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| WW2 General Every WW2 related discussion besides aviation. |
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| | #61 |
| Senior Member | I believe the thread is Canada's Wartime Effort, not Australia particated more in the PTO. Just beacause a Canadian served with another Common Wealth Unit does not take away from the fact he is a Canadian fighting in the PTO.
__________________ "Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it" "Those who dwell in the past, condemn the future" ![]() |
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| | #62 | |||
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 10,277
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Either way, that was the end of Canada's contribution to the war in that part of the war.
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| | #63 | ||
| Der Crewchief ![]() Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Ansbach, Germany
Posts: 33,150
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__________________ ![]() fly boy:"isnt that the first jet bomber becasue i have flown one in a flight sim before and i know how it handles"[/I] | ||
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| | #64 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: niagara falls
Posts: 5,585
| I hardly think the war effort of Canada has been exagerated if anything the opposite is true , the US effort on the other hand has been exagerated in the minds of most simply because of mass media or popular culture , if you ask the average Joe about any war you'll find that most are not even aware of Canada s involvment . Every time a movie is made where there is no American invvolvment is apparent the Canadian character becomes an American eg The Great Escape Movie or even non existant such as the Longest Day. Hong Kong was debacle is true but so were the Philipines and Wake Island . Very little is mentioned about the who escorted the 8th AF prior to the arrival of the P47 and P51 it sure wasn't P40's . The US is not alone in this the Brits are not much better. Work calls now but I will expand later |
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| | #65 | |
| Senior Member | Quote:
---------------------- Another point of fact I would like to throw out there is Canada alone produced 95% of Nickel and 50% of the aluminum required by the Allies. That fact alone makes Canada's contribution "under-exaggerated".
__________________ "Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it" "Those who dwell in the past, condemn the future" ![]() | |
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| | #66 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: London
Posts: 3,649
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| | #67 |
| Senior Member | I give up sys. It seems that you just want to argue straight past the point and pretend that the US won everything on it's own. Fine, go ahead. Your method of reckoning contribution to wars by the number of troops sent and casualties sustained is simply appalling. I wasn't going to twist any facts - merely to point out that the US committed far fewer troops than the UK, France, Russia, Austria-Hungary, Germany, or even Italy. And also to point out that total US combat deaths were fewer that those experienced by Greece or Bulgaria. This makes no difference to me at all - I still respect the US contribution to WWI. But surely you will have to admit by your own calculus that the US contribution was less relevant because it was not as big as most other countires Of course, that won't happen - you are totally incapable of seeing any historical view that doesn't revolve around the USA and it's superiority over the rest of the world. You started this thread supposedly to praise the Canadian war effort. As soon as people came foward to add their praise and reveal all the things the Canucks did, you got scared and started running the Canadians down in case they got more praise than the US. It's pathetic sys, I really have no other words for it. I shudder to think what you might have to say to the British contributions to WWII and the wars we have fought alongside you since then
__________________ Good generals think about tactics. Great generals think about logistics. "If freedom is to be saved and enlarged, poverty must be ended. There is no other solution." - Nye Bevan "Any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to ask for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee" - John Donne, Meditation XVII |
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| | #68 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 9,030
| It's a shame that all this has happened, as I was originally going to respond to the initial post, by expressing my interest in the story regarding the chap working at Juno beach. Does anyone happen to know how one would go about finding such an occupation? It would be a marvelous thing to be able to do, and I have the time, the interest, and at least a little of the knowledge to undertake such a worthy task. Of course, whether my current disability would allow me to do such work is another matter!
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| | #69 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 224
| BombTaxi - as a Canadian I sincerely thank you for your intelligent words. I started on the same vein some time ago - but after your "appalling" observation to Sys I realized that you were making my point better than I myself could. I try not patronize people but in this case - with Sys - it is unfortunately unavoidable. Sys is having a little "sport" with Canadians - turning our crank so to speak So a little education and perspective is coming you way, respectfully. What this thread - and many others in this otherwise wonderful forum - have revealed is that it is possible for otherwise intelligent people - males - to get further and further off topic - and the further away from topic they get the deeper they dig in. [Soren's Germany-Japan-Russia thread is a classic ongoing example of this -- just how far things can progress beyond common sense logic + facts]. Canada's participation militarily and economically in WW2 can NOT be discussed in isolation from WW1. In both - Canada punched way, way, way beyond it's weight. What our American friend refuses to acknowledge is that the true measure of a country's value as an ally is its participation as PERCENTAGE OF POPULATION and GDP. And as our American friend knows from his own country's experience (sadly) the measure of participation is VOLUNTEER participation. Canada has never fielded a conscript force in modern times. Canada lost an entire generation of Canadian young men in their very Promise and Prime ... (Britain, France, Germany, Australia etc also did) in a way that the US who was late to the party by THREE YEARS did not experience. That is not a criticism of the US - that is simply fact. Having fought in EVERY major WW1 battle and continuously being deployed as SHOCK TROOPS - in 1918 the Canadian Army [Canada's 100 Days) rolled back the German Army - taking more ground and more prisoners than their MUCH LARGER American ally with their great equipment and good rations. Those Canadian men who died 1914-1918 did not live to have the sons of their own to go to war in 1939. And the ones who did return in 1918 -- many had lost the desire or instinct to reproduce -- my moms two brothers and dad being examples dear to my heart. Sys .. don't talk baseball-stats-WW2-history to me cause it doesn't mean a thing. Percentage of population (volunteer) participation and % GDP are the only honest measures and if you'd stop and think for a moment you realize I am right. But keep cranking buddy ... I got the clutch depressed and the spark retarded MM Toronto |
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| | #70 |
| aka Dickcheese ![]() Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Washington State
Posts: 13,382
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__________________ "Some people spend an entire lifetime wondering if they made a difference in the world. But, the [U.S.] Marines don't have that problem." -- Ronald Reagan Master of Duplicate Posts |
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| | #71 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Hurst, Texas
Posts: 2,823
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__________________ ![]() Pillage, then burn. Argue not with dragons, for thou art crunchy and go well on toast. | |
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| | #72 | |
| Senior Member | Quote:
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| | #73 |
| Senior Member | NICE!, and A-Fricken-Men!!!!
__________________ "Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it" "Those who dwell in the past, condemn the future" ![]() |
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| | #74 |
| Senior Member | Thank you guys, glad to be of some service to you I've been to Vimy and I've stood at the foot of that memorial and realised just how much Canada gave in the Great War. Ypres, Arras, Vimy, Passchendaele, the final offensive... the Canadians were there. 25 years later, you did it all again, at Dieppe, in Normandy, over the Ruhr, in the North Atlantic. And you're still doing it now in Afghanistan. That deserves some gratitude in my book
__________________ Good generals think about tactics. Great generals think about logistics. "If freedom is to be saved and enlarged, poverty must be ended. There is no other solution." - Nye Bevan "Any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to ask for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee" - John Donne, Meditation XVII |
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| | #75 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 224
| Are you getting all this, Sys? It's mot personal, buddy, believe me I DO understand your underlying point. The US is a BIG society and a productive one. In 1939 your Depression wasn't over ... economy-industrial activity at about 35%. When it came - Pearl Harbour was a blessing [forgive me]. The US economy wasn't cooking fully till 1944. Other than Russian and China - the US can't discuss the "contribution" of your allies honestly -- or at least it's not easy to do so when you're paying the freight. I appreciate that but you are blessed my American friend to have the great allies you have had - the Commonwealth Nations. Time and again our forces do MORE with LESS. L'audace .. toujours l'audace. MM |
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