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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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To: Ilaine who wrote (43348)5/10/2004 5:50:41 PM
From: bela_ghoulashi   of 793759
 
I'm neither applauding nor condoning mistakes. But I'm not folding just because we aren't perfect. We can't be. That's not a reasonable expectation. Our response to those mistakes is what defines us, just as much as our honest intentions going in. And it's exactly our response to our own mistakes that will do more on a practical level to determine the outcome than our abstract intentions and expectations on going in. If we can't keep our own failures in perspective, then we have no chance to succeed.

Winston Churchill was largely responsible for the buildup of the British Navy in the first half of the past century. British capital ships were death traps, disasters. They were poorly designed and inclined to blow up almost on contact. Jutland proved this, and the sinking of the Hood by the Bismarck was just a late example. Churchill should have been ridden out of town on a rail. But he wasn't. And it's a damn good thing for England that he wasn't, because his failures, horrific as they were, were minor in retrospect, in the greater scheme of things, because he prevailed on the strategic level.
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