Word: brotherhood
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Genial José Gallostra was one of Franco Spain's key diplomatic salesmen in Latin America. Wherever he went-in Peru, Bolivia, Brazil and Mexico-he diligently peddled the doctrine of Hispanidad, the brotherhood of Spanish-speaking people...
Author Warner once ended an essay called The Cult of Power with these words: "The only reply to the cult of individual or racial power and violence is the actual practice of general justice, mercy, brotherhood and understanding." The trouble with Men of Stones as a fictional elaboration of this credo is that it reaches the intelligence without ever finding the way to the heart...
...most likely candidate for the post (out of some 30-odd St. Valentines listed in The Biographical Dictionary of Saints) is one M. Valentine. He was a Roman priest who loved brotherhood (and sisterhood), but unfortunately he lost his head over the whole matter on February 14 in either 269 or 278 A.D., depending on what book you look it up in. This explains why he became a martyr and did not die a natural death...
Spokesman for this trigger-happy little group is General Kurt von Manteuffel, an excellent soldier who led the Ardennes break-through in December, 1944. He has been spending a lot of time with Dr. Adenauer, who apparently asked for the advice of the Brotherhood on possible rearming. The reason advanced by the unemployed officers is simple: Germany needs an army to hold off the Russians. Some top Allied military men--Marshal Montgomery and General Tassigny among them--have given tacit approval to this theory...
...German divisions could do little to stop the Russian Army; a more expensive, no less effective and certainly safer, plan would be to keep occupation forces in Germany as a picket line until the Cold War either freezes or boils over. There are echoes in the urgings of the Brotherhood--unpleasant echoes from Prussia, and the Marne, and the Ardennes...