Canary writes:
//I well remember the slow fading after the Forties and Fifties until the whole affair became almost completely absent from media (and to a large extent public) attention.// well it clearly didnt fade from the memories of the combattants - but I remember the media sneering about it, in the usual marxist and anti-imperial manner. The Great War ( beeb tv 1964) was incredibly popular ( along with All Our Yesterdays with Brian Inglis). This made Max Hastings' reputation. A week ago he was re-writing that losing 700 000 men dead wasnt that much .....
//Then along came Falklands and Thatcher and it all began to ramp up again until reaching last year's obsessive levels (this year is different, being the centenary).// - well one followed the other but does that mean one caused the other ? well, the last case of smallpox in England was observed in 1976 ( I was a contact ) and after that Remembrance Days were more popular but I dont ascribe one to the other. Bliar was certain it should be forgotten and moved the commemoration to a Sunday - it was moved back not by demand whipped up by the media but by the people themselves. - a good example of the people "bucking their leaders"
//I cannot avoid thinking it is all an Establishment Initiative "pour encourager les autres".// This falls down on the media being tools of the Establishment. After a century of the marxist beeb, I just dont think so. Secondly - the idea of shooting someone to encourage the others ( Voltaire's maxim on the execution of Admiral Byng for losing Minorca 1706) - doesnt work. "Join up and we will shoot you" is not a good recruiting maxim. I could be wrong. The executions for desertion 1914 were very unpopular and were commuted later on. Men did NOT join up in 1943 because the Japanese were maltreating the POWs
//No doubt I will be vilified for such an opinion.//
No I have tried to analyse each mis-statement and show why it is obviously wrong.