D. Ray
2024-09-08 19:56:20 UTC
The idea that fighting World War 2 was a good thing is immediately taken
for granted and if you dare oppose that narrative then you are viewed as
some kind of evil extremist. This applies to generation after generation.
The veterans themselves, however, are seemingly never asked. What does that
brave generation of the war years really think? They blindly sacrificed
everything for Britain in what they at the time believed to be a just
cause. Do they still believe this? Do they regret it? Let's cut through the
postwar propaganda and hear the views of the men themselves. Their
generation, at the very least, tells it how they see it.
for granted and if you dare oppose that narrative then you are viewed as
some kind of evil extremist. This applies to generation after generation.
The veterans themselves, however, are seemingly never asked. What does that
brave generation of the war years really think? They blindly sacrificed
everything for Britain in what they at the time believed to be a just
cause. Do they still believe this? Do they regret it? Let's cut through the
postwar propaganda and hear the views of the men themselves. Their
generation, at the very least, tells it how they see it.