Each November, we’re tasked with remembrance.
We’re called on to remember the sacrifices made by the thousands killed during wars in which Canadians have fought: People such as my father (India and Burma, 1944-45) or Uncle George (killed with the RAF, 1942), or my grandfather (gassed at the Somme, served 1916-18, lived but never really able to work again.)
As the generations that served in some of those defining conflicts leave us, remembrance becomes a more challenging task — one that risks being further complicated by a rising tide of AI-generated garbage.
I ran into this by accident after seeing a YouTube video about German prisoners of war who worked on American farms. It focused heavily on Iowa, where the former PoW camp at Algona is now a museum preserving these memories .
In t

Toronto Star

Kelowna Daily Courier
The Chronicle-Journal
Psychology Today
The List
New York Post Video
The Travel