Gun Slayings

dutchthreat

New Member
No country has ever defeated the United States. Get your BS straight.


out. :blsmoke:
HAHAHAHA funny guy I guess you yanks like to forget Vietnam...... and thats just one. So far a buch of guys in the dessert are taking your armed forces for a reaaaal ride!!!! and then there is that war of 1812...stop me if I'm going to far...
 

CrackerJax

New Member
The US didn't lose that war sonny, south vietnam did. We kicked the living hell out of the NVA... we won the war of 1812 as well...duh.

out. :blsmoke:
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
He's from Canada.Read his posts. He's just doing this to mess with you guys.
Originally Posted by dutchthreat

  1. Thats a small ass opening. If i were you, I would invest in a grow tent, this way you could bring it up in pieces/take it down fast. I just saw one today at Canadian tire that was 50 bucks. it even had separate chambers for flower/veg and built in fans.
 

CrackerJax

New Member
Yes, i knew he was from canada... but he's not messing with me at least...he hasn't presented any cohesive arguments so far... I am unimpressed.

Hey Stoney (waves)

out. :blsmoke:
 

dutchthreat

New Member
The US didn't lose that war sonny, south vietnam did. We kicked the living hell out of the NVA... we won the war of 1812 as well...duh.

out. :blsmoke:
No you did not. Americans Killed in action 2260, Canadians killed 1600, wounded americans 4505, wounded canadians 3679,
17000 americans dead from diease (caused by war conditions, 3321 canadians dead from diease. FACT http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_1812

America loses!!!!!! woooooot pwned
 

CrackerJax

New Member
since there was no canada, there were no canadians...quit using wiki as a source...you'll do better next time.

In the end you can thank us for getting you independence. We won Lake Eerie and fishing rights from the st. Lawrence river, which was one of the main boiling points. You have been our appendage ever since, luckily for you.

out. :blsmoke:
 

dutchthreat

New Member
since there was no canada, there were no canadians...quit using wiki as a source...you'll do better next time.

In the end you can thank us for getting you independence. We won Lake Eerie and fishing rights from the st. Lawrence river, which was one of the main boiling points. You have been our appendage ever since, luckily for you.

out. :blsmoke:
Thats bullshit straight from the cows ass. Who took vimmy when no one else could? CANADA,

And by the way you did not gain us independence, if you knew anything about Canadian History (which you don't because your a yank) you would know thats BULLSHIT!!!
 

CrackerJax

New Member
It was the war of 1812 which convinced Britain to abandon North America...which Allowed you to become independent. You chose to be a commonwealth of Britain (unwise), but no skin off of us. We were busy building the greatest country on Earth, which without us,Canada would be a backwater beaver town to this day. Just be very very glad we like you (well...not you personally...you are a dolt).

out. :blsmoke:
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
Some comparisons between Canada and the US.
http://www.unitednorthamerica.org/simdiff.htm
And this is about Canadian Independence.
Canada peacefully and gradually evolved as a nation, quite unlike the United States, which became a separate independent country by means of armed revolution. In 1867, six British North American colonies joined together in Confederation as a new country - Canada. Then, British administrative, financial, and military support slowly was reduced, as Canada took more responsibility and control of its own destiny. During the First World War, Canada sent large contingents of troops to fight alongside Britain, and it is generally recognized that Canada's "birth as a nation" came about during that war, and was strengthened further by Canada's participation again in the Second World War.
Here is the official rest of the story:
The Statute of Westminster was the last of the Imperial Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain applicable to all the Dominions. It granted Canada, Newfoundland, New Zealand, Australia, the Union of South Africa, and the Irish Free State full independence.
As in most advances in British constitutional practices, the Statute of Westminster did not constitute a clear break with the past. It merely only consecrated practices that were already firmly established. In the case of Canada, one could consider that the road to independence started with the grant, to the several colonies, of a legislature and eventually of Responsible Government (1847-48). Confederation (1867) crowned this period in so far as, for all intent and purposes, the provinces and the Dominion government obtained full control of all internal matters. The next sixty years were to see a gradual take-over by the federal government of the responsibilities in external sovereignty that had remained, to this point, in the hands of the government and Parliament of Great Britain.
Important dates in the road to independence were the withdrawal of the British troops from Canada (1871), the negotiation of the Washington Treaty (1871) where for the first time a Canadian was included in a British negotiating team to sign a treaty on behalf of Canada, the establishment of the Supreme Court of Canada (1875), the creation of a High Commissioner's Office in London to "represent" Canada (1878), the last use of the veto (1873) and reserve powers by Britain (1886) under the Constitution Act, 1867, and the establishment of the Department of External Affairs (1909). It was the First World War that accelerated the process to independence. The major colonies played a role of such magnitude that they no longer could be considered mere colonies of Great Britain.
The international status of Canada evolved rapidly in the post-World War period: in 1919, Canada was one of the signers of the Treaty of Versailles and was elected as an independent member of the League of Nations. In 1926, the Balfour resolution was adopted at the Imperial Conference. Arthur Balfour presented this resolution to the Imperial conference of the self-governing dominions. In it Great Britain recognized that the Dominions were "autonomous communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate to one another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though united by a common allegiance to the Crown and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations".
Thus, by 1931, Canada and the other Dominions had become "autonomous communities... equal in status" to Great Britain. Today, Canada is a major partner in the Commonwealth of Nations, with its own Priminister as political leader, though retaining Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II as constitutional Head of State.
 

dutchthreat

New Member
It was the war of 1812 which convinced Britain to abandon North America...which Allowed you to become independent. You chose to be a commonwealth of Britain (unwise), but no skin off of us. We were busy building the greatest country on Earth, which without us,Canada would be a backwater beaver town to this day. Just be very very glad we like you (well...not you personally...you are a dolt).

out. :blsmoke:
reported for name calling
 

dutchthreat

New Member
Some comparisons between Canada and the US.
http://www.unitednorthamerica.org/simdiff.htm
And this is about Canadian Independence.
Canada peacefully and gradually evolved as a nation, quite unlike the United States, which became a separate independent country by means of armed revolution. In 1867, six British North American colonies joined together in Confederation as a new country - Canada. Then, British administrative, financial, and military support slowly was reduced, as Canada took more responsibility and control of its own destiny. During the First World War, Canada sent large contingents of troops to fight alongside Britain, and it is generally recognized that Canada's "birth as a nation" came about during that war, and was strengthened further by Canada's participation again in the Second World War.
Here is the official rest of the story:
The Statute of Westminster was the last of the Imperial Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain applicable to all the Dominions. It granted Canada, Newfoundland, New Zealand, Australia, the Union of South Africa, and the Irish Free State full independence.
As in most advances in British constitutional practices, the Statute of Westminster did not constitute a clear break with the past. It merely only consecrated practices that were already firmly established. In the case of Canada, one could consider that the road to independence started with the grant, to the several colonies, of a legislature and eventually of Responsible Government (1847-48). Confederation (1867) crowned this period in so far as, for all intent and purposes, the provinces and the Dominion government obtained full control of all internal matters. The next sixty years were to see a gradual take-over by the federal government of the responsibilities in external sovereignty that had remained, to this point, in the hands of the government and Parliament of Great Britain.
Important dates in the road to independence were the withdrawal of the British troops from Canada (1871), the negotiation of the Washington Treaty (1871) where for the first time a Canadian was included in a British negotiating team to sign a treaty on behalf of Canada, the establishment of the Supreme Court of Canada (1875), the creation of a High Commissioner's Office in London to "represent" Canada (1878), the last use of the veto (1873) and reserve powers by Britain (1886) under the Constitution Act, 1867, and the establishment of the Department of External Affairs (1909). It was the First World War that accelerated the process to independence. The major colonies played a role of such magnitude that they no longer could be considered mere colonies of Great Britain.
The international status of Canada evolved rapidly in the post-World War period: in 1919, Canada was one of the signers of the Treaty of Versailles and was elected as an independent member of the League of Nations. In 1926, the Balfour resolution was adopted at the Imperial Conference. Arthur Balfour presented this resolution to the Imperial conference of the self-governing dominions. In it Great Britain recognized that the Dominions were "autonomous communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate to one another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though united by a common allegiance to the Crown and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations".
Thus, by 1931, Canada and the other Dominions had become "autonomous communities... equal in status" to Great Britain. Today, Canada is a major partner in the Commonwealth of Nations, with its own Priminister as political leader, though retaining Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II as constitutional Head of State.
Told ya so cracker, you had nothing to do with it. :finger: I would never ever merge with the US, I'd just go back to europe
 

CrackerJax

New Member
Like I said, it was the war of 1812 which convinced Britain to let go of North America. If you wanted to be independent you could have been. But Britain was gone and good riddance. They weren't protecting you, they were protecting themselves. You didn't even exist (Canadians). You can thank us. Indirectly, WE created you. We own you as well. And you are a dolt.

out. :blsmoke:
 
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