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Thread: USA Politics Thread - *No gun debate*

  1. #2791

    Arrow

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]The population of Coalition countries is approximately 1.23 billion people
    First hand, according to your highly valuable american democratic ideas, it leaves 4.77 billion people telling you you're loosers

    So, the majority should be right, shouldn't it ?

    Second hand, many of your allies' decision to send in the troops are governemental ones, inspite of their own people opinion, which wasn't, everywhere, friendly with the TBA politics.

    The consequence of their unilateral decision was that some of your allied governments were fired when democratic elections occur soon after (exemples : Spain, Italy)

  2. #2792
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    Indeed. The norwegian PM at the time (which, btw, somehow became PM even though his party had virtually no support...still wondering how that happened) was a sucker who had his head so far up Bush's ass. He sent, with extremly limited support in the norwegian people, troops to Iraq. Thankfully our new goverment elected last year pulled them out
    \"Va det opp te mæ skulle dokker ha vært på ishave og ronka kobbekuk, førbainna søringsatana, så kunne dokker ha sotte å konfigurert dokker sjøl utavhælvettes langt oppi de utpulte ræven dokkers at dokker måtte sjite utav øran neste gang dokker måtte på dass, og når dokker va færdi me det, så sku æ personlig ha kommen å formatert trynan dokkers, å så innstallert skanken oppi baillhånka dokkers så dokker pesse røde serienummer.\" - Sint fisker...

  3. #2793
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    Quote Originally Posted by (Sophion-Black @ Dec. 02 2006,20:28)
    Sending troops isn't the only way to help, enter the ones not listed in wikipedia (an encyclopedia anyone can edit)

    Observe <<< link (click it, it&#39;s the source)

    Does that list look familiar? IT SHOULD&#33; I JUST COPIED AND PASTED THAT LIST...

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]I know that debating is easier if you ignore reality and make things up.
    I demand an apology, that was uncalled for.


    (That is why my research isn&#39;t limited to just wikipedia, which is mostly hearsay btw)
    Hehe, good joke, linking to the white house. If there is one biased source to rule all other biased source on this issue it is the white house. My statement stand for the white house as well as for you: debating is easier if you ignore reality and make shit up.

    As for the reliability of wikipedia, testing has shown it to be roughly as reliable as Britannica. Not that such accuracy is needed to beat the white house press office - just making things up will put you on that level.

    Incidentally, that&#39;s what you are consistently doing. You need new role models.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Sending troops isn&#39;t the only way to help

    And claiming that somebody is part of your coalition just because they aren&#39;t actively opposing you is fundamentally dishonest. Incidentally, after the white house released that list there were strong denials from some of the countries. This is the list of the 30 countries that agreed to be associated with the US on this one:

    Afghanistan, Albania, Australia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, El Salvador, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Georgia, Hungary, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, the Philippines, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, Turkey, United Kingdom and Uzbekistan.

    Source: us state department via BBC

    Anyway the only meaningful contributions to the US led coalition were made by the UK. Money and troops, that&#39;s all that counts and in the invasion only the US and the UK provided that in meaningful quantities.




  4. #2794
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    Quote Originally Posted by (denoir @ Dec. 02 2006,23:30)
    Quote Originally Posted by (Sophion-Black @ Dec. 02 2006,20:28)
    Sending troops isn&#39;t the only way to help, enter the ones not listed in wikipedia (an encyclopedia anyone can edit)

    Observe <<< link (click it, it&#39;s the source)

    Does that list look familiar? IT SHOULD&#33; I JUST COPIED AND PASTED THAT LIST...

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]I know that debating is easier if you ignore reality and make things up.
    I demand an apology, that was uncalled for.


    (That is why my research isn&#39;t limited to just wikipedia, which is mostly hearsay btw)
    Hehe, good joke, linking to the white house. If there is one biased source to rule all other biased source on this issue it is the white house. My statement stand for the white house as well as for you: debating is easier if you ignore reality and make shit up.

    As for the reliability of wikipedia, testing has shown it to be roughly as reliable as Britannica. Not that such accuracy is needed to beat the white house press office - just making things up will put you on that level.

    Incidentally, that&#39;s what you are consistently doing. You need new role models.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Sending troops isn&#39;t the only way to help
    The only meaningful contributions to the US led coalition were made by the UK. Money and troops, that&#39;s all that counts and in the invasion only the US and the UK provided that in meaningful quantities.


    I remember I saw a interview with a US scientist studying the climate changes and such. The research he and his colleges did was every now and then presented to US officials and such so they could decide the US politics on these matters...only problem was that all the places were the scientists had pointed out that USA most likely is fucking up the climate with it&#39;s policy, the white house had changed those parts, or simply removed them from the report...

    White house truth...change or remove facts that you don&#39;t like

  5. #2795
    Quote Originally Posted by (denoir @ Dec. 03 2006,00:30)
    Anyway the only meaningful contributions to the US led coalition were made by the UK. Money and troops, that&#39;s all that counts and in the invasion only the US and the UK provided that in meaningful quantities.
    Well.. im sure Kuwait allowing the US to use their country as a staging area for their attack was pretty valuable too.

  6. #2796
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    Quote Originally Posted by (EiZei @ Dec. 02 2006,23:45)
    Quote Originally Posted by (denoir @ Dec. 03 2006,00:30)
    Anyway the only meaningful contributions to the US led coalition were made by the UK. Money and troops, that&#39;s all that counts and in the invasion only the US and the UK provided that in meaningful quantities.
    Well.. im sure Kuwait allowing the US to use their country as a staging area for their attack was pretty valuable too.
    True. Which brings me to a good example why the list on the white house site is completely bogus. They list Turkey - the same Turkey that refused to allow the &#39;coallition&#39; to use it as a staging area for an attack on Iraq from the north. Nobody screwed up the invasion plans as much as Turkey did.




  7. #2797
    Quote Originally Posted by (Sophion-Black @ Nov. 29 2006,22:09)
    Quote Originally Posted by (Baff2 @ Nov. 29 2006,03:51)
    LMAO. Foreign terrorists.

    All twenty of them. Best send more troops.
    Are you stupid or just full of democratic bull sh&#33;t?

    Its been three years&#33; do you think Iraq will be left if all the terrorists were domestic? NO&#33; You honestly think that Iraqi people are picking up guns off dead terrorists to fight American and allied troops?
    For someone that alledgedly loves democracy, you sure do hate democrats. All those Democrat voting troops out there would be so happy to know you detest them so. Perhaps you should leave the rhetoric out of the discussion, like others are managing. "BUT HE&#39;S A DEMOCRAT&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33;111&#33;&#33;1" is a poor debating tactic.

    Iraqi people have no need to take guns from dead terrorists when more Iraqis have guns than have microwaves. Also, they&#39;re primarily fighting each other, not the coalition.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]political move, the terrorists know that if Iran gets a foot in the door the US will be powerless to stop them. After all look who is standing behind them, Russia and the PRC. That is one of the reasons the US doesn&#39;t want Iran to get nukes. Another being Israel will use theirs to blast Iran off the map... and we don&#39;t want to play "duck, duck, who&#39;s-- (Boom)" in Iraq&#33;
    Iran does not like Iraq, they are not friends. Iran wanted the Ba&#39;athists overthrown, but it has nothing to gain and plenty to lose from insurgency nextdoor. The cold war is over, Russia and China are not enemies of the West, they are trading partners, bringing down the West is not in their interest. Neither one of them trusts Iran any more than the West does.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]
    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Don&#39;t you think the japanese felt they were kicking some serious US ass after Pearl Harbor? Don&#39;t you think the Germans felt they were winning against the Soviets up to the battle in Stalingrad? The fact that they probably felt so doesn&#39;t make it a universal truth...
    All against well-trained-battle-hardened troops. this is different, this is militiamen.
    Well-trained-battle-hardened militiamen. The only difference is that a large proportion of them have no fear of death.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]primary sources:
    PFC David Whelms, USMC
    LCPL Jessie Whoebach, USMC
    SGT Justin Davidson, USMC
    PFC Steven Cornet, US Army
    Great, one SNCO and three from the bottom of the ladder.
    My primary sources:
    Sgt. scary RM
    Thousands of my oppos.

    Do I win a prize?

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]The Battle of Sacramento (Mexican-American War).

    US Strength:
    924 Soldiers
    Mexican Strength:
    1,500 infantry, 1,200 calvary and 119 artillery (2,819 total).

    Result: US Victory
    US Casualties: 9 (1 KIA, 8 WIA)
    Mexican Casualties: 600 (300 KIA, 300 WIA)

    There are more than one instances of "lopsided" results like this. and not just in the Mexican War either, it shows up through US history.
    I notice that you left out the fact that it was a surprise flank-attack against a force equipped with ancient muskets by Americans equipped with modern rifles.

    Events like this show up through most nations&#39; histories, the US doesn&#39;t have a monopoly on this kind of thing. Other nations, however, don&#39;t base current policy on past achievements.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]
    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]World War I... Remind me, how important was the US contribution to that scuffle?
    Money is a big thing... something the US provided.
    Neither Britain or France were poor, this was at the height of empire and either country could fart more money than the US had access to. All the artillery, tanks and other heavy equipment used by the Americans were provided by the British and French free of charge.
    When you&#39;re in a hole, stop digging. The American contribution to WWI was minimal at best.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]
    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]1) It lasted 16 years. That is prolonged.
    2) Open does not refer to strategy and tactics, it means not clandestine. It was not clandestine.
    3) I&#39;ve never seen the NYPD fighting in the jungle, or trying to stop an invading army. You cannot use more explosive than was used in WWI and WWII combined and say it wasn&#39;t a war.
    4) Not every contact was a battle. All battles can be won and a war lost.
    @1) I never knew the US was in engagement from the time it landed
    @2) "Open" means two large forces opposing each other.
    @3) Action in Vietnam was used to stop northern aggression, therefore it was a police action.
    @4) If your referring to base insurgency then that was a battle won too, they repulsed the VC.
    1) The first American combat deaths were on July 8th 1959 at Bien Hoa Billets. The last were at the fall of Saigon, April 29-30 1975. There were American combat deaths in the first Indo-China War too, the first being Major(Lt. Col.) A.P. Dewey.
    2) "Open" means two or more forces of indeterminate size opposing each other - openly.
    3) Action in WWII was used to stop German aggression. Its status as a war is unaffected. Arlington Cemetary refer to Vietnam as "America&#39;s longest and most controversial war". Perhaps you would like to argue with them.
    4) The US lost, you will not change that fact. The US went there to stop the North invading the South and failed. Not achieving your war aims while the opposition achieves theirs is a loss.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]
    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]The only way Americans were involved is if there was some use of time travel.
    The men involved there were Americans, yes they were under British "rule" but they were still living, breathing, and walking America.
    They were not Americans, nor were they under British rule as neither country existed in 1637. They were English colonists, born and raised in England, they considered themselves English, were wholly dependant on supplies from England and were bankrolled by England. They were there to set up colonies for England. They were no more American than Christopher Columbus. They were not American in the same way as Julius Caesar was not Italian.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]WRONG&#33; When a ship goes to sea it is sovereign territory the British were INVADING US SOVERNINTY, INVADING US BOARDERS AT LAND, AND INVADING US WATERS&#33; Now, if the US did that now to the British how would you feel?
    Quite frankly, I wouldn&#39;t give a toss - it was 200 years ago. It really is quite pointless trying to transplant 21st century international law onto the early 19th century. Of course, you do realise one of the things the RN were doing in US waters was stopping ships transporting slaves from the British empire. What do you think a suitable response should have been for Americans illegaly taking British subjects as slaves?

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Besides, the criteria they used to determine that the sailor was "British" fit nearly all Americans (look, acted and spoke English, and/or had an English name). basically they stole US sailors off US ships&#33;

    Should I spell it out, or do you get the point?
    No need to spell anything out, I get the point quite clearly: you&#39;re making it up as you go along.
    Impressment is just another word for conscription. The captains of American ships were complicit in assisting draft dodgers and deserters and they were most likely being paid by the French to do it.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]
    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]The best ships the US had were its super-frigates which were fourth/fifth rate.
    Try one of the best in the world, since America had different species of trees and an abundance of them, it was safe to say they were "top notch." Do i have to pull in the example of "Old Ironsides" to put you in your place about American Frigates?
    You&#39;ve changed tack more often than the Chesapeake ever did. First of all you claimed that the HMS Shannon didn&#39;t have superior firepower, which it did, you also claimed that US frigates were &#39;the best in the world&#39; because of their superior firepower, now you&#39;ve changed that to &#39;one of the best&#39; because of the timber used.
    The fact is that the best ships the US had were the 44 gunners it refered to as &#39;super-frigates&#39;. It makes no difference if they were "top-notch", they were still only borderline fourth rates built to fight fifth rate and lesser vessels. The US had nothing that could match a RN fourth rate or a ship of the line. You just don&#39;t seem to have any concept of how overwhelmingly powerful the RN was.
    As for this different trees nonsense, Britain owned Canada. Any trees the US had access to Britain had a lot more of them, as well as its pick of South American, African, Asian, Indian, Australasian and European trees.
    Out of all these new superhero trees the US had, &#39;Old Ironsides&#39; was made of oak. Trying to put me in my place could backfire especially if its the urban myth or the no holes, but you&#39;re welcome to try.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]BS *** ***Arty works just the same. And hippies do affect wars 9,000 miles away:
    1) Lowers US morale
    2) Raises VC morale
    3) Politicians control money to fund the war.
    Aside from issue of shells hitting the trees, as others have mentioned, how exactly do you think one can deploy field guns, self-propelled guns or tanks in an area no vehicle can access? Mortars can&#39;t be used with an overhead obstruction, before you mention them.
    So you&#39;re saying all it takes to defeat the US military is a college girl with a placard. Not very good then are they?

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]
    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Quote
    The US economy is in such dire condition as to need a war to stop it from collapsing
    You think was is a solution to raise an economy? well hell&#33; lets all pick up the boxing gloves
    No. I know it was a solution to protect an economy. Saddam had the dollar by its reproductives. Iran is trying to do the same thing, only better.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]In that case, the brits are damned good...there was this battle in Africa during the colonization where quite few brits killed quite many Zulu warriors...(I&#39;m quite sure they were brits). Of course, we&#39;re ignoring the fact that the brits had rifles and such, while the Zulus mostly had...axes and spears...
    Rorke&#39;s Drift. 139 British, of which 104 were fit to fight, vs. 4-5000 Zulus. Along with their assegais, the Zulus did actually have a few thousand firearms, mostly 20-30 year old rifles and flintlocks purchased from white traders. Contrary to the film it is highly unlikely they had any Martini-Henrys at that time, although they did use them at Khambula two months later.
    Per Mare Per Terram

  8. #2798
    Retired Moderator RalphWiggum's Avatar
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    I thought this was USA politics thread,not Iraq thread.
    Please read Forum Rules

  9. #2799
    Edit: Duplicate post




  10. #2800
    Wow i really have put myself between a rock and a hard place... trust a common person or trust something that has in their job description to protect me from foreign aggressors. but that&#39;s not all, they know about every military actions that has happened, is happening now, or is going to happen in the near future... who should i trust ***

    Do you know what military actions are ***going to happen in the near future?

    Besides, I&#39;m quite sure some random person could not identify all intelligence organizations contributed to the invasion of Iraq. Or what specific NBC response teams were put on alert to assist if the need arises.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]As for the reliability of wikipedia, testing has shown it to be roughly as reliable as Britannica.
    wow, thanks for telling the world a murder is just as bad a a homicide. The reason why many US schools don&#39;t have britannica in them, surprise.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Not that such accuracy is needed to beat the white house press office - just making things up will put you on that level.
    OK then, why don&#39;t i ask you how many American civilians were killed in WWII. Or should I ask how many Intelligence offices sent in information about Iraq before the invasion?

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Incidentally, that&#39;s what you are consistently doing. You need new role models.
    maybe i should use you as one, an egotistic self-centered dumb*ss that has no respect of other human beings. thank you for opening my eye oh great jack*ss of the year&#33;

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Anyway the only meaningful contributions to the US led coalition were made by the UK. Money and troops, that&#39;s all that counts and in the invasion only the US and the UK provided that in meaningful quantities.
    so we didn&#39;t need to know any bits of information or intelligence that could help the "US-led" invasion of Iraq. [shakes head] look there is more to war than just show up and blast the guy on the other side.

    1) You need logistics, supplies, ammunition, food, fuel, and spare parts for when you stop and rest.

    2) You need intelligence to know what the enemy is doing, with what, and how many of them are doing it.

    3) You need protection of the main forces, surrounding areas, innocent civilians, and political targets from any unconventional warfare.

    4) you need the money to fund the war, its not free to shoot a gun. the bullet costs money.

    and not recognizing someone for helping is just as bad as not recognizing their sovereignty at all. they made sacrifices, and I respect them for that.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Nobody screwed up the invasion plans as much as Turkey did.
    we still got into Iraq kicked a*s and took Saddam out of power, whats the difference? fly from the north and drop bombs or fly from the south and drop bombs?

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]For someone that alledgedly loves democracy, you sure do hate democrats.
    The United States is a Republic. Pulse, the Democrats are the ones blasting the pres for anything that goes wrong. I&#39;m sure it would have been better off like the old days and put a democrat in charge of the army to shut those b*****ds up. But democratic Generals are becoming extinct now.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]but it has nothing to gain and plenty to lose from insurgency nextdoor.
    One of the worlds largest oil reserve and better control of the middle east to turn against the US.

    I.E. Iraq goes to Iran for help against the terrorists, Iran turns around and stops funding the terrorists and tells them to go home. Iran looks big and bad and Iraq turns to Iran for more help in the future. in return Iran get Oil rights.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Well-trained-battle-hardened militiamen. The only difference is that a large proportion of them have no fear of death.
    Militiamen initially have no proper training, or discipline. They can go home or leave when they please. And they certainly lack proper leadership. Not to mention effective weapons and a constant supply of ammunition. When it comes down to it, Militiamen have a big disadvantage against a trained army. being a royal marine, you should have learned something to this effect.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Great, one SNCO and three from the bottom of the ladder.
    They certainly know the common soldier in Iraq, the opinion I&#39;m trying to convey.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]I notice that you left out the fact that it was a surprise flank-attack against a force equipped with ancient muskets by Americans equipped with modern rifles.
    Yet they go into a fortified city, and misidentify where the main attack is coming from. Because there is "no way they [the Americans] can get there so fast and without us knowing it"... Surprise&#33; ***

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]The American contribution to WWI was minimal at best.
    dude, progress in WWI was minimal at best.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]1) The first American combat deaths were on July 8th 1959 at Bien Hoa Billets. The last were at the fall of Saigon, April 29-30 1975. There were American combat deaths in the first Indo-China War too, the first being Major(Lt. Col.) A.P. Dewey.
    2) "Open" means two or more forces of indeterminate size opposing each other - openly.
    3) Action in WWII was used to stop German aggression. Its status as a war is unaffected. Arlington Cemetary refer to Vietnam as "America&#39;s longest and most controversial war". Perhaps you would like to argue with them.
    4) The US lost, you will not change that fact. The US went there to stop the North invading the South and failed. Not achieving your war aims while the opposition achieves theirs is a loss.
    1) combat deaths could be the same as self defence deaths. Engagements were not made until after a few years later the US landed.
    2) You see, i try not to use the word in the definition
    3) What if i said the US Civil War is the longest war in US history. Does it make its true, no. is it true? yes... its still going on to this day. the CS government didn&#39;t sign a surrender. technically the longest US war to date.
    4) The effects of Democrats getting their way, cut and run.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]They were English colonists, born and raised in England, they considered themselves English
    Just like the Canadians were English colonists, but yet they were still Canadian. Fact of the matter is, these men and women were Americans, they were the earliest record of it. granted they didn&#39;t have a country until more than 100 years later, but their spirit is the same spirit of America. If it walks like a duck, sounds like a duck and acts like a duck...

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]Of course, you do realise one of the things the RN were doing in US waters was stopping ships transporting slaves from the British empire.
    that still doesn&#39;t give them the right to invade US waters. justice should be done by judges not sailors.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]No need to spell anything out, I get the point quite clearly: you&#39;re making it up as you go along.
    Look, I&#39;m getting the information from a US history book. Your getting your information from a British history book. They&#39;re two very different things. One says good old Washington was the best man for the job as the first US president. One says Washington was the worlds biggest traitor. What keeps me from accusing you of making things up? Knowing the above.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]First of all you claimed that the HMS Shannon didn&#39;t have superior firepower, which it did, you also claimed that US frigates were &#39;the best in the world&#39; because of their superior firepower, now you&#39;ve changed that to &#39;one of the best&#39; because of the timber used.
    I don&#39;t recall saying the US frigates were the best because of firepower. This is actually the first time i have said why the US had better frigates.


    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]As for this different trees nonsense, Britain owned Canada. Any trees the US had access to Britain had a lot more of them.
    as you said, the RN and Britain was busy being in war. They had little regard for Canada and its resources of timber. besides they had their own "South American, African, Asian, Indian, Australasian and European trees." Why come all the way over here to get southern live oak?

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]how exactly do you think one can deploy field guns, self-propelled guns or tanks in an area no vehicle can access?
    cut an LZ and drop it in using a chopper

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]So you&#39;re saying all it takes to defeat the US military is a college girl with a placard.
    All it takes is a Jane Fonda siting in north Vietnam arty to get us troops to stop firing at an "American." Not exactly defeat, but it really hurts to hear about something like that.

    Quote Originally Posted by [b
    Quote[/b] ]In that case, the brits are damned good...there was this battle in Africa during the colonization where quite few brits killed quite many Zulu warriors...(I&#39;m quite sure they were brits). Of course, we&#39;re ignoring the fact that the brits had rifles and such, while the Zulus mostly had...axes and spears...
    try another example. But know this, by putting the British higher you consiquently bring the Americans along. after all, they did pop a few black eyes into the British ranks.

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