Friday, January 29, 2010
IRL 12
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
SGQ 12 Origins of the Cold War
Friday, January 8, 2010
IRL/TOK
Can history provide a guide to understanding contemporary affairs? Can it provide a guide to the future? What might be “the lessons of history” for future generations?
In my IRL 11http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwone/league_nations_01.shtml it is an overview of League of Nations and United Nations. It shows that we as a country learned from our first mistakes in making a League of Nations and not being able to enforce any of its power or not having enough "major powers" involved. But after the Second World War we made the United Nations which has existed over 60 years to help keep the peace in the world. Yes using the League of Nations as a example it can be used as a guide for the future, the leaders in charge in 1919 helped essential pave the way for united nations so when the chance came again in the 40s to correct the mistakes and fix the problems so another world war never broke out again it was taken. The lessons of history is that the League of Nations were so afraid of another great war they were willing to use appeasement to satisfy the complaining countries who they tried to satisfy no matter what the demand but if Versailles had been a better written treaty Germany would have not gotten away with this. So the lesson is you can do something and hope for the best trying to satisfy both sides, you have to do it for the well being of every person.
In my IRL 09 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4436275.stm, the Holocaust is an important historical event to learn from because without learning what one length one Regime would go to rid the world of a race/ethnicity is important so it does not occur again. I think it can provide a guide to the future of what will happen the Nazi's killed 11 million people though some choose not to follow the guide in killing instead of following this tragic event and not killing. Stalin killed 3 times as much and the genocide Hitler committed is still going on some 60 years later in Africa, which shows some didn't learn from history and we are force to see it repeat again.
In my IRL 04 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6991349.stm shows the people in Germany still fear the rise of a single party state or more importantly a Nazi regime again. After the first Nazi regime fell in 1945 the world saw how far one man would go to make his country the best. Hitler paved the way with his ideology throughout history and some still see this as a positive direction to move the country in. It’s not only Germany and other European countries but there is a small but still there Neo Nazi party in America would love to make our Democracy a Single Party State but fortunately we haven’t gone through the “factors” that essential leads to a SPS. The Neo Nazi’s in Eastern Germany that the German people are afraid of either want to things, one they didn’t learn from Hitler with the Holocaust and World War II or two they some 60 years later they want to improve or learn from his mistakes to make his plan successful this is a scary thought to know that some people see Hitler’s Nazi regime in guiding the way in what the world should be. There are two lessons to be learned from Hitler, either to prevent genocide and the rise of a regime or learn from and resurrect the regime and learn from its flaws and mistakes.
In my IRL 02http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?l=1&id=1271, we’ve learned about the Arab-Israeli issue that’s been going on for over 60 years, it’s an issue over land essential. This started in the 1940s and worked its way up to 2009. It can be a guide to a positive future or a negative future when viewing this. Positive because we could learn about the extremes two countries will go to for land and a negative because this has occurred before them and certainly after them showing that history repeats itself, the war for land has been going on forever. It also has future lessons because we see that it’s involved other countries and this can be seen throughout the world with issues involving the Middle East.
Therefore these sources show that they can be used as an understanding for future lessons and a guide for contemporary affairs.