I'm sorry, as a historian, do you value rhetorical hyperbole more than actually accurately depicting the truth of past events? You quoted the 'ungrateful' bit in your link, and you don't expect to be called on it, at this forum of all places?Thanas wrote:I am a historian. You do not need to enlighten me about the general events of the last three centuries. The comment is rhetoric hyperbole, a concept you are probably unfamiliar with. And hooray for you taking one quote and implying that is the general meaning of the article. Which is, in fact, more a bludgeon to quickly answer idiots like those who describe the french as arrogant cowards. Seriously. Did you expect a historical essay at that link or what?consequences wrote:Amazingly enough, the French then killed basically everyone in their country that we had legitimate reason to be grateful too, and there's that slight matter of that little undeclared naval war we had with them in the last days of the eighteenth century.
I suggest that you not mistake the people who helped us out of enlightened self interest(ntm the desire to make life difficult for the British in general) 220 years ago with the people we're dealing with today.
And yeah, I read the article. It kind of left stuff out, like the shit I mentioned, in the three pages where it spent more time whinging about how no one could have stopped the Germans than any other individual event(apparently Stalin was 'terrified' of Hitler, which is definitely worth a giggle). If he's going to whinge about people misrepresenting history, and then do the same thing himself, I'm going to call him a hatfucker, and you an accomplice for suggesting that we read incomplete tripe.
Is three pages not an essay now, oh great historian? Did you even bother to read the link yourself?
Never said that I did. Feel free to try to put other words in my mouth though.Also, I suggest you not mistake the people who "surrendered" in WWII for the french of today.