I was thinking in sort of an off-hand way the other day when I saw someone comment in regard to a couple of Doctor Who episodes (sorry, can't remember which of you it was) about how Britain is never going to get over WWII, that better that then... well, the US. I feel sometimes, that all we can remember is the Cold War that came after and our paranoia. Everyone is out to get us! If we approached the global threat of terrorism through the lends of WWII instead of through the lens of the Cold War, would we be behaving better? Would Gitmo be closed? Would we stop trading civil liberties for a false-sense of security? I don't know, but over here, I think we could use a lot more WWII memories and a lot fewer Cold War ones.
I was thinking in sort of an off-hand way the other day when I saw someone comment in regard to a couple of Doctor Who episodes (sorry, can't remember which of you it was) about how Britain is never going to get over WWII, that better that then... well, the US. I feel sometimes, that all we can remember is the Cold War that came after and our paranoia. Everyone is out to get us! If we approached the global threat of terrorism through the lends of WWII instead of through the lens of the Cold War, would we be behaving better? Would Gitmo be closed? Would we stop trading civil liberties for a false-sense of security? I don't know, but over here, I think we could use a lot more WWII memories and a lot fewer Cold War ones.
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Date: 2010-01-31 01:44 am (UTC)Now that I live in the UK, I see the scars on cities like Liverpool and think, yes, they may never really heal. Liverpool was only second to London in the amount of bombing it sustained, but you don't hear about it in the same way you do the Blitz. My (British) husband is far from patriotic, but his sense of what his country went through runs surprisingly deep. We visited the WWII memorial in DC once and he was visibly upset that its dates are only 1941-45. He understands the historical reasons for it, but he felt as if that had erased the trauma of everything that had happened in the 2 years before Pearl Harbour and denied the sacrifices made by those who fought and died in that time. His vehemence shocked me, but I could only agree.
As for attitudes now...the 'Spirit of Blitz' where people pull together and get on with it, does still exist and comes out occasionally. Unfortunately the current government seems in as just as much a hurry to threaten or remove civil liberties as the Bush administration was (though opposition to this is vocal and some measures, like attempting to hold terror suspects for up to 42 days, have been defeated). And you know that when the only political parties referencing British history, albeit *extremely* selectively, are the far-right ones, there are Problems.