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They're all Win With Wilkie buttons.
"The portable solar panel experiment was not the success North Korea's army hoped it would be..."
Here in the US we have the First Amendment in addition to generally tolerant attitudes about history. You have a VERY wide latitude in terms of acceptable appearance and political expression. WWII reenactors of any sort just fit into the the general atmosphere of tolerance we have.
It would take a lot more in the way of unusual behavior or appearance, in most cases, to cause a problem than any reenactors would ever exhibit. Remember that it was decided years ago by the Supreme Court that REAL Nazis (swastikas and all) could march thorough Jewish neighborhoods. (First Amendment!!)
I have met and talked to a lot of WWII vets at reenactments and have yet to hear of any negative reactions to German or Japanese reenactors of any sort.
Things have changed. I remember the early CAF Tora Tora Tora pilots, not much in the way of accurate Japanese uniforms, but a fun bunch of guys. I still have a fake Kamikaze head band one of the pilots gave me.
Well said rjb1. The CAF has reported some complaints over uniforms such as those I posted above, but generally and over-all, there is a very wide latitude of tolerance. For instance, though there may have been some hushed talk and some raised eyebrows, these gents were not hassled or asked to leave the event. I think that kind of tolerance (protected by our 1st Amendment) is a good thing and allow individuals to step out, make mistakes and learn. -dixon cannon
Some of my Grandmother's family died in the concentration Camps. I'm not asking for sympathy, just setting the scene. I re-enact (not WWII, yet), and feel a bit queesy about SS re-enactors. As has been suggested they have made a conscious choice to represent some of histories nastiest people. But then I've done Roman and also Napoleonic Imperial Guard. I think we all should be willing to answer hard questions about motivations.
But then again the destruction of stuff, such as your tie pin are worrying. What happens if everyone does this, and there are no artifacts left? We mustn't let history forget through lack of evidence. Even a tie pin might cause someone, as you did, to think about what it represents.
Here in the US we have the First Amendment in addition to generally tolerant attitudes about history. You have a VERY wide latitude in terms of acceptable appearance and political expression. WWII reenactors of any sort just fit into the the general atmosphere of tolerance we have.
It would take a lot more in the way of unusual behavior or appearance, in most cases, to cause a problem than any reenactors would ever exhibit. Remember that it was decided years ago by the Supreme Court that REAL Nazis (swastikas and all) could march thorough Jewish neighborhoods. (First Amendment!!)
I have met and talked to a lot of WWII vets at reenactments and have yet to hear of any negative reactions to German or Japanese reenactors of any sort.
You're comparing war to terrorists. I personally don't equate the chicken-*hit 9/11 thugs to soldiers - not even the dirtbags that wore the swastika. And WWII is almost 70 years over. Apples and oranges. But I think people who reenact (I am one) are best off using good judgement when donning WWII gear. I don't even dress until I'm at an event. Most people don't get it and I'm better off waiting to be amongst those that do before gearing up. The potential for anyone to be offended is there regardless of your uniform. Why push it?