woolfe9999
Diamond Member
- Mar 28, 2005
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No, I'm discussing the issue 'assuming the issue is true', discussing the responses' logic.
If someone posts 'George Washington secretly supported the massacre of all Native Americans men, women, and children', and someone responded with "I support a more powerful society committing genodcide against any weaker society, it's social darwinism and good for the human race", I'll respond to that second post even if the allegations about Washington are false, because it has wrongs needing to be righted.
I did not comment on the accuracy of the Churchill allegations, and specifically included a couple of 'if he did' type qualifiers just for that reason, obviously missed by you.
I could have said more to make that clear that I was not discussing the accuracy of the reports - I don't have the facts to say much on that - but it should be clear.
In this case I think it was more important to discuss the apologists who would react wrongly if the reports are accurate before getting to the accuracy of them.
Fair enough, but the OP made a specific claim with a specific source. To me, the accuracy of that claim is paramount in the discussion. And there is a wider issue here that is parallel to the wider issue you raise - that so-called "myth busting" aka the debunking of "hero worship" has been a popular trade among fringe historians for many decades now, and often the scholarship is specious as the person in question has a political agenda or is just trying to attract attention and sell books by being controversial. You of all people should know that there has been some questionable scholarship on JFK and MLK, most of it politically motivated.
In the discipline of history, there is naturally pressure to publish as in any academic discipline, but you have to come up with a fresh take on historical events as at this point every major historical event has pretty much been covered exhaustively. That produces a situation where certain people are motivated to write against the grain, and will bend and stretch facts and interpretations to support a controversial thesis.
Just as there are people who will uncritically support a perceived "hero" such as Churchill, there are also people similarly motivated to tear down such people just for the sake of doing so. Many people fancy themselves above the masses, as having a somehow privileged pipeline to the truth that only they themselves know, and now they will enlighten the ignorant. This sort of conceat does not necessarily make for honest commentary. Sometimes in history, a banana really is a banana.
I will also add something particular to WWII. I have studied WWII at least as much as you have probably studied Kennedy, and I think trying to draw crude moral equivalencies between Churchill/Roosevelt and Hitler/Stalin, or between allied/axis are basically dishonest. The record of the western powers is far from unblemished in that epoch and no one was a truly messianic or redemptive figure. Good guy/bad guy dichotomies are bound to be oversimplified. However, this constant need to compare everyone on the planet to Adolf Hitler is getting really tiresome. The fact is, the expansionist goals of two countries are principally responsible for getting the world in that disastrous conflict. While there's a lot of hindsight about the tactics and methods used by the allies to end it, this basic fact is often forgotten.
- wolf
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