>Implying Nazis hated all those with brown eyes and/or brown hair and didn't regard any of them as "Aryan".DracoSuave said:I want you to look at your hair color. Is it blond?
What about your eyes, are they blue?
Yes, this.MetalDooley said:Here in Ireland there is usually a few small Armistice Day ceremonies to commemorate the Irishmen who died during WW1 but the majority of the folks here don't mark the day for reasons that should be obvious
Its not a slap in the face to veterans, and you're talking crap if you're trying to say you can speak on behalf of every vet out there and tell me they all hate the white poppy. Indeed i have family in the services who arent against it, aswell as the British legion itself saying it doesnt mind people wearing the white poppy.Soviet Heavy said:(Warning, rant incoming, not directed at you personally)Ilikemilkshake said:That's why i wear a white poppy.thaluikhain said:It should be about remembering the cost of war, not politics, but it isn't. It's about glorifying the idea of going off to fight for one's country.Korolev said:I buy the poppy symbols to support the War veterans, but I always forget to wear it. I don't attend the ceremonies that are held, but I do take the day to reflect and consider the horrors of warfare. It's really not about politics - it's about remembering how brutal war can be and remembering the cost of war. Whether or not you think the war was worth it or not, we should all pause and reflect on the tremendous suffering and cost that wars bring. WW1 was a true nightmare for so many soldiers, on all sides of the conflict. WW2 was even more of a nightmare. It's always important to remember that.
And that is what I hate. That someone misinterpreted the point of the Red Poppy to see it as glorifying war. It's not, it never did. The Red Poppy is meant to honor the Veterans who survived, and to lament those who perished. It was NOT about how glorious the conflict was. But some ignorant asshole decides that it is too harsh and cruel, so they made up a fucking white poppy so people could say that they're helping when they aren't.
I find it absolutely disgraceful, especially considering that the Veterans do not condone the White Poppy, nor is it sold by the Canadian Legion Branches. NONE of the money raised by selling white poppies goes towards the veterans, it's pretty much a slap in the face to them that someone decided to take a day dedicated to vets and their fallen friends and turn it into a goddamn anti-war protest.
I'm sorry, this isn't directed at you personally, but I just absolutely hate the implications attached to the White Poppy.
Amen to that, the poppy synbolises the awful loss of war. Putting on a white one I found to be quite insulting to those who have lost loved ones to battle, as it essentially says that they died for nothing. War is terrible, but if you are going to fight then you at least want someone to think that you did the right thing.Soviet Heavy said:I'm waiting to see if those jackasses decide to start selling White Poppies as a protest against war like they did last year.
Tharwen said:So the people they were fighting were mistaken instead?Sparrow said:I'll damn well make sure my trap will be shut and that my chest will proudly display my poppy.
It's not a mistake. We're honouring those who died protecting our people and our values. It's the opposite of a mistake.Vegosiux said:My opinion is that if we have to keep reminding ourselves of our past mistakes, then we have learned nothing from them.
Probably something to do with the lack of bloody metal pins on them, I must have bought a half dozen poppies now and I keep losing them because cant actually pin them to my jacket in this crappy weather.Knusper said:I have noticed that the amount of people - of all ages - wearing poppies has decreased dramatically; it used to be everyone but now not even the old lady goes from house to house selling them any more.
I second this. I'll participate in the silence, but only because my school makes me do so. There is little point in it.Richardplex said:Important? Not really, past is the past, dead people aren't going to care whether I spend 2 minutes for people I don't know, only the living will get offended on their behalf.
That is awesome. Wish I could be there too.Sam Vimes said:I live near a town in France called Le Quesnoy wich was freed by New Zelander during 1st World War, every year on the 11th of November a delagation of kiwis come and do the Haka to honor the the soldiers who fought this battle. I'll try my hardest to be there on that day.
Yep 4th of May.Rockbottom87 said:For the Netherlands, it's the 4th of may. I am always silent at that point.