Armistice

Before Dawn: young Aussie director’s new film is a sombre recount of the ANZACs’ sacrifice

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 5, 2024

Since Australia first began producing feature films, it has returned time and again to the subject of the first world war.

Key Points: 
  • Since Australia first began producing feature films, it has returned time and again to the subject of the first world war.
  • Before Dawn, out in cinemas today, is the latest in this long line of productions.

A sombre portrait of war


The Germans constructed the Hindenburg Line, also known as the Siegfriedstellung or “Siegfried Position” in German, as a defensive fortification on the Western Front in France during the winter of 1916–1917. Stretching between the towns of Arras and Laffaux in the country’s north, it served as a formidable barrier against Allied offensives.

  • Similar to All Quiet on the Western Front, Before Dawn downplays the celebration of victory and nationalist sacrifice by instead providing a sombre portrait of the horrors of combat.
  • By the time Armistice Day arrives on November 11 1918, marking the end of the war, it is hardly a victory for the soldiers.

A young man’s film through and through

  • That said, it would seem a little unfair to compare Before Dawn with the quality and emotional gravitas of Gallipoli.
  • Prince-Wright’s prior credits include 2018 film The Decadent and Depraved, an independent western genre film set in outback colonial Western Australia.
  • Prince-Wright shares screenwriting duties with Jarrad Russell, who is receiving his first screenwriting feature credit on the film.
  • Before Dawn is certainly a young man’s film, both in what is being represented as well as in the cast and crew behind the production.

Ambitious work

  • It relies too heavily on composer Sean Tinnion’s overstated musical score to provide emotional weight.
  • The contribution of Aboriginal soldiers during WWI is yet to be satisfactorily fictionalised on the screen.
  • Despite these faults and oversights, Before Dawn offers an account of the important sacrifice Australia made in assisting the Commonwealth during the war.
  • Coupled with other sources, it could function well as a teaching text for students learning about the Hindenburg Line.


Stephen Gaunson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Greenidge Generation Announces $6 Million Investment to Support Ongoing Business Transformation

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 12, 2024

Greenidge Generation Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: GREE) (“Greenidge” or the "Company"), a vertically integrated cryptocurrency datacenter and power generation company, today announced that it has entered into a securities purchase agreement with Armistice Capital that includes an initial investment of $6 million.

Key Points: 
  • Greenidge Generation Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: GREE) (“Greenidge” or the "Company"), a vertically integrated cryptocurrency datacenter and power generation company, today announced that it has entered into a securities purchase agreement with Armistice Capital that includes an initial investment of $6 million.
  • The investment from Armistice Capital will provide Greenidge with long-term capital to support the Company’s growth strategy and is expected to fund its expansion into low-cost power centers, bitcoin mining, its EPCM business, new AI infrastructure/data centers and innovative efforts to support an increased interest in bitcoin.
  • Greenidge CEO Jordan Kovler commented: “The investment by Armistice sends a clear message regarding Greenidge’s ongoing transformation and expansion efforts.
  • This included Net Income of $1.4 million to $2.4 million, Adjusted EBITDA of $1.6 million to $2.6 million and Earnings Per Share of $0.18 to $0.32.

How do we commemorate the New Zealand Wars? The history of Anzac Day can be a guide

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Historians and Māori leaders are now worried about the mixed impact of the day – known as Te Pūtake o te Riri – amid wider fears it is already slipping from public attention.

Key Points: 
  • Historians and Māori leaders are now worried about the mixed impact of the day – known as Te Pūtake o te Riri – amid wider fears it is already slipping from public attention.
  • Unlike Anzac Day, however, Te Pūtake o te Riri was not made an official holiday – and this may partly explain its struggle for wider recognition.

A question of timing

  • It emphasises Māori experiences, and each year’s commemoration is hosted by different hapū and iwi.
  • In 2023, for example, it focused on Ngai-te-rangi perspectives of the battle of Pukehinahina – “Gate Pā” – in Tauranga.

Evolution of Anzac Day

  • The comparison with the first world war invites an intriguing question: what lessons might we learn from the history of our most visible war commemoration, Anzac Day?
  • Indeed, in 1965, the 50th anniversary of Gallipoli, there were real doubts Anzac Day could survive the passing of the last Anzac veterans.
  • Read more:
    New lessons about old wars: keeping the complex story of Anzac Day relevant in the 21st century

    Instead, it has survived as a sacred day – helped perhaps by the 1920 Anzac Day Act which made it an official public holiday.

War memorials and public memory

  • The growing public ownership of Anzac Day ran parallel to the decline of Armistice Day, which marked the end of the World War I on November 11.
  • As the sculptor Brett Graham has noted, war memorials became the dominant sculptural form of public life.
  • Nowadays, they are among the nation’s most prominent public sites, including the Auckland War Memorial Museum, the Pukeahu National War Memorial in Wellington, and Christchurch’s Bridge of Remembrance.

Gallipoli and national unity

  • Significantly, the Gallipoli story – the central focus of our Anzac mythology – has been adapted and retold by each generation.
  • Māori Television (Whakatā Māori) established a national Anzac Day broadcast in 2005, deepening the shared cultural languages and motifs of April 25.
  • Since the 1990s, successive governments – especially Helen Clark’s in the early 2000s – invested in Anzac Day as a commemoration of national unity.

Need for a national policy

  • Some have suggested Te Pūtake o te Riri will never achieve the necessary public attention until it becomes a statutory holiday.
  • As Joanna Kidman noted, many New Zealand Wars cemeteries, memorials and battlefields have been neglected or are on private land.
  • The issues raised all point to the need for a national policy on the commemoration of the New Zealand Wars – guided by iwi, with critical input from scholars – that enhances community relationships.

New ways of remembering

  • After its service on October 28, the museum hosted whānau descendants of 28th Māori Battalion veterans who had never claimed their medals for serving in World War II.
  • By choosing Te Pūtake o te Riri for the ceremony, the organisers were able to bridge past and present through themes of service, sacrifice and citizenship.
  • As trusted institutions of public memory, museums are ideally placed to tell the stories of the New Zealand Wars.


Rowan Light does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation Welcomes the 1918 Cadillac Type 57 from the National Historic Vehicle Register

Retrieved on: 
Friday, November 17, 2023

DEARBORN, Mich., Nov. 17, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The 1918 Cadillac Type 57, with engine number 57A704, is currently on display in the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation's National Historic Vehicle Register exhibit, powered by the Hagerty Drivers Foundation. On display until July 2024, this vehicle has a strong connection to America's involvement in World War I.

Key Points: 
  • The 1918 Cadillac Type 57, with engine number 57A704, is currently on display in the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation's National Historic Vehicle Register exhibit, powered by the Hagerty Drivers Foundation.
  • DEARBORN, Mich., Nov. 17, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The 1918 Cadillac Type 57, with engine number 57A704, is currently on display in the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation's National Historic Vehicle Register exhibit, powered by the Hagerty Drivers Foundation.
  • The rotating exhibit is part of a partnership between The Henry Ford and the Hagerty Drivers Foundation to display cars from the National Historic Vehicle Register that tell the story of the automobile in American history.
  • The Cadillac was the fourth vehicle added to the National Historic Vehicle Register and archived in the Library of Congress.

20 Years of Celebrating Veterans Day for Wounded Warrior Project

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, November 9, 2023

NEW YORK, Nov. 9, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- On Veterans Day, and every day, Wounded Warrior Project® (WWP) honors those who have selflessly served their country, often putting themselves in harm's way to defend the freedoms citizens enjoy. This year, WWP is honoring the service and sacrifice of all veterans in a special way.

Key Points: 
  • Though Veterans Day happens once a year, honoring veterans is a year-round effort at Wounded Warrior Project.
  • Wounded Warrior Project was founded 20 years ago to honor the sentiment behind Veterans Day, and we remain committed to serving post-9/11 wounded veterans, along with their families, throughout the year and for decades to come."
  • Veterans Day, formerly known as Armistice Day, was originally a day to recognize the call for peace by the Germans on "the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month," and honor World War I veterans.
  • Communities nationwide come together each year to recognize and honor veterans on Veterans Day.

Suella Braverman: why the home secretary can't force the police to cancel a pro-Palestine march

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, November 9, 2023

The UK home secretary, Suella Braverman, has reached new heights with her criticism of the Metropolitan police over its handling of pro-Palestinian marches.

Key Points: 
  • The UK home secretary, Suella Braverman, has reached new heights with her criticism of the Metropolitan police over its handling of pro-Palestinian marches.
  • In an op-ed for the Times, reportedly not cleared by Number 10, Braverman accused police of a double standard, treating left-wing marches more leniently than right-wing ones.
  • Over the last few days, the Met police have been under pressure to shut down marches planned for Armistice Day in London.

Principles of policing

  • But perhaps more shocking is that her comments amount to a public accusation that the police are breaking one of the fundamental principles of British policing, which is to be non-partisan.
  • His blueprint for policing included the clear objective that the police would be non-partisan: free from any political interference and not favouring any group, religion, ethnicity or other section of society more than another.

Governing the police

  • The local police and crime commissioner is accountable to the public and sets a local policing plan.
  • And the home office sets the police pay arrangements, police regulations and standards and provides 50% of police budgets.


It is clear then that Peel’s original aspiration that the police should not become a tool for politicians to misuse is still, on paper at least, alive and well. But the most senior politician responsible for policing is attempting to interfere with their operational independence regarding public order policing – and perhaps bully them into making operational decisions which satisfy a partisan viewpoint.

Undermining trust in the police

  • Policing by consent is an oft-used phrase, but it simply means that law-abiding people are prepared to help the police as witnesses to crime, or providing intelligence, while criminals begrudgingly accept the legitimacy of the police.
  • Whatever Braverman’s motivation, this precious contract between the police and the British people is now being seriously damaged.


John Fox is a member of the Labour Party.

Fareportal Brand OneTravel Shares Veteran’s Day Travel Inspiration

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, November 7, 2023

New York, New York, Nov. 07, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Americans will celebrate Veteran’s Day on Friday, November 10th this year, and Fareportal online travel agency brand OneTravel is offering some insight on where to travel to commemorate this significant day and honor those who have served.

Key Points: 
  • New York, New York, Nov. 07, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Americans will celebrate Veteran’s Day on Friday, November 10th this year, and Fareportal online travel agency brand OneTravel is offering some insight on where to travel to commemorate this significant day and honor those who have served.
  • Originally created as Armistice Day just after the first World War, the name of the holiday was officially changed to Veteran’s Day in 1954.
  • Later, to create three-day weekends for federal employees and encourage travel and tourism, in 1968 Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Act.
  • This article provides some excellent ideas on places to visit that are a great fit with the ethos of Veteran’s Day.

Team RWB and The Vitamin Shoppe to Host Over 100 "Workouts of the Day" In Locations Across the U.S. in Recognition of Veterans Day

Retrieved on: 
Monday, October 16, 2023

SECAUCUS, N.J., Oct. 16, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- This upcoming Veterans Day, November 11, veterans and their supporters in over 100 locations nationwide will complete a series of mountain climbers, power cleans, and other functional fitness exercises to support the men and women who have served our country. WOD for Warriors is a national fundraiser and "Workout of the Day," presented by The Vitamin Shoppe® in support of Team Red, White & Blue (Team RWB), a nonprofit organization forging America's leading health and wellness community for veterans.

Key Points: 
  • WOD for Warriors is a national fundraiser and "Workout of the Day," presented by The Vitamin Shoppe® in support of Team Red, White & Blue (Team RWB), a nonprofit organization forging America's leading health and wellness community for veterans.
  • "It's inspiring to see veterans and supporters come together year after year to complete WOD for Warriors on Veterans Day," said Mike Erwin, Founder and Executive Director of Team RWB.
  • The Vitamin Shoppe has supported Team RWB and its mission since 2020.
  • To do more than say "thank you" on Veterans Day, learn more and register at www.about.teamrwb.org/missions/wod-for-warriors .

Statement - Ministers of Veterans Affairs and National Defence mark 70th anniversary of Korean War Armistice Agreement

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, July 27, 2023

The armistice marked the end of three years of bitter conflict that claimed the lives of 516 Canadians.

Key Points: 
  • The armistice marked the end of three years of bitter conflict that claimed the lives of 516 Canadians.
  • The war in Korea started in June 1950 when communist forces from North Korea crossed the 38th Parallel into the Republic of Korea.
  • On this 70th anniversary of the signing of the armistice, Canada extends its deepest appreciation to all who contributed towards peace and democracy in South Korea.
  • "When the Korean War began 73 years ago, Canada joined 18 other United Nations allies to answer the call to defend freedom in South Korea.

Team Red, White & Blue and Supporters Honor Veterans with Sweat Equity

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, November 10, 2022

ATLANTA, Nov. 10, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- On Veterans Day, veterans and supporters will complete a series of mountain climbers, power cleans, and functional fitness exercises to support the men and women who served our country. WOD for Warriors is a national fundraiser and workout of the day, presented by The Vitamin Shoppe and sponsored by FOX Nation.

Key Points: 
  • As part of the event, participants tackle the Armistice WOD at gyms across the country or virtually through the Team RWB App.
  • Host gyms organize fundraisers to support Team RWB's mission while enabling community members to do more than say "thank you" on Veterans Day.
  • "WOD for Warriors is an opportunity to show veterans that their best days are ahead," said Mike Erwin, Executive Director of Team RWB.
  • Team Red, White & Blue (Team RWB), a nonprofit organization founded in 2010, is forging America's leading health and wellness community for military veterans, families, and their supporters.