Tuesday, 13 April 2010

Another nail

According to the British courts that are now merely an extension of the EU, the British Army is not a fighting force meant to protect the realm, but the equivalent of a branch of Lilywhites.

Update: Sexy T. Dear God!

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Post the money grabbing bint to Afghanistan. There's one I'd like to see come home in a box.

Sergej said...

Whiny ... has no business being in the army. Army (in my non-Brit subject, so unofficial, opinion) has no business keeping bending over backward to give her benefits as if she were a UAW/SEIU worker. But in a box? Terrorists should end up in boxes, or preferably spread thinly over several acres of rocky ground, but if being a fat whiny person with an undeserved sense of entitlement were a capital offense, it would be time to buy stock in manufacturers of hemp ropes.

David said...

Let's go easy on the wishing people dead, lads. It's a bit strong and it isn't as if we were dealing with someone who really deserves it, like Bill Oddie.

Sergej said...

While terrorists are certainly made out of people, I think that at some point they pretty much end up turning in their membership cards for the human race. I do not advocate the death penalty for being a whiny person, because then the world would be a very lonely place to live.

But what's this I notice about a 22-year enlistment? 22 years is a hefty chunk out of a human life. Maybe the enlistment papers needed some fine print that they didn't have, or the Ministry of Defense didn't consider that some female soldiers would have children when they were between 18 and 40 years old, and some of them would need to raise these children on their own. I mean, two- to eight-year enlistments, just plan these things, but 22 years, you're living a lot of your life in the service of the Crown.

David said...

I concur about the Jihadists,but the daft woman deserves contempt, not capital punishment. The Army is a fighting force and if you don't understand that, you should never have taken the Queen's shilling.