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Started By
Message
It's time to take a step back and remember some real American Heroes
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:16 am
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:16 am
If this doesn't get your blood pumping, then I don't know what will. This one goes out the the brave men who lost their lives in The war of Northern Aggression
LINK
LINK
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:19 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:
This one goes out the the brave men who lost their lives in The war of Northern Aggression
You people are sick in the head.
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:19 am to deathvalleyfreak43
Wouldn't they be real Confederate heroes?
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:21 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:
The war of Northern Aggression
...and also shame on you.
This post was edited on 2/18/15 at 10:22 am
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:21 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:
the war of Northern Aggression
I had to look up what this referred to
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:21 am to deathvalleyfreak43
I'm honored and humbled
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:21 am to deathvalleyfreak43
All these men fought for secession from the U.S., to call them "American Heroes" is absolutely ridiculous.
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:22 am to CapitalCityDevil
I don't know what else you could call it
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:22 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:
The war of Northern Aggression
The correct term is The War of the Rebellion. That's the term used in my family history book, written in part by ancestors (four brothers) who served in the Army of the Potomac and were wounded at the battles of Gettysburg, Seven Stones and Chickamauga.
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:24 am to deathvalleyfreak43
Get a fricking life
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:24 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:
The war of Northern Aggression
quote:
Heroes
Didn't they lose?
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:25 am to deathvalleyfreak43
1:35
A random drunk guy from the future!
A random drunk guy from the future!
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:25 am to bencoleman
quote:I think you should call it Let it Go.
I don't know what else you could call it
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:25 am to TigerPanzer
quote:
The correct term is The War of the Rebellion. That's the term used in my family history book, written in part by ancestors (four brothers) who served in the Army of the Potomac and were wounded at the battles of Gettysburg, Seven Stones and Chickamauga.
So some of your Yankee ancestors invaded the South, and now you're telling us what term to use to describe the invasion? Thanks, but no thanks.
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:25 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:
real American Heroes
Agreed. I'd also like to add some other heroes if I may:
Real Physical Fitness Hero:
Real Logic and Justice Hero:
and Real Jewish Hero:
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:26 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:
The war of Northern Aggression
good god man.
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:26 am to Green Chili Tiger
quote:
Didn't they lose?
Does this fact really matter? By this logic you are saying that Vietnam vets are not heroes
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:28 am to deathvalleyfreak43
quote:Heroes of what exactly?
By this logic you are saying that Vietnam vets are not heroes
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:29 am to Big Scrub TX
quote:
You people are sick in the head.
Lets just say - Big Scrub - that it is okay to admire the elan and bravery displayed by the CSA in a lost cause. While I agree with their higher ideals - of state sovereignty - the stain of slavery and the unfortunate devolvement into violence (neither side had clean hands on this - it is the stronger argument that, by the time Lincoln was inaugurated, the South was itching for a fight - wrongheaded and self-destructive as that was) continues to make this a murky issue, rather than a cut and dried one.
I agree with General James P. "Pete" Longstreet - "I think we should have freed the slaves - THEN fired on Fort Sumter."
Posted on 2/18/15 at 10:30 am to Big Scrub TX
I haven't read the link yet, but...
During the long build up to the American Revolution, the majority of American colonists wanted nothing to do with secession. By the mid-1770s, roughly a third of the population was for independence, a third were Loyalists and the rest didn't even want to be involved in the argument.
"We" eventually won, so Sam Adams and his cohorts are now know as patriots. However, if they had lost, they would have been branded as treasonous rebels.
During the long build up to the American Revolution, the majority of American colonists wanted nothing to do with secession. By the mid-1770s, roughly a third of the population was for independence, a third were Loyalists and the rest didn't even want to be involved in the argument.
"We" eventually won, so Sam Adams and his cohorts are now know as patriots. However, if they had lost, they would have been branded as treasonous rebels.
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