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The Japs

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by Girvan Loyal 1690, Jun 28, 2011.

  1. Girvan Loyal 1690

    Girvan Loyal 1690 Nobody's safe now

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    why dont they make every building out of what ever this ****ing arch is made of.

    please log in to view this image


    Still standing after a nuclear bomb and a tsnumani hit it.
     
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  2. Leon Bessi

    Leon Bessi Active Member

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    please log in to view this image


    cos their stupid

    pic related.
     
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  3. Lightfoot

    Lightfoot Member

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    **** me!! That IS impressive!!

    reminds me of that epic 20th century conundrum: "Why dont they make the ENTIRE airplane out of the stuff they use to make the BlackBox?" <erm>
     
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  4. RAVENBLACK

    RAVENBLACK Well-Known Member

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    We have a lot to be grateful to the Japanese for.

    If not we could all be Nazis now just like the Irish Paddy's wanted to be.
     
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  5. EDGE

    EDGE Guest

    Those pikey Irish pricks fought for the Nazis because Hitler was a Caflick !

    <grr>
     
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  6. Lightfoot

    Lightfoot Member

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    The following excerpt is from the novel &#8216;The Cruel Sea&#8217; by Nicholas Monsarrat. Monsarrat saw action serving on the convoys in the Battle of the Atlantic and so was writing from experience.


    &#8220;&#8230;&#8230;But it was difficult to hold one&#8217;s contempt from a country such as Ireland, whose battle this was and whose chances of freedom and independence in the event of a German victory were nil. The fact that Ireland was standing aside from the conflict at this moment posed, from the naval angle, special problems which affected, sometimes mortally, all sailors engaged in the Atlantic, and earned their particular loathing.

    Irish neutrality, on which she placed a generous interpretation, permitted the Germans to maintain in Dublin an espionage centre, a window into Britain, which operated throughout the war and did incalculable harm to the Allied cause. But from the naval point of view there was an even more deadly factor: this was the loss of naval bases in southern and western Ireland, which had been available to the Royal Navy during the First World War but were now forbidden them. To compute how many men and how many ships this denial was costing, month after month, was hardly possible; but the total was substantial and tragic. From these bases escorts could have sailed further out into the Atlantic, and provided additional cover for the hard-pressed convoys: from these bases, destroyers and corvettes could have been refuelled quickly, and tugs sent out to ships in distress: from these bases, the battle of the Atlantic might have been fought on something like equal terms. As it was, the bases were denied: escorts had to go &#8216;the long way round&#8217; to get to the battlefield, and return to harbour at least two days earlier than would have been necessary: the cost, in men and ships, added months to the struggle, and ran up a score which Irish eyes a-smiling on the day of Allied victory were not going to cancel.

    From a narrow legal angle, Ireland was within her rights: she had opted for neutrality, and the rest of the story flowed from this decision. She was in fact at liberty to stand aside from the struggle, whatever harm this did to the Allied cause. But sailors, watching the ships go down and counting the number of their friends who might have been alive instead of dead, saw the thing in simpler terms. They saw Ireland safe under the British umbrella, fed by her convoys and protected by her air force, her very neutrality guaranteed by the British armed forces: they saw no return for this protection save a condoned sabotage of the allied war effort; and they were angry &#8211; permanently angry. As they sailed past this smug coastline, past people who did not give a damn how the war went as long as they could live on in their fairy-tale world, they had time to ponder a new aspect of indecency. In the list of people prepared to like you when the war is over, the man who stood by and watched while you were getting your throat cut could not figure very high.&#8221;



    LEST WE FORGET
     
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  7. Deleted 1

    Deleted 1 Well-Known Member Forum Moderator

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    Apart from the thousands of Irish people who actually fought and in some cases died with the allies of course. Not to mention all those in civilian roles both here and in Europe.
     
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  8. Jip Jaap Stam

    Jip Jaap Stam General Chat Moderator Staff Member

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    Is Jap racist? It's short for Japanese. Paki is short for Pakistani and that is racist, but Aussie is short for Australian and that's not racist :huh:
     
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  9. EDGE

    EDGE Guest

    Shut it you ENG **** <ok>
     
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  10. Girvan Loyal 1690

    Girvan Loyal 1690 Nobody's safe now

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    scot is racist then
     
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  11. HackerJack

    HackerJack Member

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    Because it's made of a brilliant special material called "holes that let the wind and water through". Good luck with making a skyscraper out of it.
     
    #11
  12. Toby

    Toby GC's Life Coach

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    FB do you really not get it?
     
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  13. HackerJack

    HackerJack Member

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    Yes, everyone called Scot I know is racist.
     
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  14. Jip Jaap Stam

    Jip Jaap Stam General Chat Moderator Staff Member

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    What?
     
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  15. EDGE

    EDGE Guest

    Toby is on another ****ty finger-wagging mission again.
     
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  16. Girvan Loyal 1690

    Girvan Loyal 1690 Nobody's safe now

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    so as long as it has holes in it it's safe from atomic bombs and tsunamis? man you need put down
     
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  17. The Raging Oxter

    The Raging Oxter Well-Known Member

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    <laugh>
     
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  18. Ciaran

    Ciaran Going for 55

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    Oh dear, the copy and paste merchant is afoot.
     
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  19. Lightfoot

    Lightfoot Member

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    Truth hurts innit ciaran? <ok>
     
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  20. Jip Jaap Stam

    Jip Jaap Stam General Chat Moderator Staff Member

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    I thought I could smell something...
     
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