World Wide Christians Partner with Jesus' Place/
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Who is online?
In total there are 30 users online :: 0 Registered, 0 Hidden and 30 Guests :: 1 Bot

None

[ View the whole list ]


Most users ever online was 386 on Sun 25 Apr 2021, 2:56 pm
Latest topics
» Israel War UPDATE
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 11:53 pm by Admin

» KEITH NOTES FROM NANJING
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 11:46 pm by Admin

» CHRISTIAN NEWS NETWORK
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 11:43 pm by Admin

» JIHAD WATCH
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 11:31 pm by Admin

» ISRAEL BREAKING NEWS
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 11:02 pm by Admin

» PROPHESY NEWS WATCH
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 10:51 pm by Admin

» FRANCIS FRANGIPANE MINISTRIES
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 10:31 pm by Admin

» AISH
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 10:28 pm by Admin

»  HONEST REPORTING Defending Israel from Media Bias plz read REGULAR UPDATES
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 8:33 pm by Admin

» WORTHY NEWS
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 8:28 pm by Admin

» BIBLE STUDY on VERSE
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 7:28 pm by Admin

» Celebrate the Feast of Moshiach
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyYesterday at 7:04 pm by Admin

» NUGGET Today's Devotional
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyThu 25 Apr 2024, 11:23 pm by Admin

» Gatestone Institute
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyThu 25 Apr 2024, 11:19 pm by Admin

»  Chip Brogden CHURCH WITHOUT WALLS
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyThu 25 Apr 2024, 11:09 pm by Admin

» SOROS Funds pro-terroist groups support of Hamas
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyThu 25 Apr 2024, 10:57 pm by Admin

» Amir Tsarfati BEHOLD ISRAEL
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyThu 25 Apr 2024, 10:31 pm by Admin

» PULSE OF ISRAEL
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyThu 25 Apr 2024, 10:13 pm by Admin

» THE BLAZE
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyThu 25 Apr 2024, 10:00 pm by Admin

» Israel 365 News
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  EmptyWed 24 Apr 2024, 10:40 pm by Admin

Navigation
 Portal
 Index
 Memberlist
 Profile
 FAQ
 Search

Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero

Go down

Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  Empty Re: Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero

Post  Admin Sat 24 Jan 2015, 5:27 pm

Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  WINSTON_CHURCHILL
Winston Churchill: How a flawed man became a great leader
By John Simpson
World Affairs Editor
Winston Churchill giving V-for-victory sign
On Thursday, the Magazine looked at the greatest controversies of Winston Churchill's career. Here, the BBC's world affairs editor examines how an all-too-human politician became a great wartime prime minister.

In 2002 the BBC broadcast a series called 100 Greatest Britons. After each programme in which particular figures were proposed and examined - they were mostly but not exclusively the usual suspects, such as Darwin, Shakespeare and Elizabeth I - viewers were invited to vote.
In the end, there was no doubt about their verdict - Sir Winston Churchill was the greatest Briton.
The case for him is a powerful one, of course. He was first a government minister in 1908, and occupied most of the top jobs in politics during half a century. He finally retired in 1955, having served as prime minister for a total of nine years.
But it was his extraordinary leadership in World War Two that marked him out. Bold, brave and tireless in his resolve to take on the might of Nazi Germany, he inspired a nervous and hesitant Britain through his sheer energy and force of personality to defy stark odds and never give in.
The entire world's history would have been different if he hadn't come to power in Britain in 1940.
Still, Churchill made huge mistakes in his long political life - Gallipoli, the Black and Tans in Ireland, backing the use of poison gas.
As a particularly inexperienced chancellor of the exchequer in the 1920s, he put Britain back onto the gold standard. John Maynard Keynes, the great economist, believed this was a major factor in bringing about the Great Depression.
In the 1930s, in the political wilderness, he was an angry opponent of Indian nationalism, and his language about Gandhi verged on racism.
He stubbornly supported Edward VIII during the Abdication Crisis of 1936, though he was manifestly unsuited to the job.
Wartime poster of Churchill, reading "Let us go forward together"
There were several major strategic mistakes in WW2.

After it, Churchill was old and ill, yet he returned to lead the government from 1951-55, refusing for a long time to stand down.
It's a powerful litany of failure and misjudgement, and a leading academic at Cambridge University, Dr Nigel Knight, has examined it carefully.
"Churchill was fundamentally flawed. This was shown in his military strategy: Gallipoli in World War 1 was replicated in the Norwegian and North African and 'soft underbelly of Europe' campaigns during World War Two."
Nevertheless at the supreme moment, in May 1940, Churchill got it absolutely right.
During the 1930s he had visited Hitler's Germany and seen for himself the potential for evil there. Few people, either in the UK or the US, wanted to know, and he often had a problem selling his articles about the evils of Nazism to the press.
And of course once he was in power, his superb speeches inspired the country and kept it going.
He never actually quite said 'History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it', but that turned out to be the case”
Boris Johnson, the Conservative mayor of London, who recently published a book about Churchill, believes that it was Churchill's characteristic determination to go and find things out for himself that was a mark of his greatness.
"It's an illusion to think he was just a rhetorician, a guy who skated over the issues. He was deeply immersed in all the detail, and all the technicalities. And that helped him to get the right answer."
In 1938-39 British public opinion, as measured by the polling organisation Mass Observation, was strongly against Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement.
But Chamberlain's political position was unassailable, and he forced it through. Even after war had broken out in September 1939 the most likely outcome was that Britain would do a deal with Hitler and stand aside.
However, Chamberlain couldn't keep Churchill out of the Cabinet. He was now back again at the centre of power.
Churchill in car, 1950s
Churchill leaving parliament in 1964 - he remained an MP almost until the end of his life
As Hitler smashed his way through Western Europe, Churchill remained utterly faithful to Chamberlain. He forbade his supporters from leaking hostile stories to the press.

Eventually Chamberlain, his policy in ruins, was obliged to resign. He had no moral alternative but to put Churchill forward as his replacement.
Churchill was a decent and honourable man, as well as a charming one, and it was these qualities, not just his famous defiance, that made him prime minister.
He never actually quite said "History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it", but that turned out to be the case. His historical works were so good, they earned him the Nobel Prize for literature.
No other British prime minister can remotely match the scope of Churchill's achievement. When he died in 1965 the historian Sir Arthur Bryant said: "The age of giants is over."
Bryant was right - and yet that, in a way, is a measure of Churchill's success. Ever since he destroyed Hitler's despotism, our political leaders haven't needed to be giants.
They can just be ordinary.
Paint thrown over Churchill's statue in Parliament Square, 2007
The UK is marking the 50th anniversary of the death of Winston Churchill. He is regarded by many as the greatest Briton ever, but for some he remains an intensely controversial figure.
Admin
Admin
Admin

Posts : 81610
Join date : 2008-10-25
Age : 78
Location : Wales UK

https://worldwidechristians.forumotion.com

Back to top Go down

Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  Empty Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero

Post  Admin Sat 24 Jan 2015, 5:25 pm

Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero  WINSTON_CHURCHILL
Sir Winston Churchill 50th Anniversary of the death of a Hero a great leader 24 January 1965 a fitting state funeral for a commoner. 

Winston Churchill: Chartwell memories
23 January 2015 Last updated at 16:07 GMT
Fifty years ago flags were flown at half-mast at Chartwell, near Westerham in Kent, as the death of Sir Winston Churchill was mourned.
To mark the anniversary, his grandson, a gardener, and a carnival queen have been sharing their memories of the war-time prime minister.
Churchill's Kent home is hosting an exhibition of personal items from his family, including the last ever photograph taken just before he died, aged 90.
The exhibition also includes family invitations to his state funeral held in London six days after his death.
Admin
Admin
Admin

Posts : 81610
Join date : 2008-10-25
Age : 78
Location : Wales UK

https://worldwidechristians.forumotion.com

Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum