Evelyn’s Reviews > Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War > Status Update
Evelyn
is on page 44 of 384
“Good enough to die for [U.S.] American interests in vast numbers, good enough to lose their home to America’s enemies, these Hmong soldiers are not good enough to be buried alongside [U.S.] American soldiers.”
— Dec 09, 2024 10:45AM
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Evelyn’s Previous Updates
Evelyn
is on page 290 of 384
“It is perpetual war that is unrealistic. Perpetual war is madness, engineered in the rational language of bureaucracy and the high-flown rhetoric of nationalism and sacrifice, operating through campaigns that could lead to human extermination. This madness can only be matched by the logic of perpetual peace and the excessive, utopian commitment to a pure forgiveness, which the species needs to survive.”
— Oct 02, 2025 12:22PM
Evelyn
is on page 251 of 384
Rudyard Kipling, you are an evil white man…the writer of the white man’s burden.
— Oct 01, 2025 11:59AM
Evelyn
is on page 152 of 384
“‘I am afraid that too many of us want the fruits of integration but are not willing to courageously challenge the roots of segregation. But let me assure you that it does not come this way. Freedom is not free. It is always purchased with the high price of sacrifice and suffering.’ Black soldiers fought in American wars and now, ‘America, we are simply asking you to guarantee our freedom.’” -MLK Jr.
— Sep 27, 2025 11:05AM
Evelyn
is on page 150 of 384
“The Vietnamese civilian view of the Korean soldiers was worse, for some of the Vietnamese remembered how, during World War II, when the country was under Japanese occupation, Korean soldiers were in charge of the prison camps.”
— Sep 27, 2025 10:59AM
Evelyn
is on page 111 of 384
“A great novel about distant others persuades us of the need to save them, which, in our laziness, apathy, or fear, many of us will likely leave to someone else to do.”
— Sep 26, 2025 03:35PM
Evelyn
is on page 90 of 384
“The faces of the victimizers who became victims are the most visible rendition of the general problem that the Khmer Rouge era and its aftermath represents for a human and inhuman history: the reluctance to recognize and to reconcile with one’s capacity to harm others. When we refuse to see victims as capable of violence, we allow ourselves to imagine that we are the same way.”
— Sep 25, 2025 01:55PM
Evelyn
is on page 17 of 384
“A just memory says that ethically recalling one’s own is not enough to work through the past, and neither is the less common phenomenon of ethically recalling others. Both ethical approaches are needed…”
— Jul 27, 2024 08:40AM
Evelyn
is on page 43 of 384
...for those who see themselves as marginalized, dominated, excluded, exploited, or oppressed, the antiheroic takes time to develop. This is because weaker populations can ill afford to seem less than powerful to the powerful."
— Mar 31, 2017 12:53PM
Evelyn
is on page 43 of 384
"...for those who see themselves as marginalized, dominated, excluded, exploited, or oppressed, the antiheroic takes time to develop. This is because weaker populations can I'll afford to seem less than powerful to the powerful."
— Mar 31, 2017 12:49PM

