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Uisguex Jack Rear Admiral
Joined: 26 Jul 2004 Posts: 613
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Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2005 7:42 pm Post subject: Repeating history with Winston Churchill |
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Today driving I had the 'G-Man' on, he was playing this speech of Churchill’s from 11/16/1934.
I looked long and hard for a Audio link for it but have had no luck. My internet connection is messed up today, or I have more spy ware to deal with.
A link for the entire speech: http://www.rightwingnews.com/speeches/churchgermany.php
What really struck me though were the following passages, which liddy was underscoring as relevant to the Iranian Announcement to 'wipe Israel off the map'
This is just the intro to the speech, read the whole thing if you have time.
Quote: | It is indeed with a pang of stabbing pain that we see all this in mortal danger. A thousand years has served to form a state; an hour may lay it in dust.
What shall we do? Many people think that the best way to escape war is to dwell upon its horrors and to imprint them vividly upon the minds of the younger generation. They flaunt the grisly photograph before their eyes. They fill their ears with tales of carnage. They dilate upon the ineptitude of generals and admirals. They denounce the crime as insensate folly of human strife. Now, all this teaching ought to be very useful in preventing us from attacking or invading any other country, if anyone outside a madhouse wished to do so, but how would it help us if we were attacked or invaded ourselves that is the question we have to ask. |
We got serious work to do.
If anyone finds a audio link, please post it. Churchill was declared a 'war monger' for making this speech, voted out of office and left to deal with a much bloodier mess ten years later.
Where are we headed, with Cindy Sheehan, Dan Rather, Michael Moore, Howard Dean, Nancy Pellossi.... a list too long to type out?
Meanwhile Iran, Al Queda and the likes working day and night to nuke yours, mine and ours.
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Jarhead Ensign
Joined: 19 Aug 2004 Posts: 70 Location: Port Saint Lucie, FL
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Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2005 8:19 pm Post subject: |
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Speaking of Winston Churchill. Here is another great article:
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/006/200fxbyi.asp
Rule America?
Liberal elites ruined Britain as a hyperpower. Could America meet the same fate?
by Jonathan V. Last
10/21/2005 12:00:00 AM
WHAT DOES MODERN HISTORY have to teach us about the age of American empire? The final chapters of the British Empire offer lessons and parallels aplenty. Empires don't last forever, and the combination of martial victory, popular ennui, and liberal anti-patriotism is a dangerous mix for a superpower.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the British Empire was an unopposed hyperpower (much as the United States has been since 1989). As historian Colin Cross observes: "In terms of influence it was the only world power." The British people and their leaders accepted this fact. In the early 1930s, Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin pronounced that "the British Empire stands firm, as a great force for good." Historian William Manchester argues that "most of the crown's subjects, abroad as well as at home, felt comfortable with imperialism."
But after the conclusion of the first World War, Britain's imperial psyche began to fracture. "After the survivors of the Western front came home," Manchester writes, "Britons wanted nothing more to do with war; most of them hoped never again to lay their eyes on an Englishman in uniform, and they were losing their taste for Empire." Winston Churchill despaired of this change. "The shadow of victory is disillusion," he noted. "The reaction from extreme effort is prostration. The aftermath even of successful war is long and bitter."
A deep desire to avoid conflict, even at the price of letting the Empire dissolve, permeated British society. In 1931, the House of Commons passed the Statute of Westminster, the first step toward independence for Britain's dominions. In 1932, a poll found that 10.4 million Britons supported England's unilateral disarmament, while only 870,000 opposed it. Historian Alistair Horne observes that, after World War I, it took just about 10 years for the "urge for national grandeur" to be replaced by "a deep longing simply to be left in peace."
Why did it all crumble? Several interrelated reasons - among them the grisly fact that England had lost virtually an entire generation of future leaders in the trenches of Europe. But another important cause was the waning of confidence on the part of liberal British elites, whose pacifism evolved into anti-patriotism.
In 1933, the Oxford Union - a debating society and one of the strongholds of liberal elite opinion - held a debate on the resolution "this House will in no circumstances fight for king and country." The resolution passed. Margot Asquith, one of England's leading liberal lights, wrote that same year, quite sincerely: "There is only one way of preserving peace in the world, and getting rid of your enemy, and that is to come to some sort of agreement with him. . . . The greatest enemy of mankind today is hate."
Churchill disdained the new liberalism, mocking one of his opponents as part of "that band of degenerate international intellectuals who regard the greatness of Britain and the stability and prosperity of the British Empire as a fatal obstacle. . . . " So deep was this liberal loathing of empire that even as the first shots of World War II were being fired, Churchill's private secretary, Jock Colville, witnessed at a theater "a group of bespectacled intellectuals" who, to his shock, "remain[ed] firmly seated while 'God Save the King' was played."
These elites could see evil only at home. The French intellectual Simone de Beauvoir did not believe that Germany was a "threat to peace," but instead worried that the "panic that the Right was spreading" would drag France, Britain, and the rest of Europe into war. Stafford Cripps, a liberal Labor member of Parliament, feared not Hitler, but Churchill. Cripps wrote that after Churchill became prime minister he would "then introduce fascist measures and there will be no more general elections."
In an important sense, the British Empire's strength failed because its elite liberal citizens stopped believing in it.
The parallels with 21st-century America are striking. In little more than 10 years, England went from victory in World War I to serious discussions about completely disarming herself. Talk of a "peace dividend" began with the fall of the Berlin Wall and culminated 10 years later with a major draw-down of forces and the abandonment of the two-war doctrine.
Where the Great War robbed England of a generation of its best and brightest, in America the baby boom generation was lost in Vietnam or, perhaps worse, in Canada, in the Air National Guard, and in the universities, where they learned to hide and not lead. This has taken its toll. Our two baby boom presidents have been exceedingly imperfect. (As Edmund Burke once cautioned, "A great empire and little minds go ill together.")
The American left, too, eerily echoes its British counterparts. Consider the "Peace is Patriotic" bumper stickers; the howls of protest against the nomination of John Bolton to be ambassador to the United Nations, for fear that he might be too assertive of American values; the comparison - by Sen. Richard Durbin (D., Ill.) - of American soldiers at Guantanamo Bay to Nazis and Guantanamo Bay to the Soviet gulag; the protest cries of "No blood for oil" and the left-wing fringe speculation that the endgame of George W. Bush's 9/11 fear-mongering would be to cancel elections and establish a fascist police state.
The liberal opponents of the British Empire were proved wrong, but their misplaced disillusionment was enough to sap the vitality of imperial confidence. After rising one last time to fight Nazism, the sun set on the British Empire.
Likewise, it is pleasant to believe that the crisis of confidence in today's liberal elites won't affect the outcome of our war with Islamist extremism. The greater worry concerns what happens next. Will protestations of liberal elites become mainstream diffidence about America's place in the world? Will we, too, stop believing that America stands firm, as a great force for good - and then see our place in the world diminish?
History, it turns out, can be both a comfort and a caution. _________________ Semper Fi'
Jarhead
USMC 71-74
"I am a bold Internationalist, I will only disperse American troups around the world at the discretion of the United Nations" - John Kerry
$UCK THE CORRUPT UNITED NATIONS - I am a Jarhead and I approve this message |
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GM Strong Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy
Joined: 18 Sep 2004 Posts: 1579 Location: Penna
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Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2005 1:11 am Post subject: |
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The left is wrong about one salient point. We are not an empire. We have no colonies nor do we control populations of foreign lands or peoples for any economic purpose. In our history when we go into a country, we leave, usually after establishing order and stability primarily after a threatening conflict. I defer to Japan, Germany and assorted other places in particular. We are a superpower, but without an empire. However, the lessons must be heeded.
WWI was a travesty of the arrogance of Imperial Old Europe and it's monarchial governances. It passed in a bloodbath that shook the foundations of those societies and still reverberates today. Marxism rose it's ugly head and we still suffer from the Anarchist/ Socialist/ Marxist ideologues who have not learned the lessons of the last 100 years. _________________ 8th Army Korea 68-69 |
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