I think you're actually totally wrong about everyone hating war. Peter Dutton and many of his Liberal Party colleagues don't hate war one bit; on the contrary, they can't wait for the next one. They don't even need the phone call from the White House; just the sound of a telephone ring and they'll be committing another few thousand young men and women to useless deaths.think positive wrote:You may think he nailed it, I don't. I get the irony of the free speech/what they were fighting for. It's also about decorum and respect, sadly such things are disappearing.
But then you would be happy to let go of merry christmas, good Friday, etc etc. by watering down yet another traditional Day, one that the entire country can get together on, is always going to piss people off. I am old enough to remember the treatment of Vietnam vets back in the 70's still, (my history knowledge is crap, it could be the movies told me about it, but I do remember a doco, so if it all reconciled before then, I apologise and accept that) and how good it was when they finally got the recognition they deserved.
I find it hard to take you serioulsy on these subjects because you do come across as having very little respect for traditions, for service personnel (and here is the thing, we all hate war, we all think it is wasteful, stupid, irrational, but some times you do indeed have to fight to protect your own, or in defence of others, wether the particular defence is a good or bad thing, wether the reason is secretly oil blah blah blah, is not in this discussion, but I thought I'd mention it!) and we all know you don't believe in religion of any kind, as is your right. I won't bore you with telling you who defends those rights!
While I'm not going to get a massive Anzac tattoo on my chest as one of my nephews did, I really enjoy Anzac Day, and I even watch the occasional doco around this time. Even when it's not Anzac Day, if I see an old digger with his medals somewhere, I will tell him "thankyou for your service". It costs nothing, and it brightens their day. And anyway, I mean it. Many of My family in England have a service background, both my parents did. I know the personal cost. I won't bore you with the details, and even though Anzac Day is not about them, it is to me, it's a day to remember not just the fallen, but the damaged, and those left behind.
It's an Aussie, and Kiwi thing. I'm sure wherever she comes from has national days. Go to her country and try what she tried, you won't just get public condemnation I'm guessing.
Fact is, if she wasn't a media person, her illtimed tweet would have gone unnoticed, aside from her Aussie friends being upset, but she has a public pedestal and She deliberately used it to put her own political agenda forward, and she would have known it would annoy people. Yes she's entitled to do that. And the public is entitled to turn on her.
I really don't want to live in some vanilla place, where we all keep quite about historical stuff for fear of upsetting someone. I like Christmas, I like Anzac Day. While I'm not going to celebrate Passover anytime soon, I'm not going to trample on it either, and that's what she did. It wasn't accidental. and since we are still talking about it, she's succeeded, and if it backfires on her, tough titties.
Might hav been different if she had first said something respectful about the anzacs, but it comes across as a **** you
This is the thing that I think Rundle gets so right: Anzac Day is not some apolitical event that can only be read in a certain way, or treated with a certain kind of reverence. Did you really mean to compare it to Passover? Either way, that's a fitting analogy for how many people are treating it now: as a high holy day on the calendar that must be treated only with respectful piety. When government figures are acting like Patriarchs of the Orthodox Church personally seeking out and condemning heretical readings of the day, one starts to wonder about things like the separation of church and state.
Anzac Day is not and never has been apolitical. Right from its origins as a means to recruit more young men for the Western European meat mincer with tales of brave sacrifice on the battlefield to its current treatment by the tabloids as a day to celebrate militarism and attack foreigners, it's always had various agendas behind it. Some of us choose to view it as a reminder of the horror and futility of war, but we need to remember that many people do not see it that way.
In any case, the response to this social media post speaks for itself: as Rundle says, the outrage is self-evidently stupid and fascistic, and demonstrates some truly alarming things about our culture. Those of us who care about free speech must ensure we don't let it pass, even if we're just restating the obvious.