Jehoshua
Catholic
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2009
- Messages
- 7,284
On your comments regarding the post-great-war generation. Didn't EQ note that the very same generation was turning towards more conservative and religious ideologies, due to a reaction away from liberalism which was seen to be warmongering in support of the conflict? Indeed, that there is a conservative swing amongst the young could perhaps be why the Church has increased in influence over the last number of decades from what it was before the great war (and it definitely explains the success of moralism, and the conservative swing in Italy and other countries). The Hungarian, Scandinavian and I would add the French situations probably would contribute to this as well, since both situations were chaos and suffering caused by proletarists or other radicals, to which the natural backlash is a more traditionalist or conservative view. With an anti-liberal backlash to liberal warmongering in the great war already present, these events would strengthen the traditionalist trend amongst the young.
Now this isn't to say that there isn't a counter-traditional youth scene in music and the like (one can't put a generation all in one box). But a lot of the problems in Europe came about due to "progressive" by which I mean liberal/prole/hollandist ideological radicalism, and one would think that the young would move away from this instead of going towards it as a response to the historical circumstances. Indeed looking at the prole/liberal situation in Europe it would not be a stretch to say that its the older generation, that is more associated with more liberal ideology, that is the main push for it in the polls. Indeed the re-constitution of the confederacy is obviously an exercise in nostalgia for a better past, something likely to be more keenly felt amongst the older generations rather than the youth.
Now this isn't to say that there isn't a counter-traditional youth scene in music and the like (one can't put a generation all in one box). But a lot of the problems in Europe came about due to "progressive" by which I mean liberal/prole/hollandist ideological radicalism, and one would think that the young would move away from this instead of going towards it as a response to the historical circumstances. Indeed looking at the prole/liberal situation in Europe it would not be a stretch to say that its the older generation, that is more associated with more liberal ideology, that is the main push for it in the polls. Indeed the re-constitution of the confederacy is obviously an exercise in nostalgia for a better past, something likely to be more keenly felt amongst the older generations rather than the youth.