MikeKardec
One Too Many
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Of course. However his remarks were germane and offered in context of the conversation.
I understand. You can't change what the man said. And how many movements that we know of are starting right now using terms and behavior that we would privately question yet not choose to speak about or act against? We feel it's their problem and that we don't yet know where it's all going or that maybe it'll blow over before we could possibly need to get involved. We look around the world today and it looks a lot like the 1930s with chaos that WILL break out in terrible ways yet, just like then, we cannot yet predict those ways, who will end up on what side or who the heroes or villains will be when people look back from the vantage point of the next century. The "right side of history" is always the side of the victors when they look back in time.
It raises legitimate questions about when you choose to be loyal to your country and how you deal with that. I don't have any answers, as every person needs to decide for themselves in each different situation, but I find it easy to place myself in the difficult position of a German with a pre 1933 loyalties and love of Germany, who's family is all over Germany, confronting the morality of fighting the people who are attacking their home. I doubt this was all that common but you COULD have the lowest opinion of your leaders and the actions of your government yet still realize that the fight had become about the survival of everyone you care about ... especially when it was not so easy to leave a country that was becoming more despotic all through the 1930s and the world was in the height of a terrible depression. Choosing an alternative, even for relatively well off people, was not so easy at that time.
Of course, in Japan, the idea of leaving was vastly harder to conceive of. People were SO much more tied to their culture, and there were fewer peaceful and accepting places to go. Oddly, it seems to me that the US was one of the very few possibilities and, again, there was that depression thing.
It makes me wonder what the practical exchange rates were like, not yen to dollars (I can look that up) but how easy was it to make that many yen and then what they would have bought in the USA.
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