Harp
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 8,508
- Location
- Chicago, IL US
Combat is always a hellish lousy experience for everyone 100% of the time.Story said:[War's] not always a 'hellish lousy experience' for everyone 100% of the time
Combat is always a hellish lousy experience for everyone 100% of the time.Story said:[War's] not always a 'hellish lousy experience' for everyone 100% of the time
dhermann1 said:BTW! For those not familiar with the 30 Years War, it gives WW2 a run for its money in terms of tremendous scale, carnage and destruction. The experience of the 30 Years War traumatized Germany to the degree that you can argue that it was a contributory cause to the World Wars. The same can be said of the British Civil Wars, also in the mid 1600's. 200,000 killed in a country of 6 million. Imagine the American Civil War producing 2 or 2.5 million deaths instead of 600,000 and you get a vague idea. Between 1617 and 1650 the population of Germany supposedly went from 13 million to 8.5 million. Tho this may be an exaggeration, it was still a conflict of unimaginable horror. We humans sure are good at annihilating each other.
Story said:Actually, you're at a point in life to portray a WWI R.A.F. pilot dragooned back into service as a Flying Instructor. It's a good excuse for lugging around a pair of model planes on sticks, ya know? And you'd be tons more authentic than the 17 year old Colonels I've seen peacocking around places like Reading.
Then I ask you why do this then if you see public events as a joke?Vladimir Berkov said:I will go as far to say that the airshow/public battle reenactors and the private living-history reenactors are different enough as to make it hard to use the same word "reenactor" to describe them both.
Personally I would not be disappointed if I never did a public event/airshow again in my reenacting career. My friends and I usually look at them as sort of a joke. I know some reenactors are purportedly in it to "educate" the public, but personally I don't think this is the point of reenacting or living history. I can think of better things to do than be an unpaid public school teacher on the weekends.
RAAF said:I think the age thing is a result of a number of items. Most reenactors I've met at air shows are the children or grand children of WW2 veterans. Family history drives much of their interest. Most have been interested for years. The problem is that they choose to reenact a fixed period in time while they continue to age.
More probably, today's twenty-somethings probably have no interest in WW. The war occurred three generations ago for them. It was their great-grandfathers war. They're more likely to have an interest in the Vietnam War which is their father's war.
Paratrooper said:Then I ask you why do this then if you see public events as a joke?
I don't mind being the unpaid teacher for a weekend, with what passes for history in most schools what little knowdge I can pass on is a good thing.