Michael Riddell wrote:Lets just say that nationalism and patriotism are viewed with a certain degree of suspicion on this side of the Atlantic. In the context of European history, they have a tendency to get lots and lots of people killed.
Hans is fairly typical of most Germans - coming to grips with the toxic legacy of Prussian Militarism and Nazism has left modern Germans with a bone-deep suspicion and fear of patriotism and nationalism. They know how easily they can be warped.
British hyperpatriotism died on the Somme and the mud of Passchendaele.
Mike.
You got my intention pretty well.
And yes I grew up with the idea that patriotism is something bad. That is <imho> a lesson we learned out of our history.
Don't get me wrong, I love to live in Germany and I will root for our football team in Brasil but that has nothing to do with:
"Deutschland, Deutschland über alles..."
(rougly translated with: Germany is better then anyone)
I also love to live in a area, where the majority of the citizens, decided to live in a democracy and a freedom people never had before in history.
Despite all of its failures and odd things going on. But I do know that there is no place all over this world where it is perfect, or even just slightly better.
@t2m
PS We really are getting way too much into current politics for this area, IMO.
Quite correct, but to understand a possible future, like the one D.W. describes, we got to see the society we livein right now.
And this is one thing I really like in the Harrington books. He describes how the future can be. I a lot of SciFi books the future is just bad. In D.W. future, the world (Galaxy) is not a perfect place, but it is, more or less, a modified society.
Especially the way the SL is going in his story, seems pretty plausible.
It looks <imho> the way any empire in our history went. Rome for example, thick, fat not moving anymore - a state of just 'bread and games'.