Isandlwana
Sergeant
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2007
- Messages
- 645
As a child of the seventies and early eighties I had to endure parodies of Nazi's on UK television which for many of my generation actually served to humanise them and more worryingly allowed the whole regime to take on a more comical aspect. Thank goodness we don't see that anymore on our screens and subsequent generations see them for what they actually were, unadulterated evil.
Saying that, my interest in military history was peaked by iSandlwana, as a single figure digit boy. It was the the thin red line in a far away foreign land that did it but with age I see that whole conflict for what it was and in line with most other conflicts, it stems from just a few individuals trying to impose their will on others through subjugation be it for greed or misguided ideological reasoning.
It could be argued that in the years leading up to the Zulu War, Shepstone and Frere were equally as evil concocting what they did to an unsuspecting nation and certainly more duplicitous than some more recent tyrants and thankfully we will never see any figures produced of them and nor should we.
Nobody civilised would want to look at them on a shelf.
Saying that, my interest in military history was peaked by iSandlwana, as a single figure digit boy. It was the the thin red line in a far away foreign land that did it but with age I see that whole conflict for what it was and in line with most other conflicts, it stems from just a few individuals trying to impose their will on others through subjugation be it for greed or misguided ideological reasoning.
It could be argued that in the years leading up to the Zulu War, Shepstone and Frere were equally as evil concocting what they did to an unsuspecting nation and certainly more duplicitous than some more recent tyrants and thankfully we will never see any figures produced of them and nor should we.
Nobody civilised would want to look at them on a shelf.