I’m not aware of a single occasion, in the
whole of recorded human history, when the citizens of one country have stated en
masse that they hate the citizens of another country and want to go to war
with them. That doesn’t mean that they
don’t subsequently get caught up in hatred and war fever – I can well remember
growing up in the 1950s and hearing adults of my parents’ generation saying things
like “The only good German is a dead German”. That sort of hatred is necessary to sustain a
long war, and the elites who start the wars invariably use all the propaganda
tools at their disposal to encourage it; the point, however, is that it’s the elites,
not the citizens, who decide to go to war in the first place.
It’s the ordinary citizens on both sides who provide (and always have done) the cannon fodder and most of the
casualties, but it’s only since some 70-80 years ago that ordinary citizens
started to be deliberately targeted through mass bombing of cities,
culminating, of course, in the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan. The whole rationale for strategic nuclear
weapons is that their only possible actual or threatened use is for the mass
annihilation of ordinary citizens – men, women and children alike – as they go
about their daily business, for the sole ‘crime’ of living within the boundaries
of a state which finds itself at war with another state. It follows that anyone who supports the
possession of such weapons, let alone states that they are willing to use them,
is effectively arguing that that is a legitimate way of pursuing a war started by
the elites.
And that brings me to the Labour Party’s leadership
election. As I understand it, all five candidates
have expressed, at one time or another, their willingness to deliberately target
citizens of another country in this way, whilst arguing that class solidarity is
more important than nationality. All
five are being utterly disingenuous: there is no way that anyone willing to kill
millions of working people solely for being of another nationality can argue
any such thing. Their argument, I’m
sure, is that any leader stating that he or she would be unwilling to press the
button would be ‘unelectable’, by the standards of the media and those who
control them. But if that’s their only
reason, I’m not sure which is worse – their stated willingness to use such
weapons, or their cowardice in refusing to say otherwise in order to get
elected. But what does it say about the
electorate at large that the majority are willing to be guided into only electing
someone who professes a willingness to commit mass murder?
2 comments:
"yellow"is a colour prevalent in all Unionist parties not just the LibDems. Even Plaid has a yellow streak underneath its yellow top coat.
You are spot on. The absence of guts and willingness to confront this horrible truth is highly significant. Even Ms Nandy, who is at least able to understand the disconnect between metropolitan Labour pseudo lefties and the traditional Labour heartlands of the North,can't bring herself to make a bold statement on this issue. And yet the resources it would release back into the public purse and the economy could be translated easily into a raft of positive messages. Opportunity lost ?
"...the resources it would release back into the public purse and the economy..." And that's another point - they all claim to be in some way or another 'green', but there's nothing in the least bit 'green' about using the Earth's limited resources to construct weapons of mass destruction which no sane person could ever use.
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