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This has been forming in my mind for awhile, but I'm still not quite finding the words to express it. Having watched Ken Burns' The War series, it seems even more true that those of us who seek a return to the style and dignity and manners of the Golden Era... redeem the century in some ways.
Imagine those returning veterans, having seen the very worst that any man can see and endure, beginning to rebuild their lives with a full appreciation for the freedoms we take for granted. They wanted to give their children a good life, free of the horrors they had known in the Great Depression and World War II.
But the world somehow got away from them. In ways they did not comprehend, their children were dissatisfied. They turned away from all their fathers represented, called them idiots, grew their hair, and turned the culture into one of youth worship, free love and drugs. Their fathers were unable to understand it.
Now, we have the benefit of knowing the good that came of that time of upheaval. Now equal rights are extended to all, and we understand more about our natures.
But we can also pull all that was good from the early 20th century, and view those of the Greatest Generation with the respect they deserve, and more fully appreciate the good things their world stood for, while culling out the bad.
We can appreciate that the women we share our workplace with have a right to be there and compete with men, yet we can still hold the door for them. The best of both worlds.
While the world went mad for them and never settled down, and they watched as their best years were stolen from them, here's hoping we can find that settled world they expected and wanted, and even more, here's hoping we can appreciate it, and all they bought for us with their blood and, later, their nightmares.
People like us, here, pick up where they involuntarily left off, before the world went mad.
Imagine those returning veterans, having seen the very worst that any man can see and endure, beginning to rebuild their lives with a full appreciation for the freedoms we take for granted. They wanted to give their children a good life, free of the horrors they had known in the Great Depression and World War II.
But the world somehow got away from them. In ways they did not comprehend, their children were dissatisfied. They turned away from all their fathers represented, called them idiots, grew their hair, and turned the culture into one of youth worship, free love and drugs. Their fathers were unable to understand it.
Now, we have the benefit of knowing the good that came of that time of upheaval. Now equal rights are extended to all, and we understand more about our natures.
But we can also pull all that was good from the early 20th century, and view those of the Greatest Generation with the respect they deserve, and more fully appreciate the good things their world stood for, while culling out the bad.
We can appreciate that the women we share our workplace with have a right to be there and compete with men, yet we can still hold the door for them. The best of both worlds.
While the world went mad for them and never settled down, and they watched as their best years were stolen from them, here's hoping we can find that settled world they expected and wanted, and even more, here's hoping we can appreciate it, and all they bought for us with their blood and, later, their nightmares.
People like us, here, pick up where they involuntarily left off, before the world went mad.