The Canadian Red Ensign

The Canadian Red Ensign

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

We Have Already Forgotten Them

 Although the date of Remembrance Day, November 11th, is the anniversary of the armistice that brought the First World War to an end, it is the fallen from both World Wars, or World War Parts I and II if one views it as a single conflict with an intermission, whom we remember.   The phrase that traditionally expresses the purpose of the day is "lest we forget".   It is evident from everything that has been happening this year, however, that we have already forgotten.

 

When from 1914 to 1918 and again from 1939 to 1945, young men throughout the Dominion of Canada and the other realms of the British Commonwealth heard and answered the call to take up arms and do their duty for King, Country, and Empire what was it they were fighting for, that they were willing to, and in so many instances did, make the ultimate sacrifice of their very lives for?

 

If we could put that question to the fallen soldiers of both conflicts, those who fought in the First World War would most likely give their answer in the language of the older values of honour and loyalty.   Those who fought in the Second World War would probably be more likely to just give the simple answer of their country.   If pressed as to what they understand by their country, they might provide a fuller answer that includes such things as their home, family, friends, neighbours, traditions and institutions and shared way of life.   If we were to press them even further by asking the follow-up question of what they perceived to be the nature of the threat to their country, chances are the answer we would receive would be that their country’s very freedom was at stake.


In the German speaking lands, the devastation that resulted from both the First World War and punitive measures imposed by the victorious Allies as well as the constitutional vacuum created by the foolish decision, at the insistence of the liberal Democrat American President who wanted the war to be about making the world “safe for democracy”, to drive the reigning Hohenzollern (Prussian) and Hapsburg (Austrian) monarchs from their thrones, had combined to create the conditions whereby the leader of a then-obscure nationalist and socialist party, a bitter veteran of the first war with a mesmerizing, charismatic personality and the command of a private army of street thugs, rose to the chancellorship of the Weimar Republic.    He then manipulated the Reichstag into giving him the emergency powers to govern as a dictator.   His regime, like that which the Bolsheviks had established when they seized control of Russia and created the Soviet Union, was a totalitarian one, that is to say, a regime in which the state demands the full allegiance of those it governs, permits no competition to its claims on their loyalty and obedience whether from parties other than the governing party or from traditional social institutions such as the family and the church, and asserts total control over every aspect of the lives of the governed, recognizing no distinction between private and public.   Like the Soviet regime, Hitler’s governed by fear, employing secret police and tribunals, a snitch culture that encouraged people to inform on their family, friends, and neighbours, and other methods of state terrorism.  

 

As bad as all of this was in itself, it was not it per se which caused people in other countries to fear for their own freedom.   It was the way in which Hitler kept expanding his Third Reich.   Rejecting the restrictions imposed upon Germany at Versailles, he began rebuilding the country’s military machine upon assuming power and made known his intent of bringing back all of the German-speaking peoples in lands stripped from Germany at the end of the first war.   It was clear, however, that he would not be satisfied with restoring Germany to the status quo ante.   In 1938 he achieved the Anschluß (annexation) of his birth country of Austria, which had not been a part of the previous Germany which Bismarck had united under the Prussian monarchy.    Then he laid claim to the Sudetenland, a land populated by Germans which had previously been the Bohemian Kingdom under the Austria-Hungarian Empire but which had become part of Czechoslovakia after World War I.  When Britain and France opposed his expansionism, he agreed to talks and the Munich Agreement was the result, which quickly embarrassed the governments of Prime Ministers Neville Chamberlain and Édouard Daladier.  They had agreed to the “return” of the Sudetenland, thinking they had won “peace in our time”, a phrase Chamberlain borrowed from the Daily Office in the Book of Common Prayer, but Hitler just turned around carried out what had been his intention all along, the conquest of all of Czechoslovakia.    Needless to say, Hitler had no intention of stopping with Czechoslovakia and by the time he was pushing Germany’s quite legitimate claim for the return of Danzig as an obvious means of achieving the end of the conquest of all of Poland, and forging an alliance with his arch-nemesis, Stalin’s rival totalitarian regime in Russia, as a preliminary step for said conquest, it was clear that no sane person could trust his word with regards to limits on his future conquering ambitions.   So it was that when the invasion of Poland led to the renewal of the larger conflict, and the lads of the Commonwealth Realms again took up arms to fight alongside Mother Britain, it was with the conviction that the freedom they so highly valued was in peril.   

 

Although we of the present day have grown up hearing and seeing the words “lest we forget” everywhere around this time of year and reciting the words “we will remember them” or the common variation “we shall remember them” in the Ode to Remembrance taken from the fourth stanza of Laurence Binyon’s “For the Fallen” in Remembrance Day services it is quite evident that we have forgotten them.

 

Since March, we have allowed the lying snakes of the print, broadcast, and electronic media to frighten us with a virus, the danger of which they have magnified beyond anything that the facts, even those available at the time the World Health Organization declared a pandemic, certainly those which have since accumulated, support.   Out of that fear, we have allowed our governments to declare states of emergency and award themselves emergency powers, which they have then handed over to their chief public health officers, essentially making them dictators.   We have tolerated them taking away our freedom to worship.  We have tolerated them taking away our freedom to meet with our friends, family, and other loved ones.   We have tolerated them taking away our freedom of speech.   This was a growing problem here in Canada long before the coronavirus, mostly because of left-wing crackpots who have deluded themselves into thinking that by silencing people whose speech expresses ideas that don’t conform to their narrow view of what is acceptable to be thought on matters such as race, sex, and religion they are “fighting Nazis” just as our soldiers did in the Second World War.   Now it has gotten worse as our governments have encouraged the suppression of ideas and information which conflict with those coming from the public health officials in the name of public safety.  

 

The politicians and dictatorial doctors who have trampled all over our basic rights and freedoms have co-opted the language of war and twisted it to their own purposes.   We are fighting a war against the coronavirus, they tell us, and we all need to do our part and make sacrifices for the common effort.   Those who fought in the real World Wars, however, sacrificed their lives as individuals in the common effort to protect the rights and freedoms of everyone else.   What our politicians and doctors are asking us to do, is to sacrifice the rights and freedoms of everyone else – for if you support lockdown measures, social distancing, mask mandates, the closing of churches and synagogues, and the Nazi-like snitch culture that comes with all of these things, it is not just your own rights and freedoms you are sacrificing but all those of your family, friends, neighbours, and countrymen as well – out of our fear of dying from COVID-19.

 

On Tuesday, November 10, our premier in the province of Manitoba, Brian Pallister, and his chief public health officer, Brent Roussin, once again failing to understand that since repeated previous restriction increases coupled with bullying and threats to the public failed to produce the desired result more of the same is not likely to achieve it, announced that they were placing the entire province back into lockdown – clampdown they are calling it now – with the strictest restrictions we have seen yet, except that the schools will stay open this time, beginning on Thursday and lasting for at least four weeks.   They wore poppies as they told us this, impervious to any sense of the irony that they were taking away from us, that for which those whom those poppies represent died.   Red armbands might have been more appropriate for the occasion.

 

We have forgotten those who died for our freedoms.   Worse, we have failed to keep faith with them, and are giving up in irrational fear, everything they thought it worth the ultimate sacrifice to bequeath to us.

 

God Save the Queen

May God have mercy upon us all.

 


3 comments:

  1. Yeah.

    I didn't wear a poppy or observe two minutes' silence this year; my heart wasn't in it.

    Perhaps one day I may feel otherwise once again, but maybe not until things change greatly for the better.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I observed the silence on Remembrance Sunday (in the Anglican Church this is the Sunday closest to the 11th). I had to do so at home as only livestream was available for the service.

      I hadn't been able to get a new poppy this year. Normally I can pick them up at Tim Horton's but the province closed all the dining rooms at the end of October.

      Delete
  2. Watching the number of icons being smashed in this iconoclastic year, we who love our icons are justified in our lament. I placed my poppy on the grave of a Boer War/World War 1 veteran at 11 a.m. b/c the commemoration at our local cenotaph was moved to the Legion and by invitation only.

    Our forefathers didn't fight so that civilization and their own culture could be erased by an ungrateful and sanctimonious progeny.

    ReplyDelete