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Quote Bert the Head at 31 May 2013 11.15pm
You were presumably defending free speech, though mate. So why the offence? You should be pleased you've defended it so well its still thriving. Thanks...though not sure I really felt under attack from Iraq or Afganistan. But Hey thanks again.
The organization that conceived of and carried out the act was based inside Afganistan. Until mid-morning I bet the British workers inside the World Trade centres didn't feel under attack either.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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Quote serial thriller at 22 May 2013 8.18pm
Had quite an intense with a mate of mine today about one of the great celebrated figures of this nation's political history. I think I may have brought this up on here before but I've always held the view that Churchill is viewed as a great leader because he won. Had he lost, I believe a lot of questionable stuff the British did would have come out, but instead it's wiped under the carpet and we continue to moan about those nasty Germans with their concentration camps (an idea they knicked off us) and anti-Semitism (which was thriving in Britain in the 30s). The clearest example of this for me is the Bengal Famine. Churchill, fearful that the Japs might invade northern India, decided rather than evacuate the natives, he would just stop sending them food and shelter (in the middle of a famine) leading to millions of deaths, some claim on a similar scale as the number of Jews killed in concentration camps. When asked about this, Churchill blamed them for 'breeding like rabbits'. He also supported a Bill to sterilise the mentally disabled (I'm not making this up! [Link] a form of, err, eugenics. So let's look at the evidence: a mass-murderer, who supported racial purification, but won a lot of people over because he was a good public speaker and adopted the role as figurehead of a nation. Now who does that remind me of... Anyone willing to defend him? Edited by serial thriller (22 May 2013 8.18pm) Selective claptrap, you would be better getting a job at the BBC., they talk rubbish as well, only with a left wing agenda!
Everyone is entitled to my opinions |
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jamiemartin721 ![]() |
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Quote Stirlingsays at 31 May 2013 11.38pm
Quote Bert the Head at 31 May 2013 11.15pm
You were presumably defending free speech, though mate. So why the offence? You should be pleased you've defended it so well its still thriving. Thanks...though not sure I really felt under attack from Iraq or Afganistan. But Hey thanks again.
The organization that conceived of and carried out the act was based inside Afganistan. Until mid-morning I bet the British workers inside the World Trade centres didn't feel under attack either. Partially true, Al-Qaeda had key members based there, but it hadn't really function in any way along real territorial lines. Even back in 2001, it definitely had people in Afghanistan, but its questionable how much influence or knowledge the regime had over them or of the attacks. Its likely that Al-Qaeda served more as a means of financing Jyhadist groups, rather than really directing them, and those active groups tended to move around a lot. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was only a member of Al-Qaeda from 1999 onwards, and had already an extensive history in terrorism and Jyhad, including having been involved in the 1993 WTC bombing (his nephew carried it out), Chechnya, Bali, Bosnia, pakistan and the Philippines. Bin Laden certainly became very involved in the plot, but the role of Afghanistan in the scheme was fairly limited to a geographical convenience.
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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Quote jamiemartin721 at 02 Jun 2013 7.02pm
Quote Stirlingsays at 31 May 2013 11.38pm
Quote Bert the Head at 31 May 2013 11.15pm
You were presumably defending free speech, though mate. So why the offence? You should be pleased you've defended it so well its still thriving. Thanks...though not sure I really felt under attack from Iraq or Afganistan. But Hey thanks again.
The organization that conceived of and carried out the act was based inside Afganistan. Until mid-morning I bet the British workers inside the World Trade centres didn't feel under attack either. Partially true, Al-Qaeda had key members based there, but it hadn't really function in any way along real territorial lines. Even back in 2001, it definitely had people in Afghanistan, but its questionable how much influence or knowledge the regime had over them or of the attacks. Its likely that Al-Qaeda served more as a means of financing Jyhadist groups, rather than really directing them, and those active groups tended to move around a lot. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was only a member of Al-Qaeda from 1999 onwards, and had already an extensive history in terrorism and Jyhad, including having been involved in the 1993 WTC bombing (his nephew carried it out), Chechnya, Bali, Bosnia, pakistan and the Philippines. Bin Laden certainly became very involved in the plot, but the role of Afghanistan in the scheme was fairly limited to a geographical convenience.
If you were going to attack Al-Qaeda after 9/11 you had to attack Bin Laden in Afghanistan. The Taliban were given the chance to give him up and refused it. The war in Afghanistan suffered massively and detrimentally from mission creep.....There I would probably agree with you. After going for the Al-Qaeda leadership and degrading the Taliban the West should have got out and then funded the Northern Alliance and resulting government instead. They lost sight of the point in Afghanistan.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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Quote Pinky at 23 May 2013 7.54am
Also used armed troops to force miners back to work in the north-east during the General Strike. My grandad (miner, WW1 veteran) hated Churchill's guts. And a grateful nation kicked the nasty b****** out of office after they'd sorted out the mess and misery created by the crisis of capitalism in the 30s and 40s.
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pefwin ![]() |
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Excellent programme about him on right now. "Walden on Heroes".
"Everything is air-droppable at least once." "When the going gets tough, the tough call for close air support." |
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Quote bright&wright at 23 May 2013 9.06am
Quote Icepick Tony at 23 May 2013 9.03am
Quote bright&wright at 23 May 2013 8.56am
Wembley. Block 140. Row 31. Seat 182. Come and tell me Churchill was a pr*ck to my face. It's a shame he helped save people like you.
Wow. Yeah that rolling eyes icon gets way over used on here. I'm merely offering to have a face-to-face to chat about it. I'm sure he'll be defending the actions of Islamic terrorists next.
And I see signs of half remembered days, I hear bells that chime in strange familiar ways |
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blackgirl3 ![]() |
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churcllill was a prick i bet this thread has gone down well , i really loved whinny er whinny the poo
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I believe the OP would benefit from drawing distinctions between concentration camps and extermination camps. The latter, with the twisted use of Zyklon B, was most certainly NOT an idea 'nicked from us'.
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Quote blackgirl3 at 29 Jan 2015 2.37pm
churcllill was a prick i bet this thread has gone down well , i really loved whinny er whinny the poo
The Voice of Reason In An Otherwise Mediocre World |
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Thank god Churchill rallied the population in 1940 otherwise many of us would not be here today, he was no more a prick than some that have slated him on this site.
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Quote gerry theagle at 29 Jan 2015 3.18pm
Thank god Churchill rallied the population in 1940 otherwise many of us would not be here today, he was no more a prick than some that have slated him on this site. Oh no, no, no, no.
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