CSwriter1
29th April 2005, 10:30 PM
War is a fascinating subject. We have always been told we were fighting to defend democracy. Something that drives Republicans crazy, because they insist we are not a democracy, but a republic. Well, so was Germany a Christian Republic. Now we might to stop question what we were defending? I hope this is done soon before the memory of what our democracy was is lost froever. In 1958 we adopted the German model of education for military and industrial purpose, and stopped transmitting our culture. For all practical purpose, we are the New World Order we fought against, only self centered and separated from Europe, we are even worse.
In 1899 William James explains this difference in his book "TALKS TO TEACHERS ON PSYCHOLOGY: AND TO STUDENTS ON SOME OF LIFE'S IDEALS". "If we reflect upon the verious ideals of education that are prevalent in the different countries, we see that what they all aim at is to organize capacities for conduct. This is most immediately obvious in Germany, where the explicitly avowed aim of the higher education is to turn the students into an instrument for advancing scientific discovery".
In 1917 J. A. S. Sinclair, a navy recruiter says this at the National Education Assocation Conference: The German military ogranization is the world's model, at least from the standpoint of immediate accomplishment of results, and therefore we can hardly do better than to emulate it in its perfect working. It was effected in its minutest detail by the very essence of scientific thought and application. In that organization every tongue fitted its groove, every tooth its socket. We have seen how the Kaiser's marvelous soldiers carried their banner to the very outskirts of Paris in August and Septemeber, 1914. It is the Great God efficiency, to which the Germans were required by their commanders to pay the homeage of worship- and it behooves us either to effect a thing that will operate as well or to copy theirs. The fact of the world at war has silenct the erring lips that declared against the necessity for preparation against disaster, like that of Belgium and Servia".
Sinclair was not completely right. Our men prepared for independent thinking had a great advantage over those trianed to depend on orders. The was especially so when air planes battled each other. But so what, what really matters is, what are defending as today we have the culture of the NWO and are loosing the memory of the democracy we were. It helps to read "The Anglo-Germany Problem" 1915 by Charles Sarolea, and "Is Germany Incurable?" 1943 by richard M. Brickner M.D. to see the bigger picture of cultural change.
In 1899 William James explains this difference in his book "TALKS TO TEACHERS ON PSYCHOLOGY: AND TO STUDENTS ON SOME OF LIFE'S IDEALS". "If we reflect upon the verious ideals of education that are prevalent in the different countries, we see that what they all aim at is to organize capacities for conduct. This is most immediately obvious in Germany, where the explicitly avowed aim of the higher education is to turn the students into an instrument for advancing scientific discovery".
In 1917 J. A. S. Sinclair, a navy recruiter says this at the National Education Assocation Conference: The German military ogranization is the world's model, at least from the standpoint of immediate accomplishment of results, and therefore we can hardly do better than to emulate it in its perfect working. It was effected in its minutest detail by the very essence of scientific thought and application. In that organization every tongue fitted its groove, every tooth its socket. We have seen how the Kaiser's marvelous soldiers carried their banner to the very outskirts of Paris in August and Septemeber, 1914. It is the Great God efficiency, to which the Germans were required by their commanders to pay the homeage of worship- and it behooves us either to effect a thing that will operate as well or to copy theirs. The fact of the world at war has silenct the erring lips that declared against the necessity for preparation against disaster, like that of Belgium and Servia".
Sinclair was not completely right. Our men prepared for independent thinking had a great advantage over those trianed to depend on orders. The was especially so when air planes battled each other. But so what, what really matters is, what are defending as today we have the culture of the NWO and are loosing the memory of the democracy we were. It helps to read "The Anglo-Germany Problem" 1915 by Charles Sarolea, and "Is Germany Incurable?" 1943 by richard M. Brickner M.D. to see the bigger picture of cultural change.