Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for January 27, 2002
Transcript:
Danae: I've gotta tell ya, mister...that's an awfully boring tattoo on your arm. It's just a bunch of numbers. Man: Well, I was about your age when I got it, and kept it as a reminder. Danae: Oh...a reminder of happier days? Man: No..of a time when the world went mad. "Imagine yourself in a land where your countrymen followed the voice of political extremists who didn't like your religion. Imagine having everything taken from you, your entire family sent to a concentration camp as slave laborers, then systematically murdered. In this place, they even take your name and replace it with a number tattooed on your arm. It was called the Holocaust, when millions of people perished just because of their faith..." Danae: So you kept it to remind yourself about the dangers of political extremism? Man: No, my dear. To remind you.
CUTYPATTY almost 14 years ago
I thank the artist of this comic for his point of view, and for his good heart in sharing this with the world, so that our children may know and acknolege and appriciate what they have and what they can do with it. God bless you
dwm2m about 13 years ago
This is perhaps my all-time favorite cartoon. It shows that cartoons can be much more than a daily chuckle. I’m a teacher, and I want my students to remember what’s important.
kaystari Premium Member about 13 years ago
Cheers! Good message
No New Wars about 1 year ago
My parents took me to one of the death camps when I was a teenager. The whole exhibition there struck me as having one message:
“It was not Nazis who did this, or demons or monsters or evil people. It was people. People exactly like you. You did this. Remember that, and don’t do it again.”
That was over 4 decades ago, and I have not seen anything of humanity that says that claim was false. Right down to the current day comments on the cartoons, with people calling for genocide.