jakarta
Well-known member
All the above is correct, but what is also correct is that he identified Hitler and the Nazis as a fundamental threat to us and repeatedly put it to the House of Commons in the 1930's. He had quite a lot of information coming in from unofficial sources and was horrified by the attitude of Halifax and his like.As a history graduate, undoubtedly Churchill is one of the most fascinating men of the last couple of centuries.
Unquestionably the right man for the right moment in the Second World War, and a true guiding figure at the nation's hour of need. Often overlooked too was his contribution to the Great War (with the notable and tragic exception of Gallipoli) at the Admiralty. The most fasctinating conversation never to have been recorded in modern history was his with Lord Halifax in the Downing Street rose garden in May 1940 after the resignation of Chamberlain as they decided who would take over from him. Had Halifax done so, the outcome of the entire war could have changed as Halifax was keener on a peace settlement with Hitler along the lines of "Europe's your domain, leave us alone with the Empire". Whatever was said, the correct decision was ultimately made.
Outside the wars, a rather mediocre politician who had a tendency to be on the wrong side of history (dismissed Ghandi, pushed for the Gold Standard, planned on sending the army in to shoot strikers in 1926, tried to shut down the NHS in the early 1950s).
Unfortunately also a figure about whom it is almost impossible to have a proper serious, grown up conversation about. A man who polarises opinion into "evil racist who personally killed millions of Indians during the Bengal Famine" or "unquestioned saint among men who personally beat the Germans with his own bare hands and embodiment of the nation", with hardly any middle ground available for an in-depth analysis of him and his actions.
Personally, I'm of the "good outweighs the bad" side, albeit I have many issues with what he did and what he believed, and certainly don't think he should be seen as beyond criticism for either by dint of what he did achieve. Sadly, I doubt we ever will be in a position to have that proper discussion as both sides are too entrenched and never the twain shall meet.
Clearly an Imperialist, but also a patriot who had served in the British Army and was almost certainly the last PM who had killed someone in hand-to-hand combat?