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-- Sleeping man beheaded on Greyhound bus
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Posted by elFreak on Jul-31-2008 22:18:

quote:
Originally posted by guerra-monstru
LOL, way to come in at the last moment like the U.S. Any how the previous comment was directed towards the Canadians on this forum.


ummm canada joined ww2 before the americans did.


Posted by elFreak on Jul-31-2008 22:18:

protect ya neck son!


Posted by Sunsnail on Jul-31-2008 22:31:

quote:
Originally posted by guerra-monstru
LOL, way to come in at the last moment like the U.S. Any how the previous comment was directed towards the Canadians on this forum.


You say it as if the war already had a set time. There's a reason it ended shortly after we came in.


Posted by Clovis on Jul-31-2008 22:44:

quote:
Originally posted by guerra-monstru
LOL, way to come in at the last moment like the U.S. Any how the previous comment was directed towards the Canadians on this forum.



Where the fuck were the Mexicans?


Posted by elFreak on Jul-31-2008 22:52:

i think hitler hired them to build cheap ovens.

one morning he just drove up to home schnitzel depot in his hitler party van and said, "Bake mein taco"


Posted by Clovis on Jul-31-2008 22:52:

quote:
Originally posted by elFreak
i think hitler hired them to build cheap ovens.

one morning he just drove up to home schnitzel depot in his hitler party van and said, "Bake mein taco"



Posted by Ted Promo on Jul-31-2008 22:53:

quote:
Originally posted by Clovis
Where the fuck were the Mexicans?


Immigrating into the US.


Posted by pkcRAISTLIN on Aug-01-2008 00:56:

Thumbs up

quote:
Originally posted by DJ_Eternal
Greyhound Buses are in a cut-throat business.


thank god someone in here managed to make a funny other than the predictably repetitive jokes playing on the word "head".


Posted by idoru on Aug-01-2008 00:57:

I laughed when I read the article. Something about the randomness, and the way they described him being so calm at the end of it...

I'm a terrible person.


Posted by Dervish on Aug-01-2008 00:57:

Also % wise more Canadians died in ww2 than Americans. (I got work in 4hrs...yawr!)


Posted by Sunsnail on Aug-01-2008 00:58:

quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
thank god someone in here managed to make a funny other than the predictably repetitive jokes playing on the word "head".


mine was good, maybe it was too subtle for you


Posted by Dervish on Aug-01-2008 01:04:

quote:
Originally posted by guerra-monstru
how do you i would not have?! I have martial arts background and that is at least something. There were more people than just the attacker and his victim. You just do not stand around while someone is being stabbed. You do something especially if you outnumber the person, rather than just acting like a bunch of cowards. I now understand why no one can remember Canada during ww1 &b ww2. Because the Canadians do not put up much of a fight.


What is a martial arts background exactly? Do you have a magnet to flick the knife from his hand?

I've actually taken a mate out of a situation where the other guy had a knife and we didn't. (and it was a little shitty one) Believe me you're not jumping in for some strangers corpse lol.


Posted by idoru on Aug-01-2008 01:06:

quote:
Originally posted by Dervish
What is a martial arts background exactly? Do you have a magnet to flick the knife from his hand?

I've actually taken a mate out of a situation where the other guy had a knife and we didn't. (and it was a little shitty one) Believe me you're not jumping in for some strangers corpse lol.


But you're a coward if you don't try! COWARD! I bet you're Canadian, huh? Did your relatives just sit around during WW2? Pfft.


Posted by Dervish on Aug-01-2008 01:14:

Hahaha yeah! Think I have some French in me too lol!

(actually my grand uncle was a beach commando and the second most decorated man in the country, tho my granddads "d day" story was quite funny eating strawberrys and cream on a posh boat full of wrens = birds hahahaha)


Posted by elFreak on Aug-01-2008 01:16:

i don't know why i'm responding still but meh i'm bored. Its from wiki answers but still will give you the gist of it.

quote:
During World war Two, a total of 42,789 Canadian military personell were killed during their service. A further 97,988 were wounded, many of them loosing a limb, such as a arm or a leg, and some cases, they were multiple amputees, meaning that for the rest of their lives they would be disabled.

You asked about battles. You have to realize that many men were killed in isolated places, in actions that were not really a battle in the conventional sense of that word.

For example, if a fighter pilot, was shot down in a aerial combat with another enemy aircraft, he would be dead, but that does not really constitute a "battle" . The same applies to a man who was swept overboard, from a Canadian Navy ship, in the north Atlantic winter storms. He is dead, but not from enemy action. How about a trainee pilot who crashes a plane while learning to fly, in Canada. Did he die in a "battle" no , but he is still dead, just the same. About 4,000 men died in air craft crashes in Canada, while learning to fly, which was and is still a dangerous activity.

Battles are either on land, on the sea, or in the air. They by their very nature involve lots of men, and lots of equipment, such as ships, aircraft and various kinds of weapons. In order to fight effectively, all of the men have to be trained and equipped, well before they go into a battle. It takes thousands of men to form a military force, and months of time to train them properly in their various tasks. They also need a large number of "support troops" who do things like manage supply of food and water and fuel, and cook the meals and do the administration jobs like keeping track of the payroll, and providing medical care. For every ONE soldier who actually faces the enemy, there are NINE others behind him in the support units, who supply him and his mates with all they need to fight with. Without support lines and supply troops, the army will collapse.

You asked about battles. So I will give you the names, in chronological order, of SOME of the Canadian battles in WW2.

The aerial battle of Britain, summer 1941. Bombing raids of Germany by the RCAF bomber group, flying from Yorkshire to German and French targets, 1941 thru to 1945.

At sea, the Royal Canadian Navy provided escort ships to guard commercial ship convoys that brought important food and war materials to the United Kingdom from 1939 to 1945, during the LONGEST battle of the entire war, the Battle of The North Atlantic. Without those convoys, Britain would have starved to death in 1940. The German U-Boats were torppedoing many ships in the Atlantic, but the RCN was sinking a good number too, and we became the best anti-submarine force in the world by the end of the war inh 1945.

On land, we we the main force in a raid on the coast of France to test the German defenses , and also the methods to use to achieve a amphibious landing on a defended beach. this took place in August, 1942, at Dieppe, France. It was a defeat for us, with many of the 5,000 Canadians being either killed of taken prisoner by the Germans. The death toll that day was over 900 killed, and only a small number of the troops got back on the ships and back to England. The prisoners would spend the next 4 years in German prisons.

In 1942, we were part of the invasion force that landed in Sicily, and then went on to invade Italy. Italy was a partner with Germany in the Azis alliance. We fought hard all thru the summer fall and winter of 1943, to push the Germans and the Italians back up the country. There was heavy fighting at every river crossing, which the German army fortified strongly. It took weeks of fighting to advance only a few miles at a time, and lots of lives too. There are thousands of Canadians buried in Italy, never to come home again. That is the price that we as a country paid to defeat the evil that was the Nazis.

By the summer of 1944, we had just about defeated the Germans in Italy, BUT they still held all most all of the rest of Europe, so it was important that we ( the Allies) get ashore in France, and start to drive the Germans back into their own country, and finally defeat them, once and for all.

This resulted in the invasion of France, by the Allies ( Canada, Britain, and the USA ) on June 6th 1944. this was the largest military operation in the history of mankind. It was a huge effort that had been planned for 2 years, and it involved over 5,000 ships of all kinds, 4000 aircraft, and about 200,000 men in the first stages of the plan.

There were 5 landing beaches, 2 for the USA, 2 for British troops, and one for Canadians. It was code named " JUNO beach" and it was about 12 miles, from end to end, and in the first 24 hours, about 20,000 Canadians went ashore, against tough German resistance, from concrete bunkers and hidden machine gun posts. The casualty numbers were high, with over 500 killed in that first day and more than 800 wounded. But the Canadians were the most aggressive, and the most successful soldiers that day, penetrating more than 12 miles inland, the farthest of any Allied group that day, June 6th ,1944.

For the next 11 months, we fought thru France, into Belgium, into Holland, and finally into the heart of Germany, until they surrendered, unconditionally, on May 9th 1944. It was the most grueling and dirty part of the war, fighting in the cold and mud of the winter war in Holland, where the Germans had flooded the country by blowing the dykes that hold back the waters of the North Sea, so that we had to fight in 4 to 6 feet of water, everyday.

It is no wonder that the Dutch people regard Canadians as their saviors, even today, 60 years later. We liberated them and they remember us fondly.

As a Canadian soldier, in the 1980's, I could NOT spend my money in Holland, when I was there in my uniform. Nobody would take my money, they said I could have anything I wanted for FREE, as a thank you for what WE CANADIANS had done to free their country, long ago.


so as you can see tiesto and armin will buy me beer if i visit.


i will also add that canada sent over 1 000 000 troops in ww2 which is insane considering the population of canada was only 12 000 000 at the time. If that is not sacrifice i do not know what is. Canada's role in ww1 was also quite important considering that they took some of the heaviest casualties while pushing back german forces in some of the most strategically important locations.

/australiangq

argue with me and ill fucking scalp you.


Posted by DJ Mikey Mike on Aug-01-2008 01:33:

quote:
Originally posted by Project-K
He was already dead. You could say they were thinking ahead.


Absolutely superb.


Posted by guerra-monstru on Aug-01-2008 01:41:

quote:
Originally posted by Dervish
What is a martial arts background exactly? Do you have a magnet to flick the knife from his hand?

I've actually taken a mate out of a situation where the other guy had a knife and we didn't. (and it was a little shitty one) Believe me you're not jumping in for some strangers corpse lol.


my eyes spray hot sauce.


Posted by Ygrene on Aug-01-2008 01:49:

quote:
Originally posted by guerra-monstru
my eyes spray hot sauce.


If you are decapitated then that is irrelevant.


Posted by RandomGirl on Aug-01-2008 05:12:

That man really flipped his lid.


Posted by Domesticated on Aug-01-2008 05:51:

Probably did it because the sleeping guy was hogging the arm rest.


Posted by Rinster on Aug-01-2008 07:35:

That really is messed up, wonder what goes on in their head for them to do such thing..


Posted by pkcRAISTLIN on Aug-01-2008 07:55:

quote:
Originally posted by Rinster
That really is messed up, wonder what goes on in their head for them to do such thing..


truly awful. F.


Posted by Sushipunk on Aug-01-2008 09:05:

quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
truly awful. F.


What did you expect from a detergent?


Posted by colonelcrisp on Aug-01-2008 10:58:

quote:
Originally posted by Clovis
Where the fuck were the Mexicans?



practicing their fence jumping skilz.




but seriously, i know we are all kind of confused about the beheading situation, but im pretty sure the victim got teh point......


Posted by Moral Hazard on Aug-01-2008 12:27:

quote:
Originally posted by guerra-monstru
LOL, way to come in at the last moment like the U.S. Any how the previous comment was directed towards the Canadians on this forum.


Last moment... Canada declared war on September 10, 1939... a whole 9 days after the Invasion of Poland... yeah, very last minute.

Canada maintained the shipping lanes to the UK (and built the worlds 4th largest navy by the end of the war). We spearheadded the liberation of Sisily, played an equal role to the Americans in the invasion of Italy, took the Juno beach at Normandy (and penetrated further then the Americans or British by the end of the day), liberated the port of Antwerp, and liberated the Netherlands. We also fought along side the Brits in Hong Kong.

But yeah, our contribution was last minute and worthy of mockery... as opposed to Mexico's contribution which consisted of what... oh yeah, nothing.


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