Originally posted by Mr Pee
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Poppies and the "Heroes Industry" ?
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amateur51
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIs it like a Vegan Butcher
or a "Christian Soldier" ?
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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A while back (was it really just yesterday?) we were discussing the meaning of the Poppy, & why people wore it. I should have introduced the Apprentice Boys of Derry lodge in Glasgow, who decided that their march to the Cenotaph should pass several pubs in the East End which were popular with Irish Republicans (until they were on the brink of having the march banned). I wonder what their reasons for wearing a poppy were, & what they thought it meant?
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Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostA while back (was it really just yesterday?) we were discussing the meaning of the Poppy, & why people wore it. I should have introduced the Apprentice Boys of Derry lodge in Glasgow, who decided that their march to the Cenotaph should pass several pubs in the East End which were popular with Irish Republicans (until they were on the brink of having the march banned). I wonder what their reasons for wearing a poppy were, & what they thought it meant?
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Originally posted by Padraig View PostI'm sure the march went off peacefully, Flosshilde, or we would have heard. Compare the situation referred to in message 92 above. I'm reasonably confident in saying that the Apprentice Boys of Derry, in Derry, would not entertain such a march today without consultation and agreement with relevant parties in the city.
It isn't a question of the march being peaceful or not, Padraig. The 'loyal' organisation insisted that their parade to an event that is supposed, according to some poisters here, to be about peace, took a route that they must have known (because this was the second time they tried, & the second time they had been refused) would be provocative. I'm afraid 'peace' and 'an end to war' are not phrases that can be associated with the Orange movement, & I wonder what the reasons for their involvement in Armistice Day services are.
(http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/h...e-day.22586466)
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWell said that man!
We await the sentence of the court martial.
And I hope at least one or two will click the link in that article and join me in signing the Telegraph's petition for clemency in this case.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View Posthttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/poli...n-warfare.html
And I hope at least one or two will click the link in that article and join me in signing the Telegraph's petition for clemency in this case.
It is pretty clear, also, that Marine A is aware of the gravity of what he has done, because he explicitly urges his fellow soldiers to keep quiet about it, and accepts that he has broken the Geneva Convention. This treaty goes back to 1864, when nations agreed in the wake of the Battle of Solferino five years earlier that they would collectively spare all those who were hors de combat.
Indeed, the notion that it is a crime to kill the wounded is far more ancient than that, and can be found in the laws of war that were observed by the Greek city states. It is a principle that was founded then, as now, on a mixture of ideas: the universal human idea of mercy, and a sensible hope of reciprocity – that if we spare your wounded, you will spare ours. It is a very old and immutable code that Marine broke, and one that happens to be enshrined in modern British law. It is right that the courts should uphold that law, say the generals, and so do I.
So let them do it, then; Sir Nicholas Houghton (Chief of the Defence Staff), Major-General Julian Thompson and Brigadier Bill Dunham (Royal Marines) have each gone on record as believing that they should - and one might reasonably assume that they have at least the expertise in such matters that you seek to claim for Sir Malcolm Rifkind in security matters.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWell there you go
I'm not sure of why we should be empathetic towards this murderer ? If it was the other way round the good folks in the DT would be calling for public execution ! I guess our wonderful armed forces can do no wrong in some eyes which is a very dangerous belief indeed.
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