I disagree with this, because the evidence does not support it. In many places and times, the empires do not fight to the death until only one remains. Empires can come into contact and remain in contact without having to wage all-out, do-or-die campaigns of mutual conquest, even if there is bloody friction at the join between the two... and sometimes there is not even that.
Granted, empires usually do this for mutual security against a common threat. Britain and France, Britain and Russia, Britain and Japan in the WWI era, all were examples of cases where any potential colonial squabbles were brought to a halt due to a single nation presenting a common threat.
But there is ample precedent for the idea that empires can coexist (mostly) peaceably; the mere existence of multiple empires does not guarantee that they will fight.
Did killing Hirobumi touch off an apocalyptic war that killed tens of millions, which in turn touched off a second apocalyptic war that killed tens of millions?Metahive wrote:In Korea we did a similar thing by erecting a statue for Ahn Jung-geun who's claim to fame is having murdered japanese resident general Itoh Hirobumi. It's just as dumb as both Itoh and Franz-Ferdinand were moderating and compromising voices whose death made everything worse. Neither deserves a monument and it's clear it's just spite that's behind them anyway.
If not, then the Bosnians are on a whole different level of stupid than the Koreans.
Well, he's got Herostratic fame if nothing else.Ahriman238 wrote:^this. Here is a man who quite literally made history. Not in a good way, but he deserves to be remembered if not revered.Ziggy Stardust wrote:I voted "No", but honestly that's mostly because I don't think he is worthy of adulation per se. However, I think a monument to him is important for historical reasons. But it is possible to memorialize without glorifying.
Thing is, building a statue of someone isn't remembering them, it's revering them. There's a reason even the Germans don't have statues of Adolf Hitler, or the Italians statues of Mussolini.
[Someone will probably now link to a counterexample of an Italian statue of Mussolini. Nevertheless, you know what I mean]
Do you think it best to take such a stance, in a society which has an aristocracy? I question that. Progress away from aristocracy and imperialism can easily proceed in a much less bloody fashion and with less political chaos... in places where the old order doesn't expect to be massacred as part of the establishment of the new order.Stas Bush wrote:Franz Ferdinand's life is irrelevant (as an aristocrat, he probably deserved to feel the wrath through a bullet).
If you tell a man with absolute power that you are going to do your best to murder him, his brothers, his wife, and his children, because of who they are,* because they were born into and inherited positions of responsibility, of course he is going to do his best to destroy you and everyone like you, without mercy. It's self-defense. And of course innocents will get caught in the crossfire.
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*This is basically the message that, say, Franz Josef I of Austria got. He personally was targeted by assassins who came within a hand's breadth of killing him, his brother was killed by nationalists, his wife by anarchists, his nephew and heir by other nationalists, specifically Princip... what could he possibly be except a mortal enemy of all revolutionaries and all political change? Can you ask a man, not a king or a noble but just any two-legged rational animal of whatever rank, to cut his own throat, literally to cut his own throat, by surrendering to people who act this way toward him and his family?
In which case, in light of the fact that this gun went off and killed so many millions that we struggle to count them all... should we be celebrating that trigger, or the finger that tightened to pull it?Neither would his life stop a World War from happening, since it is the general trends and not isolated incidents which determine what happens. Titanic forces were at work, both Gavrilo and Franz totally irrelevant, a mere trigger for the loaded gun.
Why not celebrate a plague bacillus too, arguing that all the people who died of the plague would have died anyway of something else later on?
We should laud as heroes those who avert the terrible destruction of war, and condemn those who provoke them, even if we happen to think that particular war might have happened some other way.
Of course it was a period of tension, but that hardly means war was historically inevitable. A great war in Europe had already been averted in response to previous crises, more than once, and there were other forces in play that could change the balance of power to make it less viciously unstable.Borgholio wrote:How was it not a period of tension?
If the Cuban Missile Crisis had gone nuclear, would we say that Khrushchev and Kennedy were somehow not to blame? Such an attitude is nonsense.
And at the same time, after the Cuban Missile Crisis, we stepped back from the blink. The great powers began downsizing their nuclear arsenals and seeking rapprochement in the 1970s. The risk of nuclear war receded.
So by avoiding the immediate crisis, time was bought for the situation to cool down. Who can now say that this wouldn't have happened in Europe of 1915-20?
Was there war between Hungarians and Germans within the Austro-Hungarian Empire? Was one oppressed by the other? I argue 'no,' the Hungarians wielded great political influence within the state after they were incorporated under the Dual Monarchy.Stas Bush wrote:As we know, this doesn't help much: even the US, a Republic from the start, participated in lots of colonial wars, in the bloodbath in China and finally both World Wars.Thanas wrote:Ferdinand might have ascended to the throne and ushered in his policies of turning the empire into a federation of several ethnicities.
Reimagining the Empire as a multi-ethnic federation might not have made it democratic, but it would at least grant representation to many of the minorities you argue were oppressed by the empire, reducing the level of imperialism. It would also make it more plausible that any minorities which wished of their own accord to leave could do so peaceably, without resulting in the whole region becoming "balkanized" into a shattered mass of individually helpless nations permanently at each other's throats.
Except that the World Wars did not stop imperialism either.Stas Bush wrote:How exactly is this going to stop the bloody path of imperialism, though? If not there - then elsewhere.Thanas wrote:I am talking about a way to avoid the ethnic bloodshed that followed much of the dissolution of the empire.
They simply turned the slow oppressive cruelty of traditionalist imperialism into the more vicious cruelty of fascist imperialism. And the bloody purges of the communist regimes that emerged in the region. And the almost incalculable, staggering wreckage and death of the two world wars in which entire districts and nations were utterly laid waste, all infrastructure destroyed throughout a continent-sized area, millions of able-bodied men thrown away for nothing, the entire productive capacity of the great industrial nations devoted for roughly a decade of combined time to no end save destruction.
HOW IS THIS AN IMPROVEMENT?