Was there a real Lord Darlington on whom this is based?
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choatelodge — 17 years ago(June 07, 2008 09:36 PM)
Friend, you are truly all over the map and your increasingly hostile patter makes it evident that you are incapable of civil and intelligent discussion, therefor you are dismissed.
I regret the time I have wasted on this thread. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(February 17, 2010 12:17 PM)
It really is unfair to judge appeasement people as they had no idea what was going to come out of it."
It really is unfair to judge Iraq Invasion people as they had no idea what was going to come out of it.
It really is unfair to judge pro-Stalin people as they had no idea what was going to come out of it.
It really is unfair to judge "don'trepair-the-New-Orleans-levees" people as they had no idea what was going to come out of it.
The OP has a point. Only the first statement is justified. The world was unaware of the kinds of horror that a totalitarian system may perpetrate. Totalitarianism, ideologically speaking, was a post WWI phenomenon. Mussolini was the FIRST totalitarian dictator. After the world learned of the Nazi excesses, the excuse of ignorance is no longer valid and I don't think that later appeasers can justifiably claim ignorance. And of course the New Orleans situation was and REMAINS inexcuseable because it was EMIMNANTLY predictable. Poor levees led to the mess; so what did the city do? Spent MILLIONS rebuilding the Super Dome! But the appeasers were not totally culpable. I mean at the time, signing off on Czechloslovakia did not automatically equal Buchenwald and Treblinka. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 02, 2010 11:50 AM)
Churchill and Orwell, to mention two,actually read Mein Kampf, and they predicted what would happen.
Animal Farm (1947) and 1984 (1949) were writen AFTER WWII.
Most people who read "Mine Kampf" disregarded the idea of genecide as Hitlerian hyperbole. It had NEVER happened as a government policy before. The very fact that he didn't keep it SECRET worked against people taking it seriously. I agree that folks should have seen Hitler's agressive acts as a threat, but no one in the 30's, including Churchill, warned that Hitler was planning the deaths of millions of Jews. Not even the Jews, who saw the violence close up and personal never expected the Holocaust. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 05, 2010 08:14 AM)
I'm talking about WWII. The whole mess. It's amazing how people can't put aside hindsight. Was EVERY politcal tract to be taken seriously? Was every threat ever made by anyone fulfilled? Did no one ever bluff? Given our hindsight would Hitler have attacked the USSR? Would Japan have bombed Pearl Harbor? Would Saddam have barred UN inspection teams? It's easy to be wise AFTER THE FACT.The truth is, that Hitler could have been merely restoring Germany's territory and prestige. That's what most GERMANS believed. So don't act like standing up to Hitler was a complete no-brainer. In fact Hitler was fully prepared to go to war over Czechoslovakia. We won the war that started in Poland. Would the Allies have prevailed in this earlier war? Would you risk it?
BTW this "lesson learned" about appeasement, was used to support the idea of the "Domino Theory". Did the escalation of the Vietnam War prevent India from going Communist? It sure didn't help Cambodia. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 06, 2010 03:31 PM)
Some people got it right, for the right reasons. Meanwhile, lots of people got it wrong, in large part because of a biased judgement. Hitlers intent was not a "no-brainer", it was a good-brainer. Just like the domino theory, just like Iraqs WMD, just like the financial collapse. Some people have a track record of getting stuff right a lot more than others, and it's not chance.
I kinda agree with this statement, but I don't think that the fact that "some people got it right" is a blanket indictment against everyone who didn't. Even a stopped clock is right twice a day. SOMEBODY had to figure appeasementb was bad. Check out Churchill's judgement about Galipolli and his idea to attack " the soft underbelly of Europe " instead of an invasion of the continent. Even he had to admit afterwards "it turned out to be a tought old gut." And MacArthur, who was so right about the Inchon invasion and so wrong about Chinese intervention in Korea. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 08, 2010 07:14 AM)
Yup. All I'm saying that is that every "appeaser" was not a fool, like Chamberlain (or Darlington). Some had what they felt were good reasons to give Hitler what he wanted. (At least for the time being). The Brits were in a woeful state of preparedness. I don't think 10 years of appeasement would have helped the French. It was their state of mind.
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MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 08, 2010 07:57 AM)
Danish? Anyway the French get it because they had the largest army in the world at the time, their political leadership was so irresolute,and their tactics were entirely faulty. The French had MORE tanks than the Wehrmacht and even BETTER tanks as well. They insisted on expending them in "penny packets" as infantry support vehicles. Look what the Finns did to Stalin. The French shoulda held out for more than 6 WEEKS! It was like they sent a Maiter'D to the border."Table for 1.5 million? Goosestep right this way please."
The Benelux nations and Denmark, had no chance of stopping Hitler. The French utterly failed. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 08, 2010 09:23 AM)
"But serious historians ultimately agree that the primary factor was tactics;"
True enuff. But wars are seldom won or lost entirely on the battlefield.
Witness Vietnam. The US won every major battle. Communists just wouldn't EVER give up. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 10, 2010 07:39 AM)
Well my friend, in my case, I don't think of the French as fags et al. My problem with the French has been EARNED by them. Every step of the way. French insistance on assigning war guilt and huge reparations on Germany, gave Hitler ample fuel for exhorting the Germans to follow an aggressive foriegn policy in Europe. There is evidence that the French held back some of the aid they were given and effort against Germany in order to have the ability to reclaim their colonial empire after the war. Basically, France extorted the US to support and supply their colonial war in Indo-China. They refused to join NATO unless this aid was given. Since Germany was not yet a member, NATO would have been still-born at it's inception w/o the support of a powerful, large nation on the continent. In other words France was the only country that could support a credible NATO military presence at the time. The US had to give in.
After the French made a mess of the situation, the US inherited an agressive and now hostile (due to US) aid) situation in Vietnam. Further American misunderstanding of the problem led to escalation of this destructive, pointless war. In the mid 60's Charles the nose took France OUT of NATO as a full participant in order to peddle his idiotic "3rd force" farce. Americans who have visited France are treated with extreme rudeness and contempt. And the French reaction to Euro-Disney filled with ridiculous, (given the subject ;an AMUSEMENT PARK!) rancor and jingoism. The French even carped that we violated French airspace when Regan punished Ghadaffi in the 80's.
Every time the US tries to coax European help in fighting a mutal threat, there is France, arguing the other way. Almost always. So, my attitude is absolutely not founded on a ridiculous idea of French homosexuality. It is based on what I percieve as French ingratitude, rudeness, duplicity, obstinacy, arrogance and ineptitude. -
MrPie7 — 16 years ago(March 10, 2010 08:37 AM)
The typical European response is indifference, mingled with a patronizing dissmissal of any danger or imperative to act, when the US calls for multi-lateral action. The obverse is to blame the US for "doing nothing". Thus, we were criticized for both Ruwanda AND Somalia!