what was wrong with the waffen SS then?
What
but from my time in the Air Force I
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What trade mate?
Back in the 80's I was a air photographic processor before the days of digital reconnaissance, spent most of my time at 2 Squadron.
A great friend of mine is off to Afghanistan soon. He is a Captain for the Royal Engineers and there is always that nagging feeling that you might not see him again.
He joined he army, not with the sole intention of fighting in a certain war. He joined to serve the country and wherever that takes him. He is a hero in my eyes, as are those that have served before him and will serve after him. Anyone that is willing to put their lives at risk in the line of duty is a hero to me.
They were a bunch of hatefilled Nazi scum?
if someone tried to rape me id be ready and waiting, it wouldnt really be rape id enjoy it, so dont worry you dont have to protect us all!
typical.Im off to Afghanistan next friday for 6 months.
Its not my choice to decide where i go,but rest assured if it ever comest to defending my country on these shores i'll make sure im near your house and i'll be quite happy to let any foreign soldier into your house to RAPE you and your family!!!!
COCK.
I dont think people join the Army especialy to go and fight uninvited in other coutries.
BTW,im not into politics,but i think you'll find we are invited and welcomed by the governments into both Iraq and Afghan.Could be wrong like......
we cannot pick and chose which bits we want to do, and our own personal views are put to one side in service on our country, and the orders given by the democratically elected government, how did you last vote?
You see military heroes talking about some extraordinary act of courage that they have done on the field of battle (whether it be on ground, sea or skies), and very often they will reply to the accolade; "I was just doing my job"
Maybe heroism is NOT 'extraordinary', and to a person with courage to 'do their job' to the degree that they are not putting personal safety before duty, it is JUST them doing their job. What can be heard in those simple words, is that they consider the rest of the men and women alongside them, involved with the same intent as them, as the same 'stuff' as they are made of, and just doing the same job.
Where is the heroism? Perhaps the "extraordinary act" I speak of, is deeper rooted in the longer business, in the course of joining up to serve their country, of training, getting up in the twilight to wash in freezing water and get shouted at and crawl in mud and learn to dismantle a weapon and put it back together in minutes and run for miles wearing heavy boots carrying weight and heaving themselves over ropes and wire and digging a trench in rocks and dirt and learning to use radar and electronics and fine-tuning a gun-sight and reading a compass and working out map degree references and jumping from miles high hoping the chute they packed will open ......and and and.
Where collateral damage on the battlefield is shipped away to become personal damage for a lifetime of difficulty, of anguish, of disability - all their regret should be deflected away by those who did NOT go and serve and put their life on a line and risk it all. They not only deserve respect, they have earned every scrap - because it's acknowledgement of ALL the men and women who put themselves there as 'collateral', who knowingly placed themselves in some strange position in the World to be hated and attacked by strangers.
Goddamnit goldstone you give RESPECT to those people, and if you cannot bring it upon yourself to do that small thing for people who have done something greater than you can have ever dreamed - then you slink away with your opinion firmly under your own hat, where it can stink up that place and not contaminate anywhere outside of it.
That's all.
Post of the dayI certainly feel for the forces abroad and I can't see how anyone could critisize what they do. Maybe the choice to join the forces is questionable but ultimately we need our forces.
When my stepbrother came back from Iraq in the nineties he said that he certainly didn't feel like a hero and more like he had been sold out.
I think that the troops have been sold out and this is why they deserve respect more than any so called "heroics".