In a message dated 3/2/01 11:02:51 AM Eastern Standard Time, una@q-research.connectfree.co.uk writes:
<< You will notice from the series of quotations that I did not suggest that. You said that there was no remembrance of WW2 in B7, I replied that there was. You appear to have taken my response to be related to a different discussion about the extent to which B7 can be considered 'British'. >>
I'm sorry. I'm not sure what you're getting at, then. The question was (I thought) to find things in the B7 universe that make it a British society. I did say that I saw no remembrance of WW2 in B7. In what way would the fact that the Federation is a fascist regime prove that the *people* living in the culture of B7 remember WW2? I wasn't looking for proof that the writers of B7 remembered WW2. I was looking for proof that the people living in the universe of B7 remembered WW2 (in order to apply the analogy about wartime food rationing to B7). I think we're talking about two completely different things, so please clarify if you care to.
Annie