Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Ott Poppies?
114 Answers
Yes I know that 11/11/2018 marks the centenary of WW1 but why the OTT appearance of giant poppies everywhere - on bus-stops, whole villages etc etc. Do we recognise the Battle of Waterloo and countless others? Answer "no". War is never the solution to world problems as has many times since been witnessed.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Really? It’s the one hundred year anniversary, it deserves to be commemorated. I’m not big on this sort of thing but even I can see why it’s being done. I’ve been out in our village to look at the decorations with some of my children (because they wanted to). My own great grandfather fought at Paschendale and only died in 1999, he still has living grand children - he can’t be the only one. It shows respect and gratitude.
I’m guessing you won’t like the cycling and rugby jerseys I wear....
https:/ /poppys hirt.co m
https:/ /www.lo vell-ru gby.co. uk/Rugb y-Shirt s/Samur ai/Army -Rugby- Union-P oppy-Ap peal-S- or-S-Ru gby-Shi rt-Whit e-or-Re d-or-Bl ack/siz e_L?gcl id=Cj0K CQjwjvX eBRDDAR IsAC38T P42kNG- iZF4l3o OTdwAUx WW2ADPD 4bzSokg 6UFo-40 uo6Ihl2 5i1EsaA vZuEALw _wcB
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Wouldn't have liked the Villa's shirts last night then.
https:/ /www.fa cebook. com/avf coffici al/vide os/9011 5231674 8656/
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War may not be a solution, Diddly, but we must continue to say thank you to those who thought it was the war to end wars and would give those to come after them a better life at the cost of their own ...x
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/a v/uk-en gland-t yne-460 72969/l anchest er-resi dents-a dorn-vi llage-i n-4000- ceramic -poppie s
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We have had crochet and knitted ones other years but this year round me they have been made from the bottoms of plastic water and pop bottles and planted on all the local roundabouts and some of the verges. The effect is stunning and I have nothing but admiration for the people who have worked so hard to make so many. I don't consider it OTT at all. To my mind, poppies say nothing about the futility or otherwise of war, they are a way of registering our gratitude and respect for those who fought for our freedom.
Most wars (with the exception of WW2) are not a simple 'fight to save our country' - indeed they were most often mainly about the patriarchy and aristocracy settling scores in expansionist adventures - but the people who fought and died in those wars were no part of that.
We should respect and applaud their heroism and sacrifice, even if we deplore the actions which placed them in that situation - the annual Poppy displays around Remembrance Sunday are an entirely appropriate way of honouring them.
We should respect and applaud their heroism and sacrifice, even if we deplore the actions which placed them in that situation - the annual Poppy displays around Remembrance Sunday are an entirely appropriate way of honouring them.
Well said, jakep.
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A street a couple of miles from me.
https:/ /www.bi rmingha mmail.c o.uk/bl ack-cou ntry/wa lsall-s treet-t ransfor med-hug e-poppy -153600 22
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Did they voluntarily "give their lives" - or did they go into combat as the odds against being killed were marginally better because if they didn't then their own side would definitely shoot them.
The whole charade is to glorify the "sacrifice" in order to encourage the lower classes to do it again if necessary.
And don't get me going about the hypocrisy of the Royal Family laying wreaths on the cenotaph when WW1 was a result of their ancestor's spat.
In WW2, my father spent several years fighting his way across the Western Desert and then across the Med and up through Italy where he was killed - only to be labelled by one of the Aristocracy as a D-Day Dodger. That perhaps helps to explain my views on the matter.
The whole charade is to glorify the "sacrifice" in order to encourage the lower classes to do it again if necessary.
And don't get me going about the hypocrisy of the Royal Family laying wreaths on the cenotaph when WW1 was a result of their ancestor's spat.
In WW2, my father spent several years fighting his way across the Western Desert and then across the Med and up through Italy where he was killed - only to be labelled by one of the Aristocracy as a D-Day Dodger. That perhaps helps to explain my views on the matter.
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