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The Untold War Story -- Then and Now
Going Beyond the Tale of a Boy and His Horse
Well in advance of the 2014 centennial of the beginning of “the war to end all wars,” the First World War is suddenly everywhere in our lives. Stephen Spielberg’s War Horse opened on 2,376 movie screens and has collected six Oscar nominations, while the hugely successful play it’s based on is still packing in the crowds in New York and a second production is being readied to tour the country.
In addition, the must-watch TV soap opera of the last two months, Downton Abbey, has just concluded its season on an unexpected kiss. In seven episodes, its upstairs-downstairs world of forbidden love and dynastic troubles took American viewers from mid-war, 1916, beyond the Armistice, with the venerable Abbey itself turned into a convalescent hospital for wounded troops. Other dramas about the 1914-1918 war are on the way, among them an HBO-BBC miniseries based on Ford Madox Ford’s Parade’s End quartet of novels, and a TV adaptation of Sebastian Faulks’s novel Birdsong from an NBC-backed production company.
In truth, there’s nothing new in this. Filmmakers and novelists have long been fascinated by the way the optimistic, sunlit, pre-1914 Europe of emperors in plumed helmets and hussars on parade so quickly turned into a mass slaughterhouse on an unprecedented scale. And there are good reasons to look at the First World War carefully and closely.
After all, it was responsible for the deaths of some nine million soldiers and an even larger number of civilians. It helped ignite the Armenian genocide and the Russian Revolution, left large swaths of Europe in smoldering ruins, and remade the world for the worse in almost every conceivable way -- above all, by laying the groundwork for a second and even more deadly, even more global war.
There are good reasons as well for us to be particularly haunted by what happened in those war years to the country that figures in all four of these film and TV productions: Britain. In 1914, that nation was at the apex of glory, the unquestioned global superpower, ruling over the largest empire the world had ever seen. Four and a half years later its national debt had increased tenfold, more than 720,000 British soldiers were dead, and hundreds of thousands more seriously wounded, many of them missing arms, legs, eyes, genitals.
The toll fell particularly heavily on the educated classes that supplied the young lieutenants and captains who led their troops out of the trenches and into murderous machine-gun fire. To give but a single stunning example, of the men who graduated from Oxford in 1913, 31% were killed.
“Swept Away in a Red Blast of Hate”
Yet curiously, for all the spectacle of boy and horse, thundering cavalry charges, muddy trenches, and wartime love and loss, the makers of War Horse, Downton Abbey and -- I have no doubt -- the similar productions we’ll soon be watching largely skip over the greatest moral drama of those years of conflict, one that continues to echo in our own time of costly and needless wars. They do so by leaving out part of the cast of characters of that moment. The First World War was not just a battle between rival armies, but also a powerful, if one-sided, battle between those who assumed the war was a noble crusade and those who thought it absolute madness.
The war’s opponents went to jail in many countries. There were more than 500 conscientious objectors imprisoned in the United States in those years, for example, plus others jailed for speaking out against joining the conflict. Eugene V. Debs had known prison from his time as a railway union leader, but he spent far longer behind bars -- more than two years -- for urging American men to resist the draft. Convicted of sedition, he was still in his cell at the federal penitentiary in Atlanta in November 1920 when, long after the war ended, he received nearly a million votes as the Socialist candidate for President.
One American protest against the war turned to tragedy when, in 1917, Oklahoma police arrested nearly 500 draft resisters -- white, black, and Native American -- taking part in what they called the Green Corn Rebellion against “a rich man’s war, poor man’s fight.” Three were killed and many injured.
War resisters were also thrown in jail in Germany and Russia. But the country with the largest and best organized antiwar movement -- and here’s where the creators of those film and TV costume dramas so beloved by Anglophile American audiences miss a crucial opportunity -- was Britain.
The main reason opposition to the war proved relatively strong there was simple enough: in 1914, the island nation had not been attacked. German invaders marched into France and Belgium, but Germany hoped Britain would stay out of the war. And so did some Britons. When their country joined the fighting on the grounds that Germany had violated Belgian neutrality, a vocal minority continued to insist that jumping into a quarrel among other countries was a disastrous mistake.
Keir Hardie was a prominent early war opponent. A trade union leader and Member of Parliament, he had, by the age of 21, already spent half his life as a coal miner and he never went to school. Nonetheless, he became one of the great orators of the age, mesmerizing crowds with his eloquence, his piercing, heavy-browed eyes, and a striking red beard. Crushed with despair that millions of Europe’s working men were slaughtering one another rather than making common cause in fighting for their rights, his beard white, he died in 1915, still in his 50s.
Among those who bravely challenged the war fever, whose rallies were often violently broken up by the police or patriotic mobs, was well-known radical feminist Charlotte Despard. Her younger brother, amazingly, was Field Marshal Sir John French, commander-in-chief of the Western Front for the first year and a half of the war. A similarly riven family was the famous Pankhurst clan of suffragettes: Sylvia Pankhurst became an outspoken opponent of the conflict, while her sister Christabel was from the beginning a fervent drum-beater for the war effort. They not only stopped speaking to each other, but published rival newspapers that regularly attacked the other’s work.
Britain’s leading investigative journalist, Edmund Dene Morel, and its most famous philosopher, Bertrand Russell, were both passionate war critics. “This war is trivial, for all its vastness,” Russell wrote. “No great principle is at stake, no great human purpose is involved on either side.” He was appalled to see his fellow citizens “swept away in a red blast of hate.”
He wrote with remarkable candor about how difficult it was to go against the current of the national war fever “when the whole nation is in a state of violent collective excitement. As much effort was required to avoid sharing this excitement as would have been needed to stand out against the extreme of hunger or sexual passion, and there was the same feeling of going against instinct.”
Both Russell and Morel spent six months in prison for their beliefs. Morel served his term at hard labor, carrying 100-pound slabs of jute to the prison workshop while subsisting on a bare-bones diet during a frigid winter when prison furnaces were last in line for the nation’s scarce supply of coal.
Women like Violet Tillard went to jail as well. She worked for an antiwar newspaper banned in 1918 and was imprisoned for refusing to reveal the location of its clandestine printing press. And among the unsung heroines of that antiwar moment was Emily Hobhouse, who secretly traveled through neutral Switzerland to Berlin, met the German foreign minister, talked over possible peace terms, and then returned to England to try to do the same with the British government. Its officials dismissed her as a lone-wolf eccentric, but in a conflict that killed some 20 million people, she was the sole human being who journeyed from one side to the other and back again in search of peace.
Why We Know More About War Than Peace
By the war’s end, more than 20,000 British men had defied the draft and, as a matter of principle, many also refused the alternative service prescribed for conscientious objectors, like ambulance driving at the front or working in a war industry. More than 6,000 of them were put behind bars -- up to that moment the largest number of people ever imprisoned for political reasons in a western democracy.
There was nothing easy about any of this. Draft refusers were mocked and jeered (mobs threw rotten eggs at them when given the chance), jailed under harsh conditions, and lost the right to vote for five years. But with war’s end, in a devastated country mourning its losses and wondering what could possibly justify that four-year slaughter, many people came to feel differently about the resisters. More than half a dozen were eventually elected to the House of Commons and the journalist Morel became the Labour Party’s chief Parliamentary spokesperson on foreign affairs. Thirty years after the Armistice, a trade unionist named Arthur Creech Jones, who had spent two and a half years in prison as a war resister, was appointed to the British cabinet.
The bravery of such men and women in speaking their minds on one of the great questions of the age cost them dearly: in public scorn, prison terms, divided families, lost friends and jobs. And yet they are largely forgotten today at a moment when resistance to pointless wars should be celebrated. Instead we almost always tend to celebrate those who fight wars -- win or lose -- rather than those who oppose them.
It’s not just the films and TV shows we watch, but the monuments and museums we build. No wonder, as General Omar Bradley once said, that we “know more about war than we know about peace.” We tend to think of wars as occasions for heroism, and in a narrow, simple sense they can be. But a larger heroism, sorely lacking in Washington this last decade, lies in daring to think through whether a war is worth fighting at all. In looking for lessons in wars past, there’s a much deeper story to be told than that of a boy and his horse.
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35 Comments so far
Show AllThis, to me, as a Vietnam veteran, is simply an excellent article. As Mr. Hochschold notes, there has been a play, a movie, and a hugely successful British television program about World War I and yet none of these productions has seen fit to portray one of the seminal events of that event and that would be resistance to that war as seen from basically a British perspective. Mr. Hochschils's book has been one the more impressive and moving books that I have read in recent memory.
Another book that is well worth reading on this subject is the powerful Minds at War: Poetry and Experience of the First World War which is the largest anthology of poetry of the First World War.
another brilliant contribution from AdamH. His TO END ALL WARS is a true masterpiece. We are never more cognizant than now of the need to end war, and articles like these make it easier to contemplate.
it all underscores the absolute necessity of preventing a war in Iran. if we can stop this one, and get the insane US war budget cut, maybe we can survive the coming millennium and make Solartopia a reality.
When Bertrand Russell was released from British gaol for counselling youth to evade conscription, a condition of his discharge was that he not go within a mile of the shores of England. He might, you see, carry a torch and send signals to surfaced German submarines.
A. A. Milne - who served as a Sgt. in the Great Donnybrook - wrote commentary in =Peace With Honour= that he had conceived an idea for a book manuscript about the late war. The first line would read: "Gavrilo Princip killed Franz Ferdinand." Succeeding lines would have the same construction, until the final death of that war was recorded. The book would end with =The End=.
The best known poem of The Great War was =In Flanders Fields= by Canadian Lt. Col. John McCrae. I, however, have another favourite poem, written by A.A. Milne. Herewith.
Song for a Soldier
I march along and march along and ask myself each
day"
If I should go and lose the war, then what will Mother
say?
The Sergeant will be cross and red, the Captain cross
and pink,
But all I ever ask myself is, What will Mother think?
For
I
Kissed her at the kitchen door
And promised her as sure as sure
I'd win the what d'you call it war-
"You wait," I said to Mother
She said, "You mean you'll win the war?"
I said, "By next September, sure-
"Why, that's what I'm enlisting for"
I told my dear old Mother.
She said, "Oh next September, well that isn't very
soon:
You know that father's birthday is the 28th of
June?"
I hadn't thought of Father, so of course I had to say:
"All right, all right I'll win it by the 31st of May."
So
I
Kissed her at the kitchen door
And promised her as sure as sure
I'd win the something something war,
"You wait," I said to Mother
She said, "You mean you'll win the war?"
"The end of May," I said, "for sure-
"Why, that's what I'm enlisting for"
I told my dear old Mother.
She said ,"Well that's a comfort; I suppose you haven't
heard
"The twinses have their birthday -always had- on May
the 3rd?"
I wiped away the tear-drop that was flowing down her
cheek,
And said, "All right, all right, all right, we'll make it
Tuesday week."
Then
I
Kissed her at the kitchen door
And kissed her once again, and swore
Gort helping me I'd win the war
To please my dear old Mother
She said, "You'll really win the war?"
"By Tuesday week?" I said, "For sure,
"And probably the day before"
I told my dear old Mother.
I march along and march along and hardly dare to
speak
For planning how to finish off the war by Monday
week;
For Mother and the Sergeant will be very cross and hot
If we should lose the war because of something I've
forgot.
Yes
I
Kissed him at the cook-house door
And promised him I'd win the war-
"Why, that's what I've enlisted for"
I told my dear old Sergeant.
He said, "You'll =win= the ruddy war?"
I said, "Oh Sergeant, keep it pure,
"Of course I'll win the nasty war-
And then I'll be a Sergeant."
ADDENDUM
Most people forget that the years from 1910 to 1915 were the 50th anniversary of the U.S. Civil War. The nation was plastered with red white and blue bunting. John Phillip Sousa marches poured from band shells. Ladies with wasp waists and monstrous hats were known to bestow kisses upon males of any age, for almost any small gesture of Patriotism, while Margaret Sanger looked on
With the assistance of their canes, hoary headed men ambled towards each other, coughing, as they reenacted their days of glory, watched from the sidelines by compatriots with pinned up sleeves or pant legs.
The panoply was incredibly stirring to American boys. "War must be a wonderful adventure or these ladies wouldn't be kissing everything in sight. Maybe I'LL GET TO BE IN A WAR."
Trylon
Maybe you communists forget the 50 million citizens Stalin killed and starved and Chinas mao, real patriots they were to thier countries, apparently the old brains which were in your heads have in fact been turned to jello about these two sob's
you forgot to mention your hero stalin for killing over 50 million and also mao, pol pot, castro and che whi deserved the bullit in his head, right where the red star was in his gay cap, its your freinds above that take ignorant lives away also, actually we can add usama to the list when he convinced 21 stupid ignorant islamics by killing innocents they would get 72 ignorant virgens to have sex with them afterwards, yes please by all means only blame the USA, ITS intentiaonal asses like you that misleed the ignoarant
This reactionary rant is so off the deep end, I see no relation between it and the post it replies to.
Indeed. I don't understand where this fool gets the sense that the article blames the US for what it describes.
As a principled draft dodger I got only one virgin. But she was a pretty nice one. We married in Thunder Bay then had two children in Toronto.
My son is working on the other 71, apparently. I don't know what number he's up to, but I helped him out by assuring his dual citizenship. Run for cover, Siouxrose.
Trylon
good piece on the big one - the war to end all wars of which billions of books could be written
just a few thoughts
war is a transformative event - ww1 saw the destruction of the upper classes in europe - the europe that emerged from the war was not like the one who got into it
"Norman Dodd, former director of the Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations of the U.S. House of Representatives, testified that the Committee was invited to study the minutes of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace as part of the Committee's investigation. The Committee stated: "The trustees of the Foundation brought up a single question. If it is desirable to alter the life of an entire people, is there any means more efficient than war.... They discussed this question... for a year and came up with an answer: There are no known means more efficient than war, assuming the objective is altering the life of an entire people. That leads them to a question: How do we involve the United States in a war. This is in 1909."
So the decision was made to involve the United States in a war so that the "life of the entire people could be altered." This was the conclusion of a foundation supposedly committed to "peace.""
http://www.threeworldwars.com/world-war-1/ww1.htm
ww1 made the rothschilds lots of money as they financed both sides
partial list of war profiteers during ww1 in amerika - pre war income and war income listed
DuPont (Gunpowder) $ 6,000,000 $ 58.000,000
Bethlehem Steel $ 6,000,000 $ 49,000,000
United States Steel $ 105,000,000 $ 240,000,000
Anaconda $ 10,000,000 $ 34,000,000
Utah Copper $ 5,000,000 $ 21,000,000
Central Leather Company $ 3,500,000 $ 15,000,000
International Nickel Company $ 4,000,000 $ 73,000,000
American Sugar Refining Company $ 2,000,000 $ 6,000,000
http://www.resistanceisnotfutile.us/WarProfiteeringInWWI.aspx
the writer talks about the intellectuals who were jailed over ww1
ezra pound was jailed for 13 years after ww2 without charge - originally charged with treason he was acquitted of that
one of the greatest amerikan poets and mentor to many of the great writers of early 20th century
"Working in London in the early 20th century as foreign editor of several American literary magazines, Pound helped to discover and shape the work of contemporaries such as T. S. Eliot, James Joyce, Robert Frost, and Ernest Hemingway. Pound was responsible for the publication in 1915 of Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock", and for the serialization from 1918 of Joyce's Ulysses. Hemingway wrote in 1925: "He defends [his friends] when they are attacked, he gets them into magazines and out of jail. He loans them money. ... He writes articles about them. He introduces them to wealthy women. He gets publishers to take their books. He sits up all night with them when they claim to be dying ... he advances them hospital expenses and dissuades them from suicide.""
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Pound
"on his return from italy to the usa in 1945 pound was charged for treason for broadcasting anti american propoganda. he was acquitted in 1946 but was committed to a psychiatric institution where he remained until 1958"
http://www.funtrivia.com/askft/Question33083.html
after ww1 the disillusioned vets rioted in england, france and germany
in america we had the bonus army
"the Bonus Army was the popular name of an assemblage of some 43,000 marchers—17,000 World War I veterans, their families, and affiliated groups—who gathered in Washington, D.C., in the spring and summer of 1932 to demand immediate cash-payment redemption of their service certificates."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonus_Army
ww2 was a continuation of ww1 in many ways but contrary to the myth history it was primarily a war between russia and germany
war is a racket
"War Is a Racket is the title of two works, a speech and a booklet, by retired United States Marine Corps Major General Smedley D. Butler. In them, Butler frankly discusses from his experience as a career military officer how business interests commercially benefit from warfare."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Is_a_Racket
"I spent 33 years and four months in active military service and during that period I spent most of my time as a high class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism. I helped make Mexico and especially Tampico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street. I helped purify Nicaragua for the International Banking House of Brown Brothers in 1902-1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for the American sugar interests in 1916. I helped make Honduras right for the American fruit companies in 1903. In China in 1927 I helped see to it that Standard Oil went on its way unmolested. Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents."
ibid
what's as old as the hills is new again in fascist amerika
hey let's go to war
with syria
iran
russia
china
venezuela
honduras
line em up we'll set em down
==war is a transformative event - ww1 saw the destruction of the upper classes in europe - the europe that emerged from the war was not like the one who got into it==
Historians have overlooked the most serious consequence for 100 years. It was not, however, overlooked by Monsignor Francis Spellman - later the Military Vicar of Christ - a TITLE WHICH HE TOOK SERIOUSLY.
Since Christianity came to ROME, the Defender of The Faith was a Catholic European nation. But when they got on ships to come home, Doughboys carried with them the invisible mantle, Defender of The Faith. It passed to a nation dominated by Protestant Christians. And, not coincidentally, they were redefining the winnings of capitalism as the fruits of showing faith to God - see Max Weber.
The genius of the little stamp collector was in making Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli understand this geographic change, accept it with grace, and then commence plotting how to take as many reins as possible of the US government. Pacelli's plotting began with manipulating the terms of FDR's 1933 recognition of the Soviet government. It ended, more or less, with the Vietnam War.
Trylon
very interesting trylon - good stuff
medmedude -
Your comments remind me of the scene in the film "Reds" directed by Warren Beatty. He played journalist John Reed who wrote about the Russian Revolution. In a meeting in which he is on the stage as one of the panelists someone asks him the reason that the United States is in the European War. Reed gets up, looks at the audience and says simply "profit" and sits down. General Smedley Butler had it right.
Disabled by Wilfred Owen (killed in France, Nov. 1918)
He sat in a wheeled chair, waiting for dark,
And shivered in his ghastly suit of grey,
Legless, sewn short at elbow. Through the park
Voices of boys rang saddening like a hymn,
Voices of play and pleasure after day,
Till gathering sleep had mothered them from him.
About this time Town used to swing so gay
When glow-lamps budded in the light blue trees,
And girls glanced lovelier as the air grew dim, -
In the old times, before he threw away his knees.
Now he will never feel again how slim
Girls' waists are, or how warm their subtle hands;
All of them touch him like some queer disease.
There was an artist silly for his face,
For it was younger than his youth, last year.
Now, he is old; his back will never brace;
He's lost his colour very far from here,
Poured it down shell-holes till the veins ran dry,
And half his lifetime lapsed in the hot race
And leap of purple spurted from his thigh.
One time he liked a blood-smear down his leg,
After the matches, carried shoulder-high.
It was after football, when he'd drunk a peg,
He thought he'd better join. - He wonders why.
Someone had said he'd look a god in kilts,
That's why; and may be, too, to please his Meg;
Aye, that was it, to please the giddy jilts
He asked to join. He didn't have to beg;
Smiling they wrote his lie; aged nineteen years.
Germans he scarcely thought of; all their guilt,
And Austria's, did not move him. And no fears
Of Fear came yet. He thought of jewelled hilts
For daggers in plaid socks; of smart salutes;
And care of arms; and leave; and pay arrears;
Esprit de corps; and hints for young recruits.
And soon, he was drafted out with drums and cheers.
Some cheered him home, but not as crowds cheer Goal.
Only a solemn man who brought him fruits
Thanked him; and then inquired about his soul.
Now, he will spend a few sick years in institutes,
And do what things the rules consider wise,
And take whatever pity they may dole.
To-night he noticed how the women's eyes
Passed from him to the strong men that were whole.
How cold and late it is! Why don't they come
And put him into bed? Why don't they come?
Sigh. I am reminded of triple amputee, =Fortunate son=, Lew Puller Jr.
Trylon
WW1 resisters had a partial last laugh, as their protests were instrumental in bringing down the Hohenzollerns & the Romonovs.
Thanks for two excellent poems from 4thefuture and Trylon. I just read Smedley D. Butler's book 'War is a Racket' a few nights ago. It's only a short book but it is right to the point and not dated in the least. Unfortinately Butler, Eugene Debs, Ezra Pound, Bertrand Russell and almost every pro-union, anti-war intellectual of modern history has been deleted from our K-12 curriculums by the current corpocracy we allure to as 'our government'. While I don't believe that an invasion of Iran is imminent, the MIC is chugging along with more steam than any of its historical comparisons. Wrong train on the wrong track. Yet even more so than in WW1 Britain, the American population views war on average as another raison d'etre to order some KFC, curl up in front of the T.V., tune in on the latest distorted news from the front and get all emotional over how brave our troops are, how patriotic we feel and how nasty those 'evil doers' can get. Americans celebrate rather than fear war. American exceptionalism is questioned less than Roman exceptionalism ever was and we have a pliant media and a broken educational system to thank for it. I won't lie awake at night waiting for the Great Awakening, but I will remain vigilant in my search for any signs of progressive change.
A book not mentioned thus far is Dalton Trumbo's Johnny;s Got his Gun, about a soldier who received horrific wounds in WWI. Compared to it, Downton Abbey is about as relevant as Sesame Street.
sheepherder
Good point though I would like to note that I did quote Trumbo's powerful closing passages from his book in today's article of From War Games to Peace Games...
More recommended reading:
"Good-Bye to All That", a memoir by Robert Graves, recounts his personal experience of serving in World War I, and also provides a compelling account of the ambivalent effects of, and reaction to, the "Great War" in England.
NB: read the original 1929 version (ISBN 9781571810229), not the author's heavily edited and sanitized revision published in 1957.
An Australian composer/singer Eric Bogle ( not sure of this name ) wrote a song called " And the band played Walzing Matilda ".It tells the story of the idiocy of war and the confused attitude of the returned servicemen and women as they marched in commenerative Anzac day events.It tells in a nutshell what voluminous histories attempt to explain.
Just think of all the war movies and news reels in theaters depicting war as just what this country needs, and never mind the many actors who never set foot in a battle field but are regarded as our greatest war heroes. That is just some of the hardest and confoundedness things to over come as, by design, they are so well and solidly entrenched in american war culture that the only way to obviate them will most likely tear this country apart, that more than likely designed.
But what would or will happen if and when the attack on 9/11/01 is thoroughly investigated and the truth revealed as to what did happen and who did do anything. I mean even without the 'official story' people, we should assume, would see something not quite right, especially with a 3rd building(wtc 7) falling down in an absolutely perfectly classic implosive demolition. Or why is the fbi withholding all the video tapes of what actually hit the pentagon. This does more harm to this country that can be imagined and it is incalculable damage.
As for these films, they are made by Jewish filmakers, are you now saying the jews are the problem? even though the ones executed by the nazis were sent to thier deaths by the The Jüdische Ordnungsdienst? please explain the oxymoron
.
edit
reply
I went back and read my comment 3 times and I have yet to see where I even typed the word 'jew' much less insinuated jews are the problem to whatever you think any problem is. What are you shoveling into your cereal and coffee these days. And for you I owe no explanations, moronic or oxy... oh I got it your messed up and took a triple dose of OxyContin this a.m. Bugger off.
Do not mind him. He is having one of his "American Dreams".
american dreams -
The only "oxymoron" here is you. One more thing - learn to spell.
This poem opposes the irrationality of war with the beauty of a garden.
Reed, Henry. "Naming of Parts." New Statesman and Nation 24, no. 598 (8 August 1942): 92 (.pdf).
LESSONS OF THE WAR
To Alan Michell
Vixi duellis nuper idoneus
Et militavi non sine gloria
I. NAMING OF PARTS
To-day we have naming of parts. Yesterday,
We had daily cleaning. And to-morrow morning,
We shall have what to do after firing. But to-day,
To-day we have naming of parts. Japonica
Glistens like coral in all of the neighboring gardens,
And to-day we have naming of parts.
This is the lower sling swivel. And this
Is the upper sling swivel, whose use you will see,
When you are given your slings. And this is the piling swivel,
Which in your case you have not got. The branches
Hold in the gardens their silent, eloquent gestures,
Which in our case we have not got.
This is the safety-catch, which is always released
With an easy flick of the thumb. And please do not let me
See anyone using his finger. You can do it quite easy
If you have any strength in your thumb. The blossoms
Are fragile and motionless, never letting anyone see
Any of them using their finger.
And this you can see is the bolt. The purpose of this
Is to open the breech, as you see. We can slide it
Rapidly backwards and forwards: we call this
Easing the spring. And rapidly backwards and forwards
The early bees are assaulting and fumbling the flowers:
They call it easing the Spring.
They call it easing the Spring: it is perfectly easy
If you have any strength in your thumb: like the bolt,
And the breech, and the cocking-piece, and the point of balance,
Which in our case we have not got; and the almond-blossom
Silent in all of the gardens and the bees going backwards and forwards,
For to-day we have naming of parts.
As for these films, they are made by Jewish filmakers, are you no saying the jews are the problem?
Choice ;
slave: work or get beaten then work
citizen draftee or18 year old: join or jail wounded or killed- YOU WILL PARTICIPATE
Leader,master(s); we must defend, fight, or else the game is over.
slave--NO! : master's wife,"idiot you just slew the work force"!
Leader-NO: masses , "idiot we are" ???
I'm all for peaceful cooperation. But let's remember even a mild mannered "one world" Wendell Wilkie, moderate to liberal put the blame for the First World War squarely
on Germany. They had been carrying on land grabs ever since and before the 1870s. Against Denmark, Austria, and France and in rapid succession. They took by blood and iron what they wanted from those weaker than them. This really goes back to the German "schools of death" starting in 1815 as one Scandinavian educator explained teaching Germans they were better than others and others were only fit to be their servants.
Schleswig Holstein, part of Denmark before German conquest has never gone back to Denmark its rightful owner. Now let's deal with that. Some of Austria likely still is part of today's Germany. Poland which got independence after the First World War only did so after those "terrible Communists" came to power in Moscow and thanks to them.
Poland for the first time since 1815 got full independence. That would never have happened if Germany had won. Actually after the armistice the Freikorps, private German armies recruited by ex German army officers brutally crushed a move toward real democracy led by Rosa Luxumberg and killing like crazy their own people, then moving on to attack Poland as well as the Baltic region. Only when it looked like the Anglo French occupying armies might tighten up on these loonies did these crazies fade from the scene. Russia might also have come in if this continued. The German government then in 1923 put through the Rappolo peace agreement with Moscow. Thus these "fine, peaceloving German" warriors continued their blood lust until they saw they might take another booty whipping. The old German mind set put in by brainwashing of both their media and their "schools of death" were surely the cause of this. Nothing is meant to say that Germans are "by blood any worse than Englishmen, Swedes, Russians or anyone else"
as Henry Wallace would put it. But once "the eduational system goes bad,' it takes the whole society with it. Oh, I left out von Hindenburg's role in encouraging the Freikorps from the start and later bringing the Nazis to power. What a "nice fellow!" Yeah, he "raally saved the day." For the Nazis! Why did we ever allow our anti Russian bias over that 1917 revolution to put us in an alliance with our worst enemies against in history?
Stephen Spielberg makes really lousy movies when he tries to do history. He's so full of himself. He slights the British in "Saving Private Ryan," libels our Russian allies in "Schindler's List," and then the rest of them are just one big piece of dog do do. He'll never be an Oliver Stone, and Stone's a peacenik and a real one. Phonies get old.
Spielberg also treats election stealling and nothing John Quincy Adams as a real anti slavery type which he surely wasn't. Thomas Jefferson presided over the only action in before the civil war taken to stop US slavery nationally in 1807 when the congress passed legislation to ban the importation of slaves. It was the only action taken until Abraham Lincoln got to the White House. Now deal with that. Spielberg should stick to fiction and especially science fiction. "ET" was fine. He and the rest in Hollywood with some exceptions don't know didly about US history. They also are racist in their lack of any showing what blacks and others of color have done for the USA. I could write a book on just that subject.
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Erich Maria Remarque's book All Quiet On The Western Front (Im Westen Nichts Neues) about "The Great War", as the First World War used to be called, was banned by the Nazis.
Theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who already was a dissident leader of the "Confessing Church" in Germany, saw the 1930 movie version of All Quiet On The Western Front; while staying out of trouble, "networking", figuring out what to do next (given even the dissident "Confessing Church's" compromised position regarding Nazi efforts to control religion in Germany), and doing "post doc" study at Union Theological Seminary in New York City.
During a trip to the south Bonhoeffer witnessed the racism of segregation in the United States. As a conservative theologian Bonhoeffer was more impressed with Adam Clayton Powell, Sr.'s sermons at the Abysinnian Baptist Church in Harlem than the theology taught at Union Theological Seminary. Persecution of Jews had already started in Germany. One of Bonhoeffer's best friends was a Christian theologian and a Jew who had converted to Christianity. A brother-in-law of Bonhoeffer was Jewish. Through family connections in the government Bonhoeffer heard the inside version of some of what was going on in Germany. While Bonhoeffer was well aware of the persecution of Jews in Germany, at the time of his first trip to the U.S., he considered the treatment of African Americans in the United States as worse than the persecution of Jews in Germany. Of course, that changed later.
Along with family members and friends Dietrich Bonhoeffer became involved with a group which included high ranking people in the military plotting to kill Hitler. Although Bonhoeffer was originally imprisoned for other reasons, once the assassination plotting was discovered Dietrich Bonhoeffer and others were executed just weeks before the war was over for their involvement in efforts to kill Hitler.
This topic discussion would be wrong to fade without propers to Charles A. Lindbergh Senior, 1859-1924, father of the famous aviator. He was so appalled by the mess into which the USA was being dragged in 1917 that he wrote a book =Why Is Your Country at War?=. As soon as it hit book stores, a copy was dashed to the White House. President Woodrow Wilson immediately directed that all copies be seized and burned, along with the lead plates used to print the work! This was an egregious act, for which Wilson deserves the contempt of history. He has mine.
A few years later, some friends of Charles Lindbergh Sr. decided to give him a special birthday present. They paid for a private reprinting of =Why Is Your Country at War?= No lie, once browsing a second hand book store I found a copy of this limited reprinting. I paid a few bucks for it.
There are many reasons to regard Charles Lindburgh Sr. as a person worthy of admiration, but here is my favorite. His law office in Minnesota was located above a farmer's Feed Store. Outside his windows was the roof of the front porch. Winter snow conditions were often a serious threat to birds. Charles would go purchase bags of seed, open his office windows, and hurl the seed onto the porch roof.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_August_Lindbergh
Trylon
"Winston Smith: [reads from Goldstein's book] "In accordance to the principles of Doublethink, it does not matter if the war is not real, or when it is, that victory is not possible. The war is not meant to be won. It is meant to be continuous. The essential act of modern warfare is the destruction of the produce of human labor. A hierarchical society is only possible on the basis of poverty and ignorance. In principle, the war effort is always planned to keep society on the brink of starvation. The war is waged by the ruling group against its own subjects. And its object is not victory over Eurasia or Eastasia, but to keep the very structure of society intact." Julia? Are you awake? There is truth, and there is untruth. To be in a minority of one doesn't make you mad."
I noticed on the Internet Movie Database yesterday that the odious film "Act of Valor" took in nearly $25 million so far. This movie is not so much a piece of cinema as it is a propaganda film designed to recruit new cannon fodder and pump up the idea that the military is composed of virtuous men and women who are fighting for our freedoms. I have also seen a disturbing commercial on TV about all the swell things that the U.S. Navy is up to around the world. It ends with a troubling statement calling itself a "global force for good." Militarism continues to be a dark and dangerous force in the world and we are also seeing our police take on more of those characteristics and weapons, including drones.
In a saner country that I could admire, "Act of Valor" would be a flop. Instead, it seems headed for box office success. Will this be the beginning of more films that feature real soldiers and with scripts heavily edited and influenced by the Pentagon? Seems likely. I recommend reading "The War Prayer" by Mark Twain. It describes the kind of social insanity that takes over a people on the march to war. Twain described himself as an anti-imperialist and was deeply opposed to the war in the Philippines. He would have decried the First World War as well.