Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "I'm Still
Laughing":
I am not suggesting that things were not tough in Britain
after the war, however, Britain in fact was the biggest monetary beneficiary of
the Marshall plan, followed by France, Italy, and then (West) Germany.
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I was eleven years old when the Second World War began and sixteen when it ended.
The Marshall Plan started some time after.
I'm not sure how reliable my impressions are
I do remember the Lend/Lease agreement with the United States It was regarded as a Godsend. It allowed Britain and Commonwealth countries to carry on until the U.S. was herself attacked and entered the war.
But Lease/Lend wasn't aid. It had to be paid for. Britian's massive debt to the States was the reason for continued austerity twelve years after the war ended.
I do remember the irony of the victors being weighed down by debt and the losers recovering with the help of the U.S.
But debt was not the only problem. For years after, the threat of a new war with the Soviets hung over our heads.
Germany was still occupied by allied troops.
There was no peace.
I am not suggesting the comment above is incorrect.
It just doesn't fit with my memory of the way thing were.
Experience and memory always trump when they are pitted against text and history book information.
ReplyDeleteHmmm.. Anonymous 10:28.... Experience and memory are usually coloured by perceptions. Memory also fades.
ReplyDelete*clears throat* What 2:27 PM said.
ReplyDeleteAnd text books and history tomes are usually written by the victors, in retrospect and from a safe distance.
ReplyDelete