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To: Ayn And Milton
If before Sunday's match parts of the media represented it as a re-run of the Battle of Britain, it is hardly surprising that some people should have responded as though our country had lost a major battle, when, in fact, England has simply been beaten by Germany in a football game.
15 posted on 07/19/2010 3:34:58 AM PDT by Berlin_Freeper
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To: Berlin_Freeper

Very interesting. The author raises some important points, and highlights a few paradoxes that are worth thinking about.

Is it good or bad that so much emotion went into that match?

I myself, being 51 years of age, see younger people being almost frighteningly emotional about a mere game of soccer. But that is my perception. I need to remind myself that someone aged 20 nowadays may not even have grandparents anymore that can relate stories on their experience of the War.

Whereas my own mom and dad, both luckily still alive, were children during wartime. They know what hearing bomber planes is, what being relocated to an entirely different part of the country is (because the Nazi’s confiscated their parental homes), and what hunger is - they were obliged to eat tulip ‘balls’ (sorry, don’t know the word for the onion-shaped thing here...), because there was no real food at all. The word ‘hongerwinter’ still installs fearful memories in many, many old Dutch folks.

I think the behaviour and feelings of young soccer fans reflects their (relative) lack of direct experience with a real war.

Is that good? Well, bad it ain’t, because you don’t wish war on anyone innocent, of course.

Moot point.


16 posted on 07/19/2010 4:05:35 AM PDT by Ayn And Milton
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