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I think Churchill gets off the hook too easily for some of his more outrageous acts and comments over the course of his career. He was more often than not an enemy of the working class, whose belief in democracy was severely limited -- his idea of "democracy" was one in which the elite ran the show and the lower orders knew their place and were kept in it. Among other points, he favored the elimination of universal suffrage in the UK and the reinstatement of property suffrage, a point of view straight out of the eighteenth century. And as far as his concern for the rights of oppressed peoples to free determination, he'd have been much more convincing had he begun with India.
That said, he was right about Munich in 1938, and was very much The Man for The Hour in 1940 -- but if he hadn't been a wartime leader, I submit that he'd be remembered more as an unapologetic imperialist with a long history of bad decisions.
Churchill is far too complex a character to sum up so easily. You have to get into his head to understand his reasoning. His six volume history allows you to understand him better and why he did what he did through his life. It is all there.
I will submit that if it weren't for Churchill; Britain would have been much worse off----even to the extent of lsing Britain to Germany before we could have stepped in to help. There would have been no worries about suffrage, the working class or "opressed peoples." They ALL would have been equally opressed.:doh: