ChatterBank5 mins ago
Fight Them On The Beaches
WE SHALL fight them on the beaches, we shall fight them in the fields and on the landing grounds, said Churchill in 1939. Unusual use of the word 'we'. I was on Omaha Beach having my leg shot off and I can't remember seeing Winnie anywhere. Perhaps I missed the bit where he said "We shall fight them 50 feet underground in a reinforced concrete bunker."
Answers
The generals are rarely in the front line, they've been there before, Churchill was certainly at Dover in the front-line bunkers under Dover Castle.
20:32 Thu 19th Jul 2012
Someone had to tell them where to go madiba, Winnie got the long straw. Recently we had Tony Blair swaggering around sending our troops to fight a war that we will never win and it has escalated into terrorism here. The collective 'we' is now the 'all in it together' that Dave is now telling us about.
It may ot have been Madiba's own leg that got shot off, stoke
http:// www.god likepro ...m1/m essage1 319670/ pg1
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Actually, Churchill had the habit of leaving the bunker and watching air-raids from the roof-top (!!), to the despair of his bodyguards and staff. He wanted to observe D-Day from HMS Belfast until forced to give up the idea (the King blackmailed him out of it by insisting that if Churchill went, he was going too.)
Churchill had seen more active service than just about any Prime Minister apart from Wellington, and is probably one of the few PMs who can't be sneered at in this context.
Churchill had seen more active service than just about any Prime Minister apart from Wellington, and is probably one of the few PMs who can't be sneered at in this context.
I think he said it in 1940 just prior to the Battle of Britain. It would be uncharitable to stress that at this time "we" could not have been intended to include the USA - it wasn't in the war for another 18 months. Churchill had been a prisoner during the Boer War and his intention never to be taken alive by the Germans has been documented on a number of occasions. The final passage of the quoted speech indicates that he saw the "we" as being very much the British people on their own, with the Empire and the USA being left to carry on the (as he saw it necessary and inevitable) fight. - "...even if, which I do not for a moment believe, this Island or a large part of it were subjugated and starving, then our Empire beyond the seas, armed and guarded by the British Fleet, would carry on the struggle, until, in God’s good time, the New World, with all its power and might, steps forth to the rescue and the liberation of the old.”
Surely, common sense would tell you that "we" refers to Britain rather than just you and Mr Churchill? It means that everyone will do their bit to help. For some, it was making tactical decisions, for other it was the physical act of fighting.
Alan Turing helped crack the Enigma code but didn't do any actual fighting but was an enormous help to the war effort.
Alan Turing helped crack the Enigma code but didn't do any actual fighting but was an enormous help to the war effort.