by Suff » 06 Jul 2015, 07:09
I'd be likely to go for the National Memorial Arboretum too. There seems to be some assumption that this is a one of a kind horrific act which must be remembered so that it never happens again. This will not be the case.
If we look at the goals of IS and fundamental Islam, they are not going away and their tactics are not going to change. Also going to a non Islamic western country for holiday is not always going to ensure safety, they will simply export that terror into our society instead of bringing it to our citizens when they travel to "their" countries.
At least the Arboretum gives scope to expand and grow as the conflict grows. Otherwise we'll have memorials all over the country until we have memorial fatigue and that, for the victims, would be bad.
Memorials, for me, are things to remind us of situations which either cannot be avoided or are best remembered so that they don't happen again. Notably WW1 memorials didn't stop WW2. We are being forced into a struggle in the Islamic world where a group of fanatics want to re-draw the borders of the modern world and believe they have the power to do so. They also believe we do not have the will to stop them. This, to me, is nowhere near the end of the situation and the body count is likely to be a LOT higher before it is over.
Later we will need a memorial to remind the politicians of the old phrase. A stitch in time.....
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.