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geo said:The poppies colour was of no matter.....
Once our fallen had bled over them, they were red - forevermore......
I think that really sums it up.
Cheers.
geo said:The poppies colour was of no matter.....
Once our fallen had bled over them, they were red - forevermore......
Stoker said:I know this is a small segment that spouts this garbage, but the fact that it comes from young people and they really believe this stuff leaves me to think what's in store for our country in 20 or 30 years.
jeffb said:There were people saying this similar to what you've quoted here even when the events were occurring. I don't think you need to worry about today's youth though. There are plenty of young soldiers serving today that I think are more representative of the leaders of tomorrow then the few comments on some facebook group.
Stoker said:I know but it still pisses me off that people can really think that way. I guess serving ones country protect the freedom of speech these morons enjoy even though we might not like it.
Stoker said:This facebook page was brought to my attention called the "White Poppy for Peace". This is some of the "stuff" that is being said.
That they complain over lost revenues for their clubs (in which they celebrate the wondrous accomplishments of the Ku Klux Klan, as we recently found out) is, to me, simply a further sign of their massive egos. As such I don't regard it as valid whatsoever.
Good2Golf said:Yes.
To be honest, it doesn't bother me that much; I just apply a little statistical analysis and figure people like those quoted above are a "minus 10-sigma" type. The benefit to actually serving one's country and its people and preserving our values and assisting those of other nations far outweighs someone's myopic view of past conflict.
Regards
G2G
Stoker said:This facebook page was brought to my attention called the "White Poppy for Peace". This is some of the "stuff" that is being said.
<snip>
I know this is a small segment that spouts this garbage, but the fact that it comes from young people and they really believe this stuff leaves me to think what's in store for our country in 20 or 30 years.
mariomike said:More "stuff":
"Remembrance Day is a SCAM !":
http://www.billcasselman.com/holidays/remembrance_day__a_scam.htm
jeffb said:There were people saying this similar to what you've quoted here even when the events were occurring. I don't think you need to worry about today's youth though. There are plenty of young soldiers serving today that I think are more representative of the leaders of tomorrow then the few comments on some facebook group.
"Any man who is under 30, and is not a liberal, has not heart; and any man who is over 30, and is not a conservative, has no brains." (Sir Winston Churchill, 1874-1965)
Just to clear things up. Calling people who are anti-war, or protestors, or a white poppy wearer a hippie, is as good an argument as them calling YOU a conservative, redneck, trigger happy, gun freak. You're going to have to remember that to fight thier logic, you're going to have to use more than the same insulting strategies they are using. Generalizations and steriotyping won't get your point across, and using such typical "conservative right" language puts you on the same level as them.
Best we forget the Oprah-ization of Remembrance Day
CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Nov. 12, 2010
It was the night before Remembrance Day, at the True Patriot Love dinner in Toronto, that it all became too much for me and I had enough.
During the course of the speeches – there were many – someone referred to the members of the audience as heroes for their support at this event, and for soldiers generally.
I can’t remember now who said it, but I almost gagged: The currency is indeed cheapened when plonking down $750 a plate, or plonking down not a sou but being the happy recipient of corporate largesse and being invited to sit at your company’s table, as I was, qualifies as heroic.
I slipped out shortly afterward, before the main event speakers, just as on Nov. 11 itself, I left the city’s annual ceremony at Old City Hall early.
I can’t remember ever before missing a minute of a Remembrance Day service, and I always go and always have done.
I don’t for a minute doubt the worthiness of that dinner, which raised $2.4-million last year for the Military Families Fund created by former chief of the defence staff Rick Hillier.
I’m not calling anyone’s noble motives into question.
I’m just weary of it. When I was trying to explain all this to my friend Mary, whose brother is a serving soldier with the reserves and a friend of mine, she said, “Oh, you mean the Oprah-ization of Remembrance Day?” And that is it exactly.
As I fell asleep on Nov. 10, the last thing I heard was a Tim Horton’s commercial for Remembrance Day; this time it wasn’t the words that grated, but the wretched syrupy music. When I turned on the tube on Nov. 11, it was inexplicably tuned to a station carrying the Live with Regis and Kelly show; I believe it was Mr. Philbin who said, and I’m operating on memory here, “I think everyone should thank a veteran today.” I turned it off, lest I hear him tell Americans also to hug their veterans.
For virtually the entire month, and I know I’m not alone, I’ve been the recipient of a barrage of unsolicited Remembrance Day poems (mostly dreadful), songs (ditto), personal memoirs (ditto) and videos and speeches, most delivered in that heavy, uber-serious voice broadcasters affect when they want the viewer to pay attention.
Such overweening sadness, and certainly such pretentiousness, is not my experience of soldiers, modern or old, or even of the families of the fallen.
My memories of my time as an embedded reporter with the 1st Battalion Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry and The Royal Canadian Regiment 1st Battalion in Kandahar are of young men and women with a sense of purpose I envied, straight shooters always, who rarely spoke the hyperpatriotic language so in fashion now.
From commanding officer to lowly private, they were perfectly clear that they fought for one another and the well-being of their unit, whether company or platoon. They were funny, bright, profane, with an overdeveloped sense of responsibility that seemed to do little to temper a ribald, even bleak, humour and a tangible sense of well-being, odd as that may sound.
When one of their own was killed or wounded, they grieved hard and fast, and then got on with the job. Yet they never seemed even to try to do what in the modern lexicon is known as “moving on” or “getting on” with their lives. They spoke often of the dead, named bases and peaks and rocks for them, and when they got home to Canada, visited the families of their fallen, told them as much or as little as they wanted to know, and as often as possible, got ragingly drunk.
Perhaps because combat, as Sebastian Junger writes in his wonderful new book War, is so insanely exciting, because it strips away anything extraneous and imbues the trivial with huge importance (Mr. Junger’s illustration is the soldier with loose laces, who can’t be counted on to keep his feet when it matters and thus puts other men’s lives at risk), because colours are brighter and more stark, they were as often as not joyous.
They had nothing but disdain and suspicion, as did my late father (a navigator with the Royal Canadian Air Force during the Second World War) and those of his generation I met, for the military bureaucracy, for the plethora of paper-pushers at defence headquarters and for the endless B.S. and stupid rules that no other organization can perfect like an army can.
I cannot help but imagine that as glad as they might be for civilian Canada’s current devotion to “supporting the troops” – if only because it is far less unpleasant than the dark days of the Canadian Forces when soldiers occasionally would be spit upon – they would have little stomach for the witless sappiness that has been in the air all week.
If corporate Canada really wanted to show its appreciation for soldiers, companies could hire more of them when they leave the army: All any soldier really learns is how to lead, how to care more for his fellows than he does for himself. Surely the world can use a little more of that.
And if you really must say thanks to a veteran, send him over a damn drink and shut up.
National Post, 9 Nov 11Quebec’s first white poppy campaign is being heralded as a major success by organizers, but it has generated some backlash from those who say the traditional poppy is an important symbol of remembrance that should not be trifled with.
The white poppy, modelled after the red version that adorns the lapels of millions of Canadians each November, was first produced by Britain’s Co-operative Women’s Guild in 1933. The flower is promoted as a symbol of peace, and according to Britain’s Peace Pledge Union, “was not intended as an insult to those who died in the First World War.”
The pins have been sold in other Canadian provinces in the past, but 2011 marks the first time an official white poppy campaign has been organized in Quebec. The group behind the initiative, the Collectif Échec à la guerre, is an anti-war organization that promotes the non-violent resolution of conflict.
(....)
Several callers to a CBC Radio phone-in program last week expressed their discomfort with the idea of a different breed of poppy. The Royal Canadian Legion’s Quebec Command is being even more forthright in their opposition.
“We’re against it,” said Margot Arsenault, the Legion’s provincial president. “The poppy is the trademark of the Royal Canadian Legion and should not be used by any other association.”
The Royal Canadian Legion distributes 18 million red poppies each year as a reminder of the sacrifice of the 117,000 Canadians who died in the two world wars, the Korean War and other conflicts.
Ms. Arsenault, whose father was a veteran, said the traditional poppy holds a deep symbolic meaning for the average Canadian, and should not be modified in any way to promote a different cause.
“The red poppy already stands for peace,” she added. “(The campaign organizers) are saying they’re using this white poppy to promote peace, but nobody wants war. We’re very fortunate to live in a country where there isn’t war.”
The fact the white poppies are being sold at the same time as the annual red poppy campaign is another reason the Legion opposes it, Ms. Arsenault said ....
A pacifist campaign to distribute white poppy pins in the week leading up to Remembrance Day is getting under the veterans affairs minister’s skin.
“It really does show a total lack of respect for what, in fact, Remembrance Day stands for,” Julian Fantino said Tuesday. “And to try and intervene in this fashion, I think, is totally disrespectful, and I would suspect that most reasonable Canadians would see it that way.”
Fantino’s comments come a day after young activists with the left-wing Rideau Institute unveiled pins bearing the slogan “I Remember for Peace” at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.
The University of Ottawa’s Celyn Dufay said the pins would be distributed to those who “don’t want to celebrate war.”
Conservative MP Ted Opitz, a former army reservist, joined Fantino’s charge, calling on the Liberals and NDP to denounce the “ideological extremists” behind the white poppy pins.
New Democrat MP Alexandre Boulerice shrugged off Optiz’s call.
“I never saw those buttons before, and I don’t know,” said Boulerice, who created a firestorm of controversy last April for a blog post that trashed the First World War as a capitalist conflict fought “on the backs of the workers and peasants.”
Liberal veterans affairs critic Jim Karygiannis, however, said the students distributing the pins have offended veterans.
“They made their sacrifices in blood, and for us to disrespect them, I think the young individuals should really reconsider what they’re doing and get a reality check,” he said.