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WAR AND PEACE.

To have disturbed one military-minded hornet from his nest is encouraging indeed. Mr John Guiniven's letter is intellectually quite negligible since he ignores the principal issue and resorts to the construction of inaccurate statements. That "Britain's intellectuals are opposed to a defensive war is an assertion injudiciously made by your correspondent not by me. I did say that Britain's efforts for peace are delusions no. shared by the greatest intellectuals witlim our own Empire who have spoken m -" fi interests of democracy; and if your correspondent will review the subject of disarmament negotiations he will be logically compelled to accept the foregoing statement as truth His tirade against "cowards" and his allusion to "sob stuff" are poor examples ot Irish wit, besides being entirely irrelevant to the subject under discussion. PROLETARIAN.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19350603.2.61.4

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXVI, Issue 129, 3 June 1935, Page 6

Word Count
134

WAR AND PEACE. Auckland Star, Volume LXVI, Issue 129, 3 June 1935, Page 6

WAR AND PEACE. Auckland Star, Volume LXVI, Issue 129, 3 June 1935, Page 6