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Are We *ever* Going To Get Over Wwii ?

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jake-the-peg | 11:21 Wed 08th May 2013 | News
208 Answers
Yet another commemoration - this time 70 years of the Atlantic campaign

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-22434753

Given that WWII lasted about 5 years by the time you've commemorated a VE day anniversary it seems time to start celebrating anothe anniversary of the start of the War!

I hear the cries of 'ingrate' already and patriotic chests puffing up like pidgeons - but WWI was just as formative to those who fought in it and I don't recall continual commemorations of that from my childhood.

Why are we so obsessed with WWII and are we ever going to get over it?
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Well put jim

your post of 10.19 gives a clear and objective analysis of the scale of the Soviet war with Germany and its context

As has been stated, the inter-dependencies of contribution by various parties in WW2 are complex and fascinating
Jake's just wanting to have another moan about what he perceives as the glorification of war Jim. You're not really supposed to spoil it by actually answering the question with a sensible and objective analysis.

Hopefully that'll be it until the poppies go on sale.
I'm dying to know what svejk did for the rest of WW1 :-)
Didn't he become a Soviet Commissar, Ichi? Or maybe that was Hasek.
Hasek died with Svejk, alas!
Surely not. The "good soldier" ended up being taken prisoner by his own side, didn't he, but not shot?
Semi-autobiographical. Seem to remember being disappointed but it was a long time ago. I must read it again.
http://www.faber.co.uk/catalog/the-red-commissar/9780571260492
"Surely not. The "good soldier" ended up being taken prisoner by his own side, didn't he, but not shot? "

What I meant was that when Hasek died, so did the character of Svejk, in mid-flow, alas.

As for Hasek being a "red commissar" I think that was an ironic characterisation of himself in one of his stories. He would have been the last person to actually be one (especially as he wasn't Soviet)

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