tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8137857716187567509.post8372811547930418632..comments2024-01-18T02:47:12.669-08:00Comments on Tregear Vean: The turning year. Revjeanrolthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12744131101249601856noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8137857716187567509.post-81111244274289389082014-10-08T01:57:43.303-07:002014-10-08T01:57:43.303-07:00To be honest, I'm a baby boomer, so perhaps do...To be honest, I'm a baby boomer, so perhaps don't have the experience of the WW2 generation. But I feel much the same as your generation about the state of the world today and the various threats posed to us from Is and Ebola and the general breakdown in world order.<br /><br />We in the UK have been through out own trauma's, some of which are ongoing. Republican violence, while much reduced, remains an issue in Northern Ireland and the more recent stirring of Scottish nationalism also gives us food for thought. There is war and all sorts of destructive disorder and breakdown of countries and communities across the world. If I were to read anything into it, I might fear the end of us all. But when we look at our human history, it's full of such stories even on grander scales of conquests and empires rising and falling, while the people struggled to live to the best of their ability.<br /><br />So, my thoughts and worries are best described as in the back ground, concern for my spouse, family and friends, but outwith my control and in God's hands, not mine.<br /><br />UKViewerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18114944341930758335noreply@blogger.com