- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 210
I'm surprized that the organizers of these Peace movements have failed to grasp (yet again) who it is that they should be directing their campaigns against. As with the early 60s and the protest against the Vietnam War, the organizers of today's Peace rallies and marches are focusing on the individual military member as the reason for the world's discord and violence. It didn't work in the 60s and I am assuming it is not going to present a compelling argument today. Quite simply, these present day protesters are forgetting that it is the elected politicians that make the final decision to escalate any situation into an armed conflict. As several people have commented upon, no one wants peace more than a man or woman who has waded knee deep in the blood of their comrades and allies.
I ask these protesters now, where were they when diplomacy was the tool in which we sought to maintain peace? Where were their voices and white poppies then? In all of the crisis and conflicts that our world has faced, where were their white poppies before a single shot/bombing/or tank rolled across a boundary after the "peace" talks failed?
Where were they in their white poppy, critical mass at the voting polls to oust the so called war-mongering politicians? I feel rather than focusing on the political and political will, which is always a much more ardent task to effect change, these Peace movement protesters have sought to take an easier road to stake their claim for peace and that is to attack the armed forces - the very people that are in direct juxtaposition of gaining and maintaining desired peace.
I suspect that in the months that follow Remembrance Day, we will hear little of these white poppies as they will have lost their audiences. Sadly, even as much as Canadians are proud of their vets and fallen, they too are only willing to devote a few days a year to saying so. As the current government has stated, November 11th, is THE day of mourning the fallen, even they will resort to business as usual come Monday when the flags no longer fly at half mast. The peace protesters will have a hard time competing for attention to their cause with the mundane of life we Canadians enjoy thanks to the efforts and sacrifices of those who gave us peace in the first place.
I ask these protesters now, where were they when diplomacy was the tool in which we sought to maintain peace? Where were their voices and white poppies then? In all of the crisis and conflicts that our world has faced, where were their white poppies before a single shot/bombing/or tank rolled across a boundary after the "peace" talks failed?
Where were they in their white poppy, critical mass at the voting polls to oust the so called war-mongering politicians? I feel rather than focusing on the political and political will, which is always a much more ardent task to effect change, these Peace movement protesters have sought to take an easier road to stake their claim for peace and that is to attack the armed forces - the very people that are in direct juxtaposition of gaining and maintaining desired peace.
I suspect that in the months that follow Remembrance Day, we will hear little of these white poppies as they will have lost their audiences. Sadly, even as much as Canadians are proud of their vets and fallen, they too are only willing to devote a few days a year to saying so. As the current government has stated, November 11th, is THE day of mourning the fallen, even they will resort to business as usual come Monday when the flags no longer fly at half mast. The peace protesters will have a hard time competing for attention to their cause with the mundane of life we Canadians enjoy thanks to the efforts and sacrifices of those who gave us peace in the first place.