Can a nation justify a war if it results in death? Over thousands of years, many wars resulted in millions of deaths. War killed civilians for the sake of land, money, and resources, however lives have also been saved because of a country protecting the innocent. Winston Churchill once bravely told the people of England, “We shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall
Post-War World After World War Two ended, many thought that would be the end for a while. Not too long after the war ended, the Cold War began. Post-war time was difficult for the countries involved and the difficulties during this time ultimately led to the Cold War. World War Two was fought on three major theaters and on different fronts. After the war was over, settlement establishing international institutions helped to get the continent of Europe and other struggling countries back onto their
Imagine a world without China a world without exotic but exquisite cuisine, a world without healthy alternatives to bland water such as green tea, and a world without everyday objects such as paper and silk. this might seem silly, but with without the Great Wall of china, built by the Han and Qin dynasties, China might not exist today. Although many people died during the building process the benefits of the wall outweigh the cost by protecting China, impressing visitors, and becoming a historical
World War II was a moment nobody wants to live in, it has caused physical and mental destruction to many people throughout the world. Women were a big help for World War II, they served in many roles in the war, such as the Nurse corps, armed corps and mostly took many jobs that were previously reserved for the men in the war, including creating more jobs to help contribute to the war, such as munition factories, building ships, aeroplanes and spitfires. Rosie the Riveter was a culinary icon of the
Second World War, the families would experience “a constant dread of receiving a telegram announcing the injury, missing status or capture, or death of a husband, son or father." Why help to fight World War II when you know the pain that it endures on your family? In the middle of World War II in 1939, a photographer captured a commemorative picture of a soldier/father kissing his daughter goodbye before her dad leaves Britain. Not only does the photograph show the impacts that World War II had
Lend-Lease in World War II "Lend-Lease is one of Franklin Roosevelt 's most remarkable and vital achievements in the formation of the anti-Hitler alliance" (World War Two: Alliance). Such glowing praises were usually beyond Stalin. Lend-Lease has been hotly debated by historians since the conclusion of hostilities, as Russians insisted that it made up merely 3% of the Soviet Union’s industrial output during the war (Glantz), and many contemporaries (Sokolov) arguing that it made up much more. This
and its worldly impact. The Cold War was primarily fought between the US and Soviet Union, but it was very much a world wide war. To start, by the end of WWII, the US and Soviet Union were in control, or fighting for, most of the world countries. In addition, the US instituted the Truman Doctrine, which states that the US will assist any nation threatened by or fighting against communism (“The Truman Doctrine”). This policy opened up the war to the rest of the world and was the US policy for the next
World War I began with with just one event, which was the assassination of archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife. Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia, and then the whole world erupted into war due to existing alliances which caused obligations. The United States chose to stay neutral at the beginning of the war, while Russia entered immediately due to the fact that Germany declared war on them as well as their ally, France. Germany, obviously, was allied with Austria-Hungary. The British then
work. With your briefcase in hand, you walk to the bus stop, ready to board your bus that takes off at exactly 8:20 AM. You have no worries in the world; sure, there is a huge war going on, but you are entirely innocent and safe. You’ve done nothing. But then, the whole world comes crashing down around you. You hear an unbearably loud boom, the world shakes, and the sky suddenly and inexplicably darkens. An amazing flash of white light sweeps through your surroundings, then you see things explode
to the depletion of faith in religion following World War I. Initially, the speaker reveals that following what was known as “the war to end all wars,” the men who had fought are now void of true substance and are only a shell of their prior selves. Specifically, the speaker describes the voices of the hollow men to be as “quiet and meaningless / as wind in dry grass” (9-10). Here, Eliot’s simile demonstrates the lack of purpose the veterans of the war now possess. Just as wind in grass creates a negligible