Shouldn't such a day be one where we commemorate how Australia and New Zealand are committed to help each other out no matter what comes?
Instead it has become perverted into celebration and glorification of a war that is the antithesis of anything good or heroic: Gallipoli.
Enormous numbers of kids got sent to the wrong beach to invade a country that had nothing to do with us in order to provide a diversion for the British who were not even really using it. The British command were so unconcerned that they didn't bother to see if it was the right place. The Australian command were so conditioned to jump when ordered to do so by their lords and masters that none of them seemed to question it. The kids who were the cannon fodder, who were slaughtered there, just blindly went to their doom.
Those who were the chain of command were such moral cowards that they didn't question the orders. They didn't ask "how does murdering hundreds of kids help anyone here?" They were apparently so lacking in understanding that they couldn't see that you can't invade from the foot of cliffs topped by machine guns -- morons!
What gets me most is that this appalling waste of life was carried out in the service of something almost evil: we were attempting to invade another country. Nobody has given me any reason why we would have been justified in invading Turkey at that point. (There probably was a reason, but given all the other stuff-ups of the situation, I don't have a lot of confidence that it would be a good reason.)
Gallipoli should be remembered as something that should never be repeated. It should be written large as why war is such a terrible mistake: unquestioned obedience to moronic commands, massive loss of life in the pursuit of a nasty error.
I think Gallipoli has been built up into a hero thing precisely because those in command can't bear to have people think about the massive stupidity that it really represents.
The worst part of it all is all the kids who were murdered, who should have been leading happy lives back home falling in love and living lives their parents could be truly proud of.
Instead it has become perverted into celebration and glorification of a war that is the antithesis of anything good or heroic: Gallipoli.
Enormous numbers of kids got sent to the wrong beach to invade a country that had nothing to do with us in order to provide a diversion for the British who were not even really using it. The British command were so unconcerned that they didn't bother to see if it was the right place. The Australian command were so conditioned to jump when ordered to do so by their lords and masters that none of them seemed to question it. The kids who were the cannon fodder, who were slaughtered there, just blindly went to their doom.
Those who were the chain of command were such moral cowards that they didn't question the orders. They didn't ask "how does murdering hundreds of kids help anyone here?" They were apparently so lacking in understanding that they couldn't see that you can't invade from the foot of cliffs topped by machine guns -- morons!
What gets me most is that this appalling waste of life was carried out in the service of something almost evil: we were attempting to invade another country. Nobody has given me any reason why we would have been justified in invading Turkey at that point. (There probably was a reason, but given all the other stuff-ups of the situation, I don't have a lot of confidence that it would be a good reason.)
Gallipoli should be remembered as something that should never be repeated. It should be written large as why war is such a terrible mistake: unquestioned obedience to moronic commands, massive loss of life in the pursuit of a nasty error.
I think Gallipoli has been built up into a hero thing precisely because those in command can't bear to have people think about the massive stupidity that it really represents.
The worst part of it all is all the kids who were murdered, who should have been leading happy lives back home falling in love and living lives their parents could be truly proud of.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-25 11:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-26 04:40 am (UTC)So I fence sit on it, what happened happened I suppose and it didn't have anything to do with me now (OK, protecting my freedom, got it) but in the end yeah, I'd have to agree on the fact if anything it serves as a good reminder not to be so stupid in the future, as war is and always shall be, an ineccesant wast of lives
no subject
Date: 2005-04-26 11:20 pm (UTC)Yes, what happened at Gallipoli is in the past, but unfortunately it has everything to do with you, and nothing to do with protecting your freedom (then or now). The current leaders of Australia and USA are in the process of propagating the same lie again that we are involved in a necessary war and that it is right and good and just. They haven't learned the lesson from Gallipoli -- in fact they hold it up as a shining beacon of what is good about Australia instead of a falsehood producing a string of errors so stupid it would make a great comedy if it wasn't so horrifying. The morons in charge are happy to repeat the whole damn invasion if they could only land on the right beach this time and slaughter more of those innocents instead of ours this time.
It is insane. Most people haven't learned a thing from it. It is generally agreed that "war is bad" but then most people will excuse it with, "except this one". That is what needs to be fixed.
"Starting a war on someone is wrong... except he deserved it."
"Torture is evil"... "except in this case."
"Arbitrary imprisonment is wrong... except we need to deter these people."
"Politicians telling lies is bad... except we need him for X."
no subject
Date: 2005-04-26 10:50 pm (UTC)That way of thinking needs to be defused if we are ever to have a peaceful future. It is that kind of belligerent niavete that politicians and military recruiters manipulate.