Monday, November 7, 2011

0 Great Men The Battle Of Britain

Great Men The Battle Of Britain

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I've predicted before that the day would come when Feminist historical revisionism would subvert much of the truth and lead to us all remembering "the men "AND "women" who landed on the beaches of Normandy.

I further predicted that one day soon after that, the imagined bravery of women will be given more prominence and it will become "the "WOMEN" and men".

Perhaps not long after that, it may become simply "the "WOMEN "who landed on the beaches of Normandy". Nothing concerning the potential for historical revisionism in our culture would surprise me.

I now am certain that at least some of these predictions will come to pass, sooner rather than later. And it "has" already started in one telling of the Battle of Britain

THE RAF MUSEUM


I have visited the RAF Museum in London on a few occasions. My boy loves it there and it's a nice day out with the family.

The museum shows a film several times a day which tells the story of the Battle of Britain where, to put it succinctly, a few hundred men stopped Germany from invading Britain. These airmen flew Spitfires and Hurricanes and stopped the attempted invasion in its tracks by protecting the airspace over England. As Winston Churchill put it "never have so many owed so much to so few [men]".

Many school parties attend the showing of this film, groups of kids chattering amongst each other and absorbing some history while they're about it.

But this film was fallacy posing as historical record. It left me shaking my head at how Feminism has sullied the very blood spilt by men in defending Britain.

THE WAY IT REALLY WAS


Let's be absolutely clear: without the military services of women, the outcome of the Battle of Britain would have been the same. Without men, however, it would not have been the "Battle of Britain" it would have been the "Walkover of Britain".

The roles of men and women during this conflict (and others) were very different and ought to be made crystal clear.

Women helped in map rooms, nursed the wounded, managed paperwork and made the coffee. But it was men, and men alone, who did the flying and the dying. It was men alone, who were responsible for victory.

Of course, I know the revisionist agenda and understand what is being done and why.

I am familiar with the documentary editing process and I could see how they had gone out of their way to choose many clips featuring women in huge disproportion to the actual number of women involved in the RAF during this period.

I am familiar with scripting and I could note how the language was manipulated to present the overwhelming impression that as many women as men were flying and fighting in the skies over Britain against the German hordes. Indeed, the very word 'men' was used precisely once during the 15 minute presentation, yet there were precisely zero female combat pilots.

Sure, I knew all this.

But what about the class of school children in the seats around me? What impression would they be left with after watching this mockery of a historical film?

Why were the boys denied genuine information on what it has meant to be a MAN compared to what it has meant to be a WOMAN? Why is it taboo to speak of and recognise uniquely "male "sacrifice?

Of course, we can pretend to ourselves that women have contributed to our (relative) freedom to the same degree as men, but then we could also say something like: "the women and men who give birth to our children". It's true that men and women both contribute to the creation of children, but is it remotely accurate to say that women "and" men give birth?

No.

It is travesties like this that are part of the reason I do this. That film is repeated every hour every day at the RAF museum. Those lies that are not quite lies, are repeated to hundreds of children week in week out.

This sort of Feminist propaganda sullies the memories of the men who fought and died for me, and for all of us Brits. It is sickening and hugely insulting to the memories of those men to not be distinguished as MEN in their sacrifice and valor.

"510 BRITISH AIRMEN DIED BETWEEN JULY AND OCTOBER, 1940"

When reciting details of the Battle of Britain, to mention women in the same breath as men; or even within the same sentence, or, to be brutally honest, even AT ALL, is simple fallacy and counts as a poor attempt to belittle male sacrifice and create a false history.

I will fight this misandry wherever I see it and I hope my films and commentary can serve as a small counterpoint to the lies, misrepresentation and rampant Feminist historical revisionism that we are undergoing.

So, to all who might want a more accurate idea of this pivotal point in British history: the Battle of Britain was an historic air campaign fought and won by men, with aircraft built by men, using weapons forged by men, assisted with radar conceived by men, and with fuel extracted by men.

And judging from how our society now treats men, all this was for the good, ironically, of pretty much everyone in Britain "EXCEPT" men.

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Source: gamma-male.blogspot.com

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