. . . in recent days, here:
[U/D Dec 13, cf follow-up post here for now public details]
A gentle reminder. END
PS: If that does not suffice, ask yourself why Jamaica's Parliament building bears this particular name:
. . . and stands on that particular site.
As the Third Christian Millennium dawns, the Caribbean is at kairos: the nexus of opportunity and risk. In light of the Christocentric fulness theme of Ephesians 4:9 - 24, perspectives and counsel will be offered to support reformation, transformation and blessing towards a truly sustainable future under God.
Friday, November 28, 2014
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Sci Tech watch, 24: Dr Tim Ball of WUWT on polar air mass driven weather systems . . . a 101
Here -- beautiful, tight, insightful summary (don't mind the climate change debates). END
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
11:11:2014 -- In Flanders Fields . . .
Sunday, November 09, 2014
Remembrance Sunday, 2014 -- 1914 + 100 years . . .
. . . is this about lions led to the slaughter by donkeys, for no good reason?
A few days back, I had reason to reflect on how the lessons of the past were often paid for in blood and tears. So, that, if we refuse to learn them soundly and heed them well, we are doomed to pay for them over and over again, at the same price.
I will not hide, that the state of our civilisation c. 2014 deeply troubles me.
But, what were the true lessons of 1914 - 18?
It does seem to me that the world had then been playing with fire for years, and the bomb went off in July and August. Whereupon, the British found that the ruthless German armies brushed aside Belgium's neutrality to outflank the French defenses on their mutual frontier. (As they would again do in 1940.)
That meant that Britain would confront its main naval rival across the narrow English channel.
So, Britain had but little choice but to stand with Belgium and France.
Where, as the Russo-Japanese War of a decade earlier and even the US Civil War and Crimean War warned, the advances in firepower meant war was now much more devastating and deadly. Railroads, Machine guns and rapid fire artillery meant, only siege tactics could work, and without the breakthrough engines of effective tank units with high mobility and attack aircraft of adequate power, it was going to be a long, hard, blood-soaked war of attrition to break Germany's back.
And indeed the Russians would argue that in the 1940's they bled and caused Germany to bleed at fully comparable levels.
Of course the consequence was, collapse of Germany, Austria and the Ottomans, as well as of Russia, leading to the bloodiest century in human history.
Sobering.
However, let us take some time to come to a fresher appreciation of General Haig, principal leader of the British Army:
Let us learn, let us weep, let us understand that sometimes we can only postpone the day of reckoning in the face of determined aggressors (as happened with Hitler who exploited post WW I war-weariness), let us try to re-balance the world towards sanity. END
A few days back, I had reason to reflect on how the lessons of the past were often paid for in blood and tears. So, that, if we refuse to learn them soundly and heed them well, we are doomed to pay for them over and over again, at the same price.
I will not hide, that the state of our civilisation c. 2014 deeply troubles me.
But, what were the true lessons of 1914 - 18?
It does seem to me that the world had then been playing with fire for years, and the bomb went off in July and August. Whereupon, the British found that the ruthless German armies brushed aside Belgium's neutrality to outflank the French defenses on their mutual frontier. (As they would again do in 1940.)
That meant that Britain would confront its main naval rival across the narrow English channel.
So, Britain had but little choice but to stand with Belgium and France.
Where, as the Russo-Japanese War of a decade earlier and even the US Civil War and Crimean War warned, the advances in firepower meant war was now much more devastating and deadly. Railroads, Machine guns and rapid fire artillery meant, only siege tactics could work, and without the breakthrough engines of effective tank units with high mobility and attack aircraft of adequate power, it was going to be a long, hard, blood-soaked war of attrition to break Germany's back.
And indeed the Russians would argue that in the 1940's they bled and caused Germany to bleed at fully comparable levels.
Of course the consequence was, collapse of Germany, Austria and the Ottomans, as well as of Russia, leading to the bloodiest century in human history.
Sobering.
However, let us take some time to come to a fresher appreciation of General Haig, principal leader of the British Army:
Let us learn, let us weep, let us understand that sometimes we can only postpone the day of reckoning in the face of determined aggressors (as happened with Hitler who exploited post WW I war-weariness), let us try to re-balance the world towards sanity. END
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