Highbury_Blade
Bummed in the gob
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Out of interest who's workplaces did observe a minutes silence on friday?
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but its still the work space for pro footballersI would have thought that the whole idea of a minutes silence is for quiet reflection...not flexing muscles or spitting. I can not see that remaining motionless for one minute is going to spoil preparation for a football match. It is at least lack of discipline and at worst lack of respect. No-one expects airline pilots to stop safely flying their plane, but then they are not participating in a pre-arranged event.
very moving post mateChrist. There's some shit being spouted, isn't there?
For the detractor's information: People don't necessary sign up to the armed forces to zero-in on some distant 'rag-head' (my inverted commas) and sort him out with the afterlife. It would be pushing it to find anyone who enjoys watching Afghans, Balkans, Libyans, whoever displaced, brutalised or bombed to shit in the name of our flavour of democracy. But what you're going to have to face is this. Our democracy enables you to choose the least hated set of wankers to make the decisions you don't have to. The armed forces vouchsafes your wonderful right to do so, and has done for a very, very long time now. Were they not there - and were I not involved in providing that safety net for thirty two of my finest years - your right to differ in opinion from the dictat of tyrants would be fabulously short lived. To paraphrase Jack Nicholson in 'A Few Good Men', " ... you need us out on that wall." Now the best that people can do, and that includes those who luxuriously lay back in the tepid water of their freedoms and feel that the protectors of that freedom are misguided and cruel, is to simply say 'thank you', even if the least hated wankers are making them do it by governmental order.
We all know what a fuck up Iraq, Afghanistan and possibly Iran may be. But let's face it. The very, very ... VERY bottom line is that we have radicalised Islamist tyrants controlling the world's remaining energy sources. That in itself is a pretty bleak outlook because if you think this financial snowstorm is hard going, think about what it will be like with Amadinhedjad's spindly grasp around your bollocks. Someone has to put a stop to the woman hating, savage, fascist bastards like the Taleban (go see The Young News Channel for their grisly work against humanity), people like SaddamHussein who will happily gas his own people (Halabja, for example) or a running sore like Ghadaffi (or even Assad) who will happily mete out the nastiness when their own people want a vote for freedom.
When our troops happily climb into transport aircraft and sod off overseas to forward your government's foreign policy, don't blame them, blame your government. And if they die, be grafteful they will be willing to do the will of the government, or the next time the firemen are on strike*, get your sorry, civilian arse into a fire truck and fight your own fucking fires. When people are trapped by swirling floodwaters, pitch up and lend them a hand, instead of sitting quietly in your urban shithole thanking your lucky stars you don't have to. When this country eventually grinds to a standstill because of the upcoming shitstorm of unionised chaos (another beautifil freedom, courtesy of democracy), think which tired, pissed off, battle weary cabbages will be climbing into the vehicles to provide hospitals and the like with their fuels and victuals. Will it be you, Highbury? Not your job, is it?
*Firemen. Shift bonus. Six months work for a year's pay (hence second jobs), plus overtime and extras. And a union to fight ridiculous pay deals (26%) and a right to strike. Soldiers, sailors and airmen. None of the above.
I feel a lot of today's peole have a romanticised vision of past warfare (they fought to protect their own lives and ours as well) and love to denigrate the warfare of today ... just because they can, more than anything. There isn't much difference. Churchill instructed the armed forces to fight. Cameron, Brown and Blair (as much bastards as they are) much the same. Blame them, when you remember. But never forget wpeople who have died. There is no glory in their deaths, just dignity.
Good luck to serving members out in areas of conflict, and those about to go. God's speed.
pommpey
Not really, since about 5 million of the British forces weren't volunteers.
Christ. There's some shit being spouted, isn't there?
For the detractor's information: People don't necessary sign up to the armed forces to zero-in on some distant 'rag-head' (my inverted commas) and sort him out with the afterlife. It would be pushing it to find anyone who enjoys watching Afghans, Balkans, Libyans, whoever displaced, brutalised or bombed to shit in the name of our flavour of democracy. But what you're going to have to face is this. Our democracy enables you to choose the least hated set of wankers to make the decisions you don't have to. The armed forces vouchsafes your wonderful right to do so, and has done for a very, very long time now. Were they not there - and were I not involved in providing that safety net for thirty two of my finest years - your right to differ in opinion from the dictat of tyrants would be fabulously short lived. To paraphrase Jack Nicholson in 'A Few Good Men', " ... you need us out on that wall." Now the best that people can do, and that includes those who luxuriously lay back in the tepid water of their freedoms and feel that the protectors of that freedom are misguided and cruel, is to simply say 'thank you', even if the least hated wankers are making them do it by governmental order.
We all know what a fuck up Iraq, Afghanistan and possibly Iran may be. But let's face it. The very, very ... VERY bottom line is that we have radicalised Islamist tyrants controlling the world's remaining energy sources. That in itself is a pretty bleak outlook because if you think this financial snowstorm is hard going, think about what it will be like with Amadinhedjad's spindly grasp around your bollocks. Someone has to put a stop to the woman hating, savage, fascist bastards like the Taleban (go see The Young News Channel for their grisly work against humanity), people like SaddamHussein who will happily gas his own people (Halabja, for example) or a running sore like Ghadaffi (or even Assad) who will happily mete out the nastiness when their own people want a vote for freedom.
When our troops happily climb into transport aircraft and sod off overseas to forward your government's foreign policy, don't blame them, blame your government. And if they die, be grafteful they will be willing to do the will of the government, or the next time the firemen are on strike*, get your sorry, civilian arse into a fire truck and fight your own fucking fires. When people are trapped by swirling floodwaters, pitch up and lend them a hand, instead of sitting quietly in your urban shithole thanking your lucky stars you don't have to. When this country eventually grinds to a standstill because of the upcoming shitstorm of unionised chaos (another beautifil freedom, courtesy of democracy), think which tired, pissed off, battle weary cabbages will be climbing into the vehicles to provide hospitals and the like with their fuels and victuals. Will it be you, Highbury? Not your job, is it?
*Firemen. Shift bonus. Six months work for a year's pay (hence second jobs), plus overtime and extras. And a union to fight ridiculous pay deals (26%) and a right to strike. Soldiers, sailors and airmen. None of the above.
I feel a lot of today's peole have a romanticised vision of past warfare (they fought to protect their own lives and ours as well) and love to denigrate the warfare of today ... just because they can, more than anything. There isn't much difference. Churchill instructed the armed forces to fight. Cameron, Brown and Blair (as much bastards as they are) much the same. Blame them, when you remember. But never forget wpeople who have died. There is no glory in their deaths, just dignity.
Good luck to serving members out in areas of conflict, and those about to go. God's speed.
pommpey
You're reading far too much into it.
its all about respect isnt it ? a few on this board today seem to have a problem with that
im not getting into semantics with you ,i dont want to argue about thisThere is an issue here about soldiers who die in military operations which are almost universally thought to be "wrong". Should the Germans respect those who died in WWII? Agreed, it wasn't the ordinary soldiers' fault than his country waged an aggressive war, but it couldn't have waged such a war uness ordinary Germans were prepared to fight and participate in it. Wouldn't it have been more courageous to refuse to fight?
More closer to home, doesn't the same apply to, say, British troops who fought at Suez or even in the Iraq war?
im not getting into semantics with you ,i dont want to argue about this
as far as im concerned either you respect the armistice or you dont
What you post though does beg the question as to why anyone joins the armed forces if conditions are so crap and the politicians who order them into battle are such bastards?
Could it be because certain types of people are easily brainwashed into believing that fighting and dying for your country is a heroic and noble thing to do when it's more likely that what they're fighting and dying for purely political?
As opposed to you and I who are so much more intelligent...
I would be interested if you could give me an example of any war that wasn't fought for political purposes.
As opposed to you and I who are so much more intelligent...
I would be interested if you could give me an example of any war that wasn't fought for political purposes.
No, but you seem to be suggesting there could be a war that wasn't political. I can't see it.
You appeared to be suggesting that it was only those who didn't have a choice who should be remembered on Armistice Day.
I haven't suggested anything of the sort. My line is that that Remembrance Sunday should be about remembering the 1st and second world war dead, including the civilians that died in those terrible conflicts. When i paid my respects on Friday i was thinking about the 1st and 2nd world war, and how we should remember them specifically so that type of conflict doesn't happen again.
We have an armed forces day to remember those servicemen and women who gave their lives in other conflicts.
What we've effectively got now is 2 days of the year that commemorate pretty much the same thing.
I haven't suggested anything of the sort. My line is that that Remembrance Sunday should be about remembering the 1st and second world war dead, including the civilians that died in those terrible conflicts. When i paid my respects on Friday i was thinking about the 1st and 2nd world war, and how we should remember them specifically so that type of conflict doesn't happen again.
We have an armed forces day to remember those servicemen and women who gave their lives in other conflicts.
What we've effectively got now is 2 days of the year that commemorate pretty much the same thing.
You guys expect the armed forces to do exactly what the government wants them to do, however distasteful or unpleasant.
It's not semantics and I think it's a valid question to ask as to whether the Germans should honour their WWII dead. They "died for their country" as much as British soldiers.
Some people just love to be outraged don't they ? Pommpey, Read your high handed moralising first post, difficult though it was, and your second post up to the "I joined to go round the planet, get wankered fuck loads of poontang and have a laugh" after that couldn't be bothered to take it seriously. Before you do your "outraged of Orpington" number on me you should know that my grandfather died at the Somme, my mother was 3 and never knew her father and my father served in the army 1939-45 ending by working at Spandau Prison as a guard with a doberman dog which scared him to death. Funny he never bigged himself up (D-Day+1) or spoke a great deal of his experiences but had a quiet dignity about him. He returned to the mines after demob where he worked until his retirement, dying in 1993. I joined the RAF in 1971 and remember parading at Remembrance day parades. I repeat what I said earlier I was at the match yesterday and thought the players officials and both sets of fans observed the silence impeccably. I'm not going to take offence at players moving their neck or twitching nervously. As I say some folk love to be outraged. Incidentally how did bombing Libyan civilians make my life safer ?
Not neccessarily. Had there been a collective mutiny in 1956 or 2003, I would have been rather pleased.
Some people just love to be outraged don't they ? Pommpey, Read your high handed moralising first post, difficult though it was, and your second post up to the "I joined to go round the planet, get wankered fuck loads of poontang and have a laugh" after that couldn't be bothered to take it seriously. Before you do your "outraged of Orpington" number on me you should know that my grandfather died at the Somme, my mother was 3 and never knew her father and my father served in the army 1939-45 ending by working at Spandau Prison as a guard with a doberman dog which scared him to death. Funny he never bigged himself up (D-Day+1) or spoke a great deal of his experiences but had a quiet dignity about him. He returned to the mines after demob where he worked until his retirement, dying in 1993. I joined the RAF in 1971 and remember parading at Remembrance day parades. I repeat what I said earlier I was at the match yesterday and thought the players officials and both sets of fans observed the silence impeccably. I'm not going to take offence at players moving their neck or twitching nervously. As I say some folk love to be outraged. Incidentally how did bombing Libyan civilians make my life safer ?
So, what position would that have left this country? Economically and politically? Do you think such a mutiny would lead to a civil war? In 1956? Just when the Soviet influence is spreading across eastern Europe?
Odd thinking, just to satisfy a belief. The knock on effect of such an action would be disasterous for this country, believe me.
pommpey
Let the Germans do what they want.
Try telling that to the arseholes burning poppies outside the V&A on Friday. The taliban are a vile, evil set, they are beyond any kind of tolerance and understanding because they do not display any themselves.
There is an issue here about soldiers who die in military operations which are almost universally thought to be "wrong". Should the Germans respect those who died in WWII? Agreed, it wasn't the ordinary soldiers' fault than his country waged an aggressive war, but it couldn't have waged such a war uness ordinary Germans were prepared to fight and participate in it. Wouldn't it have been more courageous to refuse to fight?
More closer to home, doesn't the same apply to, say, British troops who fought at Suez or even in the Iraq war?
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