=OBS= EstebanRey wrote:
puckmercury wrote:
=OBS= EstebanRey wrote:
Suprise, suprise, an American getting his history knowledge from fiction. Bet you think Pearl Harbor is factually correct too!
In short, every battle was important and the Americans have no right claiming they won the war anymore than the British have the right to claim it, or the Russians, or the Australians etc
Man, some people have no concept of TEAMWORK!!!!!!!!!
P.S The funniest thing about this is if you ask most of the "you'd be speaking German" brigade who their favourite sports team is, and the accuse said team of being a one-man team they would harp on all day about how important every player in a team is.........
Let me reiterate since our friends accross the pond seem to have missed the main stab of my point. I was addressing Europe and Europe alone. Furthermore, I was not ever intending to state or imply that America won the war. The movie Pearl Harbor was only loosely fact at best. The two novels I mentioned were mentioned as their premise was based on a factual event. The subsequent events in the books have nothing to do with either this topic or my post. As I stated, clearly, it is the premise I was addressing. The premise of fictional books usually has a basis in reality anyway. Let me clarify, I said BASIS, not 100% historical reference.
So, are we clear? Any others care to attack excerpts of a post out of context and then claim it as the basis and core of a post?
OK I'll answer the incident in your original post. You said that "the Britsh were having their asses handed to them on a plate" by the Germans and you were basing this on the sub plot of a fictional book. Indeed, Children were moved away from London during the war because
they're children!. If you were living in an age where you had kids in the Capital city of a country under attack by another country that was not too far away and coukld strike you easily, I think you would move your kids to a safer part of the country too wouldn't you? Note, it was mostly children that were moved and they were moved to another part of Britain (not another country).
I think you are assuming that Britain had all the sophisticated radar and monitoring systems we have nowadays. In truth, it was extremely hard to stop a German war plan coming over and dropping a bomb on London as radar wasn't fully developed and functional. If Canada wanted to do the same thing to the US it would have been the same.
Learn some history before making uneducated posts......
I have quite a grasp of history, I would ask that you read posts and ask questions before assuming and jumping to incorrect conclusions. I am basing nothing on the plots of fictional books. Nothing.at.all. I wasn't saying you screwed up, I wasn't saying you should have been doing better. You were against overwhelming odds against a superior military force. The fact that the last time England fell to a foreign invader was in 1066 (to maintain this trend, you clip the wings of the ravens at court, as legend states that when the ravens leave you will fall again) is quite a testament to the British itself. It makes perfect sense that the children were sent elsewhere, and as I SAID EARLIER, it was quite the humanitarian act.
As for assumptions of technology? I make no assumptions and assume you had no RADAR. Hell, we HAD RADAR (capitalized because it's an acronym, not because I'm yelling) and look what happened at Pearl Harbor? We blatantly ignored the new technology as we couldn't believe what it was trying to tell us.
The ONLY reason I brought up two fictional books was because truth is stranger than fiction. In that vein, most fictional books get their premise from common and dominating themes from real life. I assumed that was common knowledge, my apologies. To that end, these two very popular and widely known books both used that real life premise as their beginning. This speaks volumes of the real life events' impacts on society and the world culture. I specifically addressed this post before any of this side track began by saying that I only referenced these books for that end and not for their fantastical plot lines past the prologue.
As for US plucking up the courage to join the war, it had nothing to do with courage and everything to do with the fact that we were plunged deep into isolationism after the FIRST world war we ventured over in. We simply wanted to stick our head in the sand and pretend it didn't involve us. Folley to be sure, but not cowardice. Our president was actively campaigning to involve us in the war Lend/Lease act to name but one example of this), which is the genesis of many a conspiracy theory surrounding the fact that every carrier was out of port during the attack on Pearl Harbor. We weren't afraid, we just didn't think it would affect us as a society. Where is YOUR sense of teamwork or historical accuracy my friend?
So, before you try to flame me or my post on an out of context element or on some aspect you think you derive from an unwritten subtext, stop and think or just ask. I have nothing but respect for the British people, but I don't let that respect blind me to historical fact or global trends.
Last edited by puckmercury (2006-07-11 06:41:37)