KEAGaming
Community Talk => General Talk => Topic started by: dirty_harry on June 06, 2009, 08:39:27 PM
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Day of Days 65 years ago today. We owe a lot to those men that braved the bullets and shells.
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Yeah, we do.
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Go America! :D
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go sooners!
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Go Canada! I watched the history channel all weekend didnt miss a show.
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I brave shells every time I go to Logan's or a baseball game. I feel more sorry with the ones who have PTSD (shell shock) than the ones who perished.
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may the gods have mercy on their souls..
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may the gods have mercy on their souls..
amen
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I brave shells every time I go to Logan's or a baseball game. I feel more sorry with the ones who have PTSD (shell shock) than the ones who perished.
i hear that, dying would have been easier than coming out of that mess alive and having to live with what you saw for the rest of your life
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MIssed this one but here are some stats.
as with World War 1, Canadians were not only considered expert and professional soldiers, they were feared by the Germans as an omen of impending attack. The Canadian forces were relied upon to provide defence on the high seas and over Britain, and to spearhead assaults for major battles. Once again Canadians had proved themselves on the battlefield and fought ferociously to win every battle they were engaged in.
1.1 million Canadians served in WWII, including 106,000 in the Royal Canadian Navy and 200,000 in the Royal Canadian Air Force. In 1944 the canadian Population was 11,946,000, the US had a population of 138,397,345
The first Canadian infantryman to die in World War II was Private John Gray. He was captured and executed by the Japanese on December 13, 1941 in Hong Kong.
Canada was the first Commonwealth country to send troops to Britain in 1939.
During 1939-45 hundreds of thousands of Canadians - more than 40 per cent of the male population between the ages of 18 and 45, and virtually all of them volunteers - enlisted
During the Second World War, Canadian industries manufactured war materials and other supplies for Canada, the United States, Britain, and other Allied countries. The total value of Canadian war production was almost $10 billion - approximately $100 billion in today's dollars.
ESP