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#61
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On 19 Nov 2003, you wrote in rec.aviation.ultralight:
You must be too young to remember when the Allies won WWII. Many Germans and Japanese fought and killed Allied troops long after the war. That is simply a bald face lie. -- |
#62
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"Dale Ward" wrote in message .. . On 19 Nov 2003, you wrote in rec.aviation.ultralight: You must be too young to remember when the Allies won WWII. Many Germans and Japanese fought and killed Allied troops long after the war. That is simply a bald face lie. I could have sworn hearing my dad, who was serving in the Philippines at the end of WWII, telling how some of the Japanese soldiers in the islands refused to give up and continued to fight, even after the war was over and Japan had surrendered. |
#63
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"Fred the Red Shirt" wrote in message om... | "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... | "Thomas Borchert" wrote in message | ... | | | | I can't see much of a difference for the world with Saddam missing (he | | isn't, really, by the way). I am now absolutely certain - as most news | | watchers - that Saddam didn't pose nearly the threat that some were led | | to believe. There are no WMD, period. | | | | Saddam's own military commanders all believed that Saddam had WMD. They have | told investigators that they still believe it. | | I'm only aware of one such person and he made claims about nuclear | weapons which made it clear that he actually knew nothing about them. Well, I heard it on NPR. |
#64
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("Robert Perkins" wrote)
They just didn't study it. History began with the formation of the BRD, there was a 17 year gap, anything before that was like studying pre-Civil War days in the U.S., that is to say, cursory. We live in the "obscure president street names" area of town - Buchanan, Van Buren, Pierce, Tyler, Quincy, Monroe, Polk, Fillmore, Taylor. The nieces have lived around here for 17 years - they didn't know the streets were named for Presidents. Yes, Tyler is only two blocks over from Taylor. Can you say postal confusion? -- Montblack |
#65
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On Thu, 20 Nov 2003 16:22:09 -0800, "Holger Stephan"
wrote: On Thu, 20 Nov 2003 22:42:27 +0000, Robert Perkins wrote: Oh, I'm using the correct terms. My interviewees were two men in their early 20's, and our conversations, casual peer conversations that they were, took place in late 1989. Asking two guys during a "casual peer conversation" what they remember from their school time is hardly a base to judge a country's school system. Your report may be truthful, but it's not even worth mentioning. Thought that particular criticism was about whether I knew what the names of the types of German schools were. I do, because some Germans told me what they were. Why, just two days ago I was in a NetMeeting conversation with a 15-year-old student at a Rheinland-Pfalz Realschule. He explained it again. What they learned there I gleaned from their descriptions of the curriculum, not their recollections of the details of the curriculum. Stephan, the *whole era* was missing from their study. And it's not like I didn't converse with other Germans while there. I did: hundreds to thousands in my time there. (I lost count.) In Germany, the subject simply never comes up in polite conversation. The topic of Nazi's is banned in Germany. The norm by now is expected to be widespread ignorance of that part of their history. BTW, the one from Berlin doesn't count anyway. Different world there I have no idea how to respond to that. Rob -- [You] don't make your kids P.C.-proof by keeping them ignorant, you do it by helping them learn how to educate themselves. -- Orson Scott Card |
#66
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On Thu, 20 Nov 2003 21:44:15 -0800, "C J Campbell"
wrote: | I'm only aware of one such person and he made claims about nuclear | weapons which made it clear that he actually knew nothing about them. Well, I heard it on NPR. Why, then it must be true! ;-) Rob -- [You] don't make your kids P.C.-proof by keeping them ignorant, you do it by helping them learn how to educate themselves. -- Orson Scott Card |
#67
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Robert,
Stephan, the *whole era* was missing from their study. And it's not like I didn't converse with other Germans while there. I did: hundreds to thousands in my time there. (I lost count.) In Germany, the subject simply never comes up in polite conversation. The topic of Nazi's is banned in Germany. The norm by now is expected to be widespread ignorance of that part of their history. Man, I live here! You are simply wrong. The subject is discussed on a regular basis, there are no inhibitions at all. Just last week, a politician got fired for publicly displaying anti-semitism - and everybody and his brother discussed the topic. I can point you to the lesson plans of ANY German federal state - all will contain extensive lessons in that part of history. If anything, that part of our history is overtaught - rightly so, I might add. I don't know which Germany you talk about, but it's not the country I live in. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#68
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Ian,
If you were born after about 1935, you don't know as much as you think you know, having obtained your education in your country's history following the imposition of laws restricting the dissemination of information on the NSDAP. Yeah, right... Time for a reality check, my man. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#69
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"Montblack" wrote in message ... ("Robert Perkins" wrote) They just didn't study it. History began with the formation of the BRD, there was a 17 year gap, anything before that was like studying pre-Civil War days in the U.S., that is to say, cursory. We live in the "obscure president street names" area of town - Buchanan, Van Buren, Pierce, Tyler, Quincy, Monroe, Polk, Fillmore, Taylor. The nieces have lived around here for 17 years - they didn't know the streets were named for Presidents. Yes, Tyler is only two blocks over from Taylor. Can you say postal confusion? Yes, especially for Mr. Taylor, the tailor that has a shop over on Tyler. |
#70
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On Fri, 21 Nov 2003 06:56:42 +0000, Robert Perkins wrote:
What they learned there I gleaned from their descriptions of the curriculum, not their recollections of the details of the curriculum. Stephan, the *whole era* was missing from their study. And it's not like I didn't converse with other Germans while there. I did: hundreds to thousands in my time there. (I lost count.) In Germany, the subject simply never comes up in polite conversation. The topic of Nazi's is banned in Germany. The norm by now is expected to be widespread ignorance of that part of their history. These are pretty sever accusations. I would like to understand better from where they come from. Do you speak German? How long did you stay in Germany? Are you competent in the matters of eduction and school curriculum? I sense a somewhat educated person behind what you write, but am at a total loss as to understand how you came to your findings. I went to school in Germany. My father taught history in German schools. I can assure you the time between 1933 and 1945 is taught, including the Holocaust. There were the history classes in which we went through the chronology of political events in detail and I heard it twice (maybe because I changed state and school). Then book reviews in the literature classes. Read Peter Bamm's battle field reports as a 15 year old. It will create pictures in your head that will stay with you for life. They've shown us documentary films with caterpillars shoveling skinny corpses into mass graves. Extremities moving one last time as if they might still have life in them. View that as teenager without preparation of daily violence on TV and you'll be thrown in a depression. Yes, they did tell us before it would be tough and we could elect to leave the class room. But if you didn't and also happened to have read Anne Frank's diary before seeing this it will be more than you thought you could take that day. I wished Thomas Borchert, as a German, would have voiced his political position a bit more diplomatically in a predominantly American forum. You won't understand him, and Germany's politics regarding Iraq neither. But the German people has been exposed to the horrors of war not that long ago. It happened right where they live and that, together with the incomprehensible guilt on the German nation has turned the people into pacifists. This has everything to do with the ugly face of war and little with the relationship between Germany and the United States and their people. - Holger PS: I felt oblighted to respond, but don't like cross posting and would like to leave it at this, for the groups I don't visit. |
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