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One day, however, he decides to shake it all up. But I think a lot of people will relate to John. That thing of assessing your life and going, 'OK, I'm here, everything's fine, but is this what I want? He finds that darkness inside himself and he quite likes it, which is a great thing to be able to play. It's very much its own film, but the attitude is the same as the original, which is what's good about it. Mackintosh looks set for another period in the spotlight, though he continues to get frequent reminders of the last one.
He lived with bouts of depression throughout his life. Churchill called his depression 'the black dog'. His good friend Lord Beaverbrook said Churchill was always either 'at the top of the wheel of confidence or at the bottom of an intense depression.
Some of things that Churchill said seem controversial today and there are many debates about some of the things he did. Some experts say he believed that some countries and races were naturally superior to others. In he said "I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place.
Others say that it's unfair to judge him by attitudes and beliefs we hold today and that many of his views were held by many other people at the time. He had very strong views about the British relationship with India and was opposed to self-rule. He also considered Ghandi a threat to the British Empire. He is accused of not doing enough to prevent during a famine in the region of Bengal, in south east Asia in which millions of people are thought to have died.
This happened in , during World War Two, and some experts say his focus was on fighting the war in Europe and that when he became aware of the true seriousness what was happening, he ordered grain to be sent there. He also has a negative reputation for the way he dealt with Unions and workers rights, mainly after sending the army in to stop riots following strikes in Tonypandy in South Wales.
Churchill died on 24 January and was given a state funeral, an honour saved only for kings and queens, and sometimes other people of the highest national importance. A quick search of the Internet turned up an astonishing number. The narrative context varies too: sometimes the person rebuked by Churchill is a correspondent, a speech editor, a bureaucrat, or an audience member at a speech and sometimes it is a man, sometimes a woman, and sometimes even a young student.
Sometimes Churchill writes a note, sometimes he scribbles the note on the corrected manuscript, and often he is said to have spoken the rebuke aloud. The text concerned was variously a book manuscript, a speech, an article, or a government document. Ben Zimmer has presented evidence on the alt. Since Churchill often contributed to The Strand , Zimmer argues, it would certainly have identified him if he had been the official in question.
It is not clear how the anecdote came to be attributed to Churchill by Gowers, but it seems to have circulated independently earlier.
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