Karnal wrote on Sep 5
th, 2014 at 10:04pm:
red baron wrote on Sep 5
th, 2014 at 7:04pm:
It's the best example. Defeat at Gallipoli had nothing to do with it Karnal, stop leg pulling. You know as well as I do that I am referring to the spirit of Anzac and what the core values of those diggers were.
What a load of krap.
My great uncle fought in WWI. The one thing he told me - when he could lift his attention from the races on 2KY - was never let the bastards get to you.
He hated the spirit of Anzac. He knew that there is no spirit of Anzac. We ALL know that there is no spirit of Anzac.
The spirit of Anzac is 19 year old kids emptying their rifles to save ammunition before they say a quick prayer and run into Johnny Turk’s machine gun fire.
The spirit of Anzac is body counts and pinewood coffins being lined up in the shade.
The spirit of Anzac is little white crosses lined up in military formation as if on some limp dick parade.
Fck the spirit of Anzac. It’s the biggest con we ever had forced on us after rum, sodomy and the lash.
We have learnt well from those losses karnal. Mainly about the ways to minimise deaths on our side.
So why would we send in troops when we can send in drones.
The morons in ISIS truly are stuck back in the days of Gallipoli.
We've moved on
A pimply faced civil servant with wifi sitting in HQ in South Carolina is about to turn ISIS into toast.
Gud is great for providing us with these rightard weapons.
Sure the barbarians will hate that, they,d love nothing better than troops on the ground.
You know, it's scarey Shiite when a magpie swoops you. Soon everyone in ISIS will be living in fear of "the good news" falling from the sky.
I wouldn't send one troop there, except to call in the GPS on the targets.
This will be a yippie shoot.
Technology has come a long way since gulf war 1
Just wait til all the jihadists have had time to assemble, then it's game on.