Dunkirk during evacuation. Image source: Imperial War Museum.
I went to see Dunkirk last night, and it reminded me of why
I support international cooperation, including things like NATO and the UN, and
why the statements of Trump and others are so offensive to me.
World War II bound much of the planet together in blood.
Over 60 million people died, including over 400,000 Americans. That war altered
our history as a species. The efforts and lives of so many, including the lives
of a full 13% of Soviet citizens and over half of all European Jews, went in to
fighting against fascism, genocide, and territorial expansion at the point of a
gun. It's easy to gloss over statistics, but those aren't just numbers. They
represent individual lives. Individual acts of courage, fights for survival,
countless children, and tales of horror and humanity.
The evacuation at Dunkirk, to me, represents more than a defeat that actually ended
up saving the United Kingdom. It was allies fighting to save one another. At
the end of the battle, it was the French - historically the arch rival of the English - who
sacrificed many of their men after the battle was lost to ensure that at least
some of the British troops could evacuate to carry on against tyranny.
And before the light of Western Civilization was snuffed
out, the near unlimited might of the United States entered the conflict. We
weren't just trying to save our British cousins, or the French to whom we owe
much for our own successful Revolution. As we discovered, too, we weren't just
trying to vanquish Japan for their attack on Pearl Harbor, either.
We soon learned that the Allied cause was the salvation of the enormous progress gained after ages of struggle against evil
and small-minded men who would seek world domination or the obliteration of a
people based on race or religion.
From small towns in Tunisia to the ancient capitals of
Europe, from little known islands in the Pacific to the never-ending steppes of
Russia, from defending New York Harbor against U-Boat attacks to sending a life
line to the Chinese as millions were killed in cold blood. We all fought
together, Americans and Russians, British and French, Nationalist and Communist
Chinese, Muslims and Hindu. The new world that emerged (which included the end of colonialism and the independence of dozens of nations) is not something we
should easily discard because the Germans or the Mexicans or the pesky French
"stole" our industry -- and yet we have grown ever richer and more
powerful.
For all the faults and rightful criticisms of organizations
like the UN and NATO, the last 75 or so years since the end of the war have
been the most peaceful in Europe since the days of Rome, and the most prosperous and innovative period in human history.
But for some reason, a relative few dollars is too high a
price to help maintain that order? The relationships that were forged in blood
and fire, and honed over generations should be discarded? There are real
current and growing threats that we're all going to have to confront.
Pretending like they don't exist or thinking we can achieve victory piecemeal
or all alone is to ignore the lessons taught by those 60 million lives. It’s a
pity the abundance of knowledge history affords us is forgotten so easily.
--Jacob Bogle, 8/4/17
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