Bob Caldwell wonders what has happened to our trust in government since the second world war, while Dave Hunter is concerned that current generations are not making sacrifices for future ones
Much has been made of the resemblance between wartime Britain and the current pandemic. Having experienced both, I find the contrast in social reactions to the two situations very striking and puzzling. During the war, nobody denied its existence, nor disputed whether it represented an existential threat; no one refused to enter air raid shelters, nor declined to don a government supplied gas mask. We trusted every restriction, including severe rationing, as having been imposed for our ultimate benefit. What has happened to cause so many to refuse life-saving procedures and flout sensible precautions during this current emergency when the threat has been, and continues to be, equally obvious?
Bob Caldwell
Badby, Northamptonshire
• Running with Mark Walford’s theme (Letters, 9 November), it is striking how frequently people who are unhappy with the state of the nation say something to the effect of “our parents fought so we [their offspring] could be free and we should honour their sacrifice”. Yet we collectively do not seem prepared to follow that lead and make sacrifices for our offspring so that they can lead lives free from the worst consequences of global heating – which would be a way to honour that earlier sacrifice. Continue reading...
http://dlvr.it/SCLJqs
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Insulin100: The Discovery and Development
By Defining Moments Canada The discovery and the development of insulin in the early 1920s by a team of scientists in Canada saved the live...
-
The making—and selling—of Coca-Cola. By E. J. Kahn, Jr. , THE NEW YORKER, Profiles February 6, 1959 Photograph by George Marks / Retrofile...
-
At the New York Times trial, the former governor was impressive at first. It didn’t last. BY SETH STEVENSON | Slate FEB 10, 20228:31 PM S...
No comments:
Post a Comment