At the time of the Cuban Missile Crisis it was generally permissible in the United States to say you supported negotiations for peace and disarmament — I mean without declaring your hatred for China or liberals or black people. Had it not been so, we might not be here to talk about it.
But it was not so at the time of World War I. At that time, you could get locked in prison for peace talk. Had there been nuclear weapons at the time, we might not be here to talk about it.
It’s useful, after over a century of continuing to use war as the preferred means of ending war, to remember momentarily what The Great War was — that it was a whole new level of imbecilic horror, that it was a huge leap forward in the ability to kill, employed not only against — among others — “white” people, but also employed mostly from the ground — not yet from such a distance that those doing it could avoid seeing it.
Among the lovely biproducts of WWI (a deadly flu pandemic, the reborn KKK, prohibition, the European carving up of the Middle East for future wars, Nazism, the latest monstrous monument in 2022 in Washington DC) was the Armenian genocide, so labeled later because at the time of WWI a large portion of those killed in wars were still soldiers, whereas from WWII forward, with the majority of deaths usually being civilians, it was discovered that bad or genocidal killing could not be done from the air.
While no war would have been easier to avoid than WWII, it can’t even be imagined without WWI, the creation of which virtually nobody tries to justify. We are now in a moment in which it’s critical to remember that wars must be chosen, and that silencing antiwar voices is one way to choose them.
One means we have of restoring a bit of peace culture today is restoring formerly peace holidays. We should make Armistice / Remembrance Day a day to mourn all victims of war and advocate for the ending of all war. The story from the first Armistice Day of the last soldier killed in Europe in the last major war in the world in which most of the people killed were soldiers highlights the stupidity of war, and should always be remembered as well.
What would Henry have said afterwards, had he been capable? What will we say after a nuclear apocalypse if we are capable? “It was worth it, to stand up to Putin”? What would someone another century along think of that if they were capable of thinking about their own lack of existence?