If somebody came to Botswana and ask me to trap my as$ in a Spitfire and get paid damn good too do it, I'd be first in line.
Douglas Bader - captured in Aug 1941 with 20 kills and no legs....
Probably would have been close had he stayed in service
He's a true British hero. Had he been an American, a Canadian or a Frenchman there's no way he would have applied to go fighting in a war with no legs.
Very well put
Sorry, kept them {Soviet reserves} in the east.
What do you mean they died for Canada ?! Did Canada drag them over the border kicking and screaming to conscript them. Sounds like American BS.
Three times. I've never been able to figure out why the Napoleonic Wars aren't called World War I. They were fought on a broader scale than WWI, on every continent except Antarctica and on all the oceans.You know Blackleaf, even our tolerance to your pathetic chest thumping has its limits. You f uckin Europeans plunged the world into a world war on your own....twice you Europeans f uckers couldn't get your sh!t together an dragged the planet into chaos and the you bitch who didn't come to fight with you or that you would have won the war. You're a f uckin disgrace and you dishonor millions of people's memories (soldiers or not) that lost their lives, grow the f uck up.
Their own, I hope. You can get some nasty infections and fungal infestations from wearing other guys' uniforms.Whose uniform did they wear?
The circumstances surrounding how Bader was shot down in 1941 are controversial. Recent research strongly suggests he was a victim of friendly fire.
Three times. I've never been able to figure out why the Napoleonic Wars aren't called World War I. They were fought on a broader scale than WWI, on every continent except Antarctica and on all the oceans.
Their own, I hope. You can get some nasty infections and fungal infestations from wearing other guys' uniforms.
Well now, that's very British.
In England the pilots exchanged uniforms with the WAAFs when they were on liberty." Today , troop, we shall exchange our underwears.
Schultz, you vill exchange vith Horsts..."
I can safely say that WWII very much became America's business when Germany and Italy declared war on it and Japan bombed it.
"WWII is none of America's business and we shouldn't have been involved in it" is a ludicrous, historically ignorant myth that I hope I never have to read again on here.