^^The boys and the girls who went over? I don't remember there being any girls.
^^The boys and the girls who went over? I don't remember there being any girls.
I think Terry Kelley is referring to ongoing conflicts, not just WW1 and WW2.
I do agree that remembrance should not be a two-minute thing on one day of the year - but I also think that it's a good opportunity for me to teach my students how important it is to remember that there are people dying every day in conflicts around the world.
^^The boys and the girls who went over? I don't remember there being any girls.
I think Terry Kelley is referring to ongoing conflicts, not just WW1 and WW2.
I do agree that remembrance should not be a two-minute thing on one day of the year - but I also think that it's a good opportunity for me to teach my students how important it is to remember that there are people dying every day in conflicts around the world.
If you manage to bring some good to your students through this, that is to your credit. However, my experience of this day is that it's a society-wide excuse to ignore issues and responsibilities that should not be brushed aside and must be addressed.
WWI was ultimately the result of the ideologies of all the European nations; their militiarism, their belief that their young men had no higher purpose than to fight and die "for their country" and such nationalistic nonsense. Boys were conditioned from birth into this masculine role and callously sacrificed in the name of government's ridiculous competitiveness and national pride. But what do we do every Remembrance Day? Celebrate this sacrifice, thanking the victims of our societies for their victimization.
Remembrance Day should be about society confronting its mistreatment of its sons, ensuring that we never again make the mistake of seeing our young men and boys the way our nations did then. We must reaffirm the desire to treat our sons better and we must accept responsibility for what we've done to them for generations. Society has to imagine those soldiers as people deserving of empathy, not "heroes" (as they're always labeled), who are distinct from you or I. You and I are not heroes. Heroes are not people like us. Society has to learn not to dismiss these soldiers behind the exact same nationalistic, good-for-them-being-courageous-men nonsense that contributed to these conflicts in the first place. Society should use this day to say to its sons, "we were wrong".
But society does not admit its wrongs. Instead, it brushes the issue under the carpet with two minutes of silence defined in terms of the exact ideologies that were and are responsible for so many of our brothers and sons being lost to us.
I will spend a good part of Armistice day playing Call Of Duty Modern Warfare 2
Haha, wicked.
Maybe they should invent a spin off game called Call of Duty: Armistice where you sit around all day writing treaties.
^^The boys and the girls who went over? I don't remember there being any girls.
^^The boys and the girls who went over? I don't remember there being any girls.
Many women served in war zones as nurses and some of them were killed. One example are the 21 Australian nurses who died in Banka Island Massacre, machine gunned by the Japanese after surviving the sinking on the ship thy were on. 2 other nurses went down with the ship, while 9 others were seen floating away on a raft and never seen again. Only one nurse survived the massacre.
^^The boys and the girls who went over? I don't remember there being any girls.
Many women served in war zones as nurses and some of them were killed. One example are the 21 Australian nurses who died in Banka Island Massacre, machine gunned by the Japanese after surviving the sinking on the ship thy were on. 2 other nurses went down with the ship, while 9 others were seen floating away on a raft and never seen again. Only one nurse survived the massacre.
That doesn't change the fact that 99.9 % of those who died were male, and died specifically because they were male. Anything else is revisionist history that tries to deny this selective maltreatment. If we were talking about women being denied the right to vote and we started talking about "women and men", I'm sure someone would object to the incorrect assumption that this was an issue imposing upon both sexes equally...
Many women served in war zones as nurses and some of them were killed. One example are the 21 Australian nurses who died in Banka Island Massacre, machine gunned by the Japanese after surviving the sinking on the ship thy were on. 2 other nurses went down with the ship, while 9 others were seen floating away on a raft and never seen again. Only one nurse survived the massacre.
That doesn't change the fact that 99.9 % of those who died were male, and died specifically because they were male. Anything else is revisionist history that tries to deny this selective maltreatment. If we were talking about women being denied the right to vote and we started talking about "women and men", I'm sure someone would object to the incorrect assumption that this was an issue imposing upon both sexes equally...
I certainly don't see how honouring the women who served can lead to the assumption that they served in equal numbers.
However in Anzac Day marches the nurses march with the soldiers and that is how it should be. Females did go into war zones and therefore the statement
"boys and girls who went over"
Is absolutely correct.
They weren't sent into those war zones to die, they were sent in to mop up their brother's guts. It isn't the same thing, and to equate the two is to deny the true issue which is the disposibility with which the nations involved marked their sons.
They weren't sent into those war zones to die, they were sent in to mop up their brother's guts. It isn't the same thing, and to equate the two is to deny the true issue which is the disposibility with which the nations involved marked their sons.
I would say that, as far as Australian soldiers are concerned, that they were sent to fight rather than sent in to die.
Australian lost far more troops in the WWI than in WW2 (60,000 deaths in WW1, 33,826 deaths in WW2). This is because during the first war we were under British command and the British generals were too willing to sacrifice troops. When WW2 came along Australia refused to give over command of their troops and weren't willing to sacrifice men needlessly.
I do think that the women who choose to serve in war zones were just as brave as the soldiers and should be as equally honoured.
My father who was a WW2 veteran certainly had as much respect for the nurses as he did the troops.
And there was very difference between the way Allied men, women and children were treated after being captured by the Japanese during the Fall of Singapore. There is little difference between the way captured civilians and soldiers were treated. They all died in high number and those that survived endured starvation and cruelty.
On Anzac Day Australians honour them all.
Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives... You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side now here in this country of ours... you, the mothers, who sent their sons from faraway countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land. They have become our sons as well. - Kemal Ataturk
I think it is worth noting that Anzac commemorates Australia's defeat at Gallipoli not any sort of victory. At school we were taugfht how futile the Gallipoli campaign was but how brave the soldiers who fought there were.
We have a war memorial in Australia which has on the words of the leader of the army our troops fought at Gallipoli
Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives... You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side now here in this country of ours... you, the mothers, who sent their sons from faraway countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land. They have become our sons as well. - Kemel Ataturk
As a US Military Veteran of both the Cold and Gulf Wars, this Veterans Day, I salute not only the Veterans but those, both American and Allied, currently serving both in and out of the combat zones.
Over my course of service, I lost some friends, and have lost people I knew in the current conflicts across the world.
There is one song I always remember on this day..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FvE97zz5loc
Thank a Veteran today, if it wasn't for them, many of you would be living much different lives now..
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