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Two minutes of silence can’t carry the whole story. We lean into the hard questions Remembrance Day raises: how to honor courage without glamorizing war, how to include civilians alongside veterans, and how to keep memory honest when distance invites denial. With Canadian Armed Forces chaplain Capt. Justin McNeil and philosopher Dr. Trudy Govier joining our regulars, we navigate symbols like the red and white poppy, the surge in defense spending, and the chronic underfunding of diplomacy. The aim isn’t to score points; it’s to hold tension: preparedness and restraint, justice and forgiveness, grief and hope.
Justin takes us inside the strange vocation of training for what you hope never happens, and the pastoral work of rehumanization—names, faces, families, artifacts from those with no graves. Trudy probes where reconciliation meets justice, from South Africa’s TRC to today’s conflicts, and how amnesty, accountability, and public repair can clash. We ask what rebuilding must look like after the shooting stops, and why “win and leave” only seeds the next war. Together we explore nonviolent resistance, alliances, and the leverage that shapes negotiations in a world where drones, disinformation, and nationalism have changed the rules.
We also confront the language that primes violence and the counter-story of shalom: peace as shared safety, dignity, and livelihood. From Rwanda’s neighbor-against-neighbor horror to Canada’s peacekeeping identity and the realities of moral injury, we keep circling one insistence: remember well so we can choose better. If you’re wrestling with poppies, budgets, diplomacy, and what to carry after the bugle fades, this conversation offers clarity, compassion, and a path forward.
If this moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us your key takeaway from Remembrance. Your voice helps more listeners find thoughtful, hopeful conversations like this one.
Check us out at www.preparedtodrown.com
Continue the conversation over at our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/PreparedtoDrown
By Soul Cellar MinistriesTwo minutes of silence can’t carry the whole story. We lean into the hard questions Remembrance Day raises: how to honor courage without glamorizing war, how to include civilians alongside veterans, and how to keep memory honest when distance invites denial. With Canadian Armed Forces chaplain Capt. Justin McNeil and philosopher Dr. Trudy Govier joining our regulars, we navigate symbols like the red and white poppy, the surge in defense spending, and the chronic underfunding of diplomacy. The aim isn’t to score points; it’s to hold tension: preparedness and restraint, justice and forgiveness, grief and hope.
Justin takes us inside the strange vocation of training for what you hope never happens, and the pastoral work of rehumanization—names, faces, families, artifacts from those with no graves. Trudy probes where reconciliation meets justice, from South Africa’s TRC to today’s conflicts, and how amnesty, accountability, and public repair can clash. We ask what rebuilding must look like after the shooting stops, and why “win and leave” only seeds the next war. Together we explore nonviolent resistance, alliances, and the leverage that shapes negotiations in a world where drones, disinformation, and nationalism have changed the rules.
We also confront the language that primes violence and the counter-story of shalom: peace as shared safety, dignity, and livelihood. From Rwanda’s neighbor-against-neighbor horror to Canada’s peacekeeping identity and the realities of moral injury, we keep circling one insistence: remember well so we can choose better. If you’re wrestling with poppies, budgets, diplomacy, and what to carry after the bugle fades, this conversation offers clarity, compassion, and a path forward.
If this moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us your key takeaway from Remembrance. Your voice helps more listeners find thoughtful, hopeful conversations like this one.
Check us out at www.preparedtodrown.com
Continue the conversation over at our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/PreparedtoDrown