We watched it later in the evening. When I wasn't blathering about related things I had seen at the National Air & Space Museum I was thinking about World War II. Cynical thoughts. I've always thought of the ghost of Vietnam as a potent force in national politics. It was dragged out and fretted over for every 'police action' during my lifetime -- every one until Afghanistan, that is. The ghost of WWII is much more influential these days. They're a wonderful study in contrasts, these two ghosts. The ideal of uniting to defeat great evil and the fear of getting sucked into horrible, divisive, unwinnable wars. Both haunt America.
I freely admit that I'm a sucker for WWII nostalgia. It was an amazing war that did amazing good. The Marshall Plan was forward thinking on a level I simply have trouble attributing to governments. And yet... maybe it's best if we don't think just wars are possible, just necessary, tolerable ones.
I wonder if the ghost of WWII won't end up responsible for far more evil than all the good we managed to do 60 years ago.
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And the Hitler comparison is just creepy.