No, no! Ignore the legless, homeless, jobless, hopeless man in the corner! All hail the heroes of Vimy Ridge!
The saddest part is, too many people live the mantra
No, no! Ignore the legless, homeless, jobless, hopeless man in the corner! All hail the heroes of Vimy Ridge!
A lecture on politics is part of rememberance considering war is a result of politics and treatment of the disabled revolves around politics - Lest We Forget
Everything is a result of politics. Using your silly argument, A preacher at a funeral could start yabbering on about politics because the Guy is being buried at a municipal cemetery. You can try and justify it anyway you want. It was still inappropriate
...That being said, one must remain apolitical....
The saddest part is, too many people live the mantra
That is way over the line. Ceremonies like this are supposed to be non-partisan.....and how many veterans in the crowd do you think are also Conservatives? Quite a few, I would guess. Do you think they wish to be lectured on politics at a place and on a day set aside to remember the sacrifice of their brothers-in-arms?
If she had just had someone read over her speech first this would not have happened. Right idea, wrong time.
No, I take it all back. You're right. Remembrance Day is a day to for hollow symboism. The right time to advocate for veterans is when nobody's listening.
Remembrance Day is not for politics or grinding axes. She was wrong.
Couldn't have been said better !The government's treatment of veterans is unacceptable.
Neutrality is a political position. If you pretend a problem doesn't exist or deliberately avoid considering its causes you are supporting the problem and the people responsible for it. The Conservative party is responsible for the poor treatment of veterans, and voters are responsible for putting them into power. Denying this isn't de-politicizing the issue. It's allowing the government and its supporters (YOU) to avoid responsibility for what they've done.