Manic street preachers - If you tolerate this (lyrics)digitalfinch
The song warns that if society tolerates fascism, then the children will be the next victims. It references shooting rabbits and fascists, and walking the streets of Barcelona but without real intent. It repeats the chorus "And if you tolerate this, then your children will be next" several times as a warning call against tolerating authoritarian rule and its consequences for future generations.
Manic street preachers - If you tolerate this (lyrics)digitalfinch
The song warns that if society tolerates fascism, then the children will be the next victims. It references shooting rabbits and fascists, and walking the streets of Barcelona but without real intent. It repeats the chorus "And if you tolerate this, then your children will be next" several times as a warning call against tolerating authoritarian rule and its consequences for future generations.
Once allies celebrated together forty years ago, but now tensions have risen. In Berlin, people anxiously await the end as shadows are cast by two giants competing for power, while in Washington DC politicians dismiss problems in Europe. Where the author comes from, Americans are disliked for being loud and out of touch compared to those with stiff upper lips. The world has changed significantly in the forty years since the end of World War II.
The document is a poem about American soldiers in the Vietnam War. It describes their experiences from basic training, to being sent overseas where they faced harsh conditions and danger, to the losses they endured. The soldiers felt disconnected from those at home, and they bonded closely with each other for survival as they fought in a war they did not fully understand.
The song describes walking along the Moskva River in Moscow and listening to the wind of change on an August night. It references soldiers passing by who are also listening to this wind of change and how the future is in the air as change blows everywhere. The wind of change is taking people to a magical moment where children can dream of tomorrow in this changing wind.
The song expresses hope that Russians love their children just as much as Americans do, and questions the growing hysteria and threats between the two countries. It notes that there is no such thing as a winnable war, and hopes that shared humanity between all people, regardless of ideology or country, can help avoid nuclear conflict.
Viktor was born in Leningrad in 1944 during World War II and never knew his father after the war. He grew up in the Soviet Union during the Cold War, serving in the Red Army and later becoming a circus clown to make children happy. The narrator was born in 1949 in the United States during the McCarthy era and Cold War tensions, remembering nuclear drills and the Cuban Missile Crisis. In the present, the narrator meets Viktor in Leningrad and they embrace, realizing the importance of friendship between former adversaries.
The song describes a world on the brink of self-destruction due to violence, war, hate, and a lack of progress on important issues like integration and legislation. It warns that without change, pushing nuclear buttons or continuing down current paths could lead the world to its end, with no escape from the coming destruction.
This document provides instructions for a word search puzzle, listing Dutch place names and terms that are to be found and circled in a grid. The grid contains letters arranged horizontally, vertically and diagonally, within which the listed words are hidden. The goal is to find and circle each word from the given list within the letter grid.
Once allies celebrated together forty years ago, but now tensions have risen. In Berlin, people anxiously await the end as shadows are cast by two giants competing for power, while in Washington DC politicians dismiss problems in Europe. Where the author comes from, Americans are disliked for being loud and out of touch compared to those with stiff upper lips. The world has changed significantly in the forty years since the end of World War II.
The document is a poem about American soldiers in the Vietnam War. It describes their experiences from basic training, to being sent overseas where they faced harsh conditions and danger, to the losses they endured. The soldiers felt disconnected from those at home, and they bonded closely with each other for survival as they fought in a war they did not fully understand.
The song describes walking along the Moskva River in Moscow and listening to the wind of change on an August night. It references soldiers passing by who are also listening to this wind of change and how the future is in the air as change blows everywhere. The wind of change is taking people to a magical moment where children can dream of tomorrow in this changing wind.
The song expresses hope that Russians love their children just as much as Americans do, and questions the growing hysteria and threats between the two countries. It notes that there is no such thing as a winnable war, and hopes that shared humanity between all people, regardless of ideology or country, can help avoid nuclear conflict.
Viktor was born in Leningrad in 1944 during World War II and never knew his father after the war. He grew up in the Soviet Union during the Cold War, serving in the Red Army and later becoming a circus clown to make children happy. The narrator was born in 1949 in the United States during the McCarthy era and Cold War tensions, remembering nuclear drills and the Cuban Missile Crisis. In the present, the narrator meets Viktor in Leningrad and they embrace, realizing the importance of friendship between former adversaries.
The song describes a world on the brink of self-destruction due to violence, war, hate, and a lack of progress on important issues like integration and legislation. It warns that without change, pushing nuclear buttons or continuing down current paths could lead the world to its end, with no escape from the coming destruction.
This document provides instructions for a word search puzzle, listing Dutch place names and terms that are to be found and circled in a grid. The grid contains letters arranged horizontally, vertically and diagonally, within which the listed words are hidden. The goal is to find and circle each word from the given list within the letter grid.
4. Hallo kinderen van groep 8a. Ik had al verwacht dat jullie naar mijn spookschool zouden gaan. Maar waarom? Om jullie geheugen een beetje op te frissen. Zo werkt de quiz: zagen jullie net die deuren? Dat zijn de vragendeuren , maar je moet eerst de sleutel vinden voor je er in kan. Hiernaast heb ik de sleutel van de taal-deur gelegd. De andere sleutels moet je zelf vinden. Directeur H. Vink P.S. Vind de sleutel der waarheden! (dat is de enige manier om hier uit te komen………)
5. Vraag 1: Van welk spreekwoord is dit de betekenis? Beter iets dan niets Terug naar de hal Vraag 2: Wat is een stoffelijk bijvoeglijk naamwoord?