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The skill to kill, courtesy of the new Mother Theresa

According to our new leader, there will be Army cadet units in schools which will give “the skills and confidence [pupils] need to thrive” – note the new definition of “thrive” here: it means to kill other people. This definition will not appear in the Oxford English Dictionary immediately, but it will be applied in schools as soon as possible. There may be some retraining available to Church of England theology students and vicars, rewriting the Sermon  on the Mount so that it teaches what we always knew it did: kill your neighbour. That’s what bishops have always taught anyway, so it’s just bringing the biblical text into line with practice. Got to be modern after all, haven’t we?
Jeremy Corbyn, meanwhile, has been mocked for being against war. Well, what does he know? He’s not a Christian. And he lives in the 1980s. Get real, Jeremy. Live in the first century, when Jesus told his followers that their enemies would be plunged into the fire that would never be quenched. Hell. Sounds like Trident to me. Go for it.

For peace – and against ceasefires

Am I missing something? I’m tired of the United Nations wringing its United hands about Aleppo and acting surprised because a ceasefire has failed, humanitarian aid hasn’t been delivered and the bombing has got worse. Of course it has. All the nations of the world are united in believing in war; all of them are armed to the teeth, the big and strutty ones with WMDs. War is the opposite of humanitarian. It’s the opposite of aid. War is destruction. War is murder. That’s what it’s for. Why would two (or in the Syrian situation, Gawd knows how many) antagonists at war be interested in aid to their victims? Or a ceasefire? (“Will it hold?” “Oh dear, there seem to have been violations.” What a surprise!).

This is why I can’t stand the mushy sentimentality surrounding the Christmas truce during the First World War. One English language textbook a few years ago used it in one of its lessons. The class weeps over a bilingual “Silent Night” in the trenches, sighs as it realises that the very next day both choirs went back to war, and then the class joins in singing some old wartime song popular with the British troops.

I don’t have an answer to all this. We don’t need ceasefires or humanitarian aid. We need to stop believing in war. Jeremy Corbyn doesn’t believe in war but, if he does get into government, I don’t know how he’ll try to persuade others. He’s set himself the task of trying to persuade his own party not to renew Trident (there’s a mountain to climb) and we can only join him in that effort and keep our fingers crossed. But it feels as if it could all be too late, especially since Iraq, and our creation of ISIS.

So, as I say, I’ve got no answer. I’m just tired of it, that’s all.