Quote:
Originally Posted by Skybird
Then do some reasonable assumptions, calculations, and estimations on basis of past real-world tests.
Putting that into a visible image maybe would help in that it stays like that: that these things not only have not happened, but also will not happen. We are very easy these days in just ignoring these very realistic possibilities, and softening up our policies and making unrealistic assumptions. What makes these things more likely. Monuments for WWII do not help us in preventing them. And we cannot expect the now young that a long forgotten war still is as present for them and still has the same meaning for them as it has for those who had lived at that time.
I have criticised the cult about the Auschwitz remembrance for the same reason. People sit and eat beside the entrance to the compound. And they will drink a coffee with milk and sugar while watching that digital video about Warsaw. And they will find it an exciting evening spend at the cinemas next time a warmovie is shown.
We are so fixiated on staring back into history that we miss to prevent new calamities being done in the present. WWII we could not have prevented, none of us, we all are too young. The genocide in Darfhur for example is something that takes place during our lives. That we could have tried to influence for the better. (Just an example).
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The problem comes when people forget the lessons that should have been learnt after that war, and I think many people are forgetting now. I agree that a lot of people do focus on WWII, I personally think that it would be also good to have a similar thing on Ypres or down the front line. There was a film not so long ago that featured a film taken from an airship which flew across many of the old battlefields in 1919 when the devastation was still quite fresh. It was rather chilling to view.
In two years time it will be a hundred years since that war began, and despite our annual remembrance event I wonder how many people outside of historians and those interested in the era actually pay it much attention.
There's a reason that there are more museums for the First and Second World Wars than there is for the Korean war or Falklands war, and that's the sheer size and scope of them.
Should there be a 'Danger Muslims Ahead' museum? Perhaps, but would it do anything other than encourage people to kill each other more? No, not really.