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Very disappointing piece on the radio this morning. A bunch of school kids at the Ypres Commonwealth War Grave. One young lass, almost overcome with emotion said, "It really brings it home to you that these people gave their lives because they were British and because they were fighting for a just cause. It makes you proud to be British."Something has clearly gone wrong in the education system if we're bringing kids up to think that WWI was a war fought in a just cause. WWII, certainly. But WWI was a senseless mass carnage, fought for no other reason than that the upper class ruling elites of UK, Germany, France, Russia and Austro-Hungary couldn't find a way to stop it, then poured lives into the battlefield once it had started. And, each country having taught it's people to despise the enemy, they found no end of volunteers to go and "do their duty". And the world that they fought for, the world of the 1920s and 30s was one that resulted in mass unemployment, poverty and degradation for the working class of UK and Europe, whilst the upper class grew richer than ever. We should teach our kids to feel lots of things about the sacrifice of 10million European lives in WWI. Sympathy, horror, disgust, anger and admiration for the courage of men thrown into a senseless annihilation. But pride is the last thing they should feel. Lose that lesson and you are sowing the seeds of the next senseless generation of us-against-them.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 12, 2014, 12:35:13 amVery disappointing piece on the radio this morning. A bunch of school kids at the Ypres Commonwealth War Grave. One young lass, almost overcome with emotion said, "It really brings it home to you that these people gave their lives because they were British and because they were fighting for a just cause. It makes you proud to be British."Something has clearly gone wrong in the education system if we're bringing kids up to think that WWI was a war fought in a just cause. WWII, certainly. But WWI was a senseless mass carnage, fought for no other reason than that the upper class ruling elites of UK, Germany, France, Russia and Austro-Hungary couldn't find a way to stop it, then poured lives into the battlefield once it had started. And, each country having taught it's people to despise the enemy, they found no end of volunteers to go and "do their duty". And the world that they fought for, the world of the 1920s and 30s was one that resulted in mass unemployment, poverty and degradation for the working class of UK and Europe, whilst the upper class grew richer than ever. We should teach our kids to feel lots of things about the sacrifice of 10million European lives in WWI. Sympathy, horror, disgust, anger and admiration for the courage of men thrown into a senseless annihilation. But pride is the last thing they should feel. Lose that lesson and you are sowing the seeds of the next senseless generation of us-against-them. The bid question is what would Europe and in particular Germany have evolved into if WW1 hadn't happened? Would National Socialism and Hitler had any of the traction that it did without the poverty and humiliation heaped on Germany after defeat in WW1?