That's not even English.Yeah since the Brits were the right end up their @rse joining forces with Mao would have made sense. You're just BSing.
That's not even English.Yeah since the Brits were the right end up their @rse joining forces with Mao would have made sense. You're just BSing.
Not particularly. Brexit is never likely to happen now. It was supposed to be March 29th. We're set on a path of never ending extensions, followed by a revocation of Article 50 and a betrayal of democracy.Why the hell this *censored* of an English Sow being so liberal on apologies? Is she bothered by Oct-31 being no-deal Brexit?
I'd rather jump on a Commodore 64 than reply to you.You mean time to hit the pub. Drink yourself silly, piss on your bed and jump on the commode.
That's not even English.
@Milspec ; @nairThe Hindustan Times source quoting 3000 children per day is only last year (Jul 2018).
Death by hunger is India’s tragic reality
Amazing how nobody blames the Japanese for cutting off supplies from Burma. And your tales of excess are garbage. Even people in the UK were living on rations.
The Delhi Durbar was only held 3 times - 1877, 1903 and 1911, it was not held in 1943.
Delhi Durbar - Wikipedia
They were extremely benign. So benign that the Monstrous, neanderthal , undernourished cukcolded Irish felt extremely insecure with the virile English & Scots around. The Irish tried everything. They fled, they converted to protestantism and finally they rebelled. The IRA laid more stock in the 3rd Reich than Britain. They actively indulged in acts of sabotage all across the mainland Britain. De Valera ( God Bless his Soul) showed the parasite & future stroke patient Churchmouse the middle finger when he asked assistance. All in all the Irish gave a decent account of themselves. Yet Bose is to be despised for siding with the Japanese. Sounds more like racism than indignant benign colonialism.The first link dated Jul 2018 is about hunger deaths. How is it that such widespread deaths under Indian rule in peacetime, post green revolution, in the 21st century are acceptable but when a similar number of deaths happen during WW2, pre green revolution, in the face of crop failure, bad weather, supply shortages and mass exodus, it's because the British were monsters?
please report, so it shows up on the queue, If I am not around other mods can take care of it.@Milspec ; @nair
I thought off topic posts were prevented here after a specific warning. Looks like there are two sets of rules still prevailing. One for desis and one for whites. Nice to note.
It seems clear to me that in the name of FoE, any shit is & should be edible. After all Indians are supposed to have robust digestions. Didn't we survive the Delhi belly?
Yes. It serves no purpose.My absolutely personal take:
Get over it India! A foreign power, ruling over you, used all means "legal" as per it's rules and regulation, to enforce its writ! No one asked you to surrender your sovereignty to a foreign power in the first place that you complain now.
Because WW2 was NOT OUR WAR!The first link dated Jul 2018 is about hunger deaths. How is it that such widespread deaths under Indian rule in peacetime, post green revolution, in the 21st century are acceptable but when a similar number of deaths happen during WW2, pre green revolution, in the face of crop failure, bad weather, supply shortages and mass exodus, it's because the British were monsters?
Dyer was initially lauded by conservative forces in the empire, but in July 1920 he was censured and forced to retire by the House of Commons.[13] He became a celebrated hero in the UK among most of the people connected to the British Raj,[14] for example, the House of Lords,[15] but unpopular in the House of Commons, which voted against Dyer as a Colonel. He was disciplined by being removed from his appointment, was passed over for promotion and was prohibited from further employment in India.
Looks like there are two sets of rules still prevailing. One for desis and one for whites. Nice to note.
It seems clear to me that in the name of FoE, any shit is & should be edible
That's newspapers for you. The government itself was against what he did.That's some harsh punishment...Also.
On his exile to Britain, Dyer was presented with a gift of £26,000 sterling, a huge sum in those days (approximately £1,000,000 in terms of 2013 PPP), which emerged from a fund set up on his behalf by the Morning Post, a conservative, pro-imperialist newspaper which later merged with the Daily Telegraph. A "Thirteen Women Committee" was constituted to present "the Saviour of the Punjab with the sword of honour and a purse". Large contributions to the fund were made by civil servants and by British Army and Indian Army officers, although serving members of the military were not allowed to donate to political funds under the King's Regulations (para. 443).
Meanwhile the soldiers from the Garhwal regiment who refused to fire at unarmed civilians during Qissa Khwani Bazaar massacre were all court-martialled & many served life sentences.
That's newspapers for you. The government itself was against what he did.
You would that British government was against all this when he was forced to retire. Such a dreadful punishment.
The government has a lot of things to consider in their punishment. Public opinion, troop morale etc. It did however lead to reforms in the way such illegal gatherings were dealt with.You would that British government was against all this when he was forced to retire. Such a dreadful punishment.