ... this is where dictionaries come in very handy but a complete waste of time suggesting such an obvious solution here, I think!
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWell, thank you for clarifying this. What then do you feel about the term including all those who would take an active stand against all war and be prepared to underwrite it by refusing to participate in any war? No "dictionaries" are needed in order to provide an honest answer here, methinks...
What makes you think otherwise?
Here is the authoritative Catholic stance, for example ...
So there you have both an honest and clearly accurate answer.
I can do little else!
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostNot "everyone" (see below) requires or is seeking such an explanation, PGT; Flosshilde, in noting the fact of your having been flummoxed, points out that others are not...
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostWell that's very true, and it's what constitutes a 'just war' or not. WWII would certainly come into the 'just war' category with most people, I suspect, though there will have have been some cruel and unjust things carried out by the Western Allies in the course of it ... the Dresden mass-bombing by the British and the the dropping of the atom-bomb on Japanese cities by the Americans might well come into that category? So it's unlikely that any war can be considered wholly just though the alternative of surrendering to the Axis Powers would have been unthinkable.
However I wasn't so much thinking of that but the fact that, for the dead and those they leave behind, it doesn't really matter what sort of military war was fought ... the end result (death, destruction and associated misery) is always the same?
As a possible example, I would have thought the British army's acts of violence in attempting to extinguish the flame of independence in Ireland, during that country's struggle to break from Britain, nearly a hundred years ago, were considered "just" at the time by the British government and the 'establishment' classes.
But, as you say - the suffering and loss is always the same for the victims of all war. That is the pity of the hell of war.Last edited by visualnickmos; 16-11-14, 20:33.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostMost Christians have absolutely no problem with sincere 'conscientious objection'.
What makes you think otherwise?Last edited by ahinton; 16-11-14, 22:44.
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