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One of the last five French WWI veterans dies at 111
AFP via The Tocqueville Connection ^ | 11/10/2006

Posted on 11/10/2006 6:08:35 AM PST by Republicain

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1 posted on 11/10/2006 6:08:36 AM PST by Republicain
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To: Republicain

Vive' le France!


2 posted on 11/10/2006 6:14:01 AM PST by jjm2111 (http://www.purveryors-of-truth.blogspot.com)
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To: Republicain
Some 8.5 million French soldiers fought in the 1914-1918 conflict, of whom some 1.38 million died in action.

Wow, that was some sacrifice. I take my hat off and bow to the greatest generation of France. Their kind is no more.

3 posted on 11/10/2006 6:14:01 AM PST by nwrep
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To: Republicain

Back when the French had some fight in them. They should do a DNA test on Maurice Floquet and see what changed...


4 posted on 11/10/2006 6:15:33 AM PST by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: Republicain

Sad that a generation that sacrificed so much is now all but gone.


5 posted on 11/10/2006 6:15:42 AM PST by SmoothTalker
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To: Republicain

You know, we really rip on France here (sometimes rightly, sometimes wrongly), but in World War I, they endured slaughter on a scale that has never been seen in this country, except maybe during the Civil War. When you look at the casualty figures back then, and then compare them to what we've suffered in Iraq in three years, it's mind-boggling. 2,800 dead was just an average single day on the Western Front.

The figure that always sticks in my mind was from the first day of the Battle of the Somme. There were twenty thousand British and Commonwealth troops killed on that day. Not "casualties," which means killed, wounded, and missing. KILLED. In one day. For advances of no more than one mile, if that. Ninety years later, we simply can't get our heads around numbers like that. We hear about ten soldiers or Marines getting killed in a single helicopter crash, and we hear how much a tragedy it is...and it is. But in 1916, you had hundreds of soldiers dying in a few minutes, and the nations put on their stiff upper lips, shrugged, and fed more fodder into the muzzles of the machine guns.

Sir Martin Gilbert has an absolutely fantastic single-volume history of the Great War that concentrates more on the human side of the conflict than a simple retelling of dates and places. I highly recommend it. It's a very sobering read.

}:-)4


6 posted on 11/10/2006 6:22:16 AM PST by Moose4 (Baa havoc, and let slip the sheep of war.)
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To: Republicain

World War I, back when the French were still cool and still had a spine.


7 posted on 11/10/2006 6:30:08 AM PST by Chewie84
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To: Moose4

Thats true Europe lost a generation of young men on the battlefield


8 posted on 11/10/2006 6:41:11 AM PST by antihannityguy (When they come for your guns give them the ammo first)
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To: Republicain
The French fought valiantly for most of the First World War (the mutiny in 1917 being the great exception), although they were rarely well-led.

It seems hard for those who are not students of history to believe, but from the mid-17th century through 1940, the French were regarded as both warlike and very competent at it.

That image began to change with their humiliating defeat by the Prussians in 1870-71 in the Franco-Prussian War. Then they rallied to fight well in the First World War. It was only their utter collapse in 1940, followed by the disaster in Indochina and the humiliating loss (though not through French military incompetence) in Algeria that solidified the French reputation as cheese-eating surrender monkeys.

9 posted on 11/10/2006 6:45:13 AM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: Republicain

RIP brave soldier.

My (German) family lost during WWI two of its sons in France. Today (my uncle married a French woman) a part of my Family is French. The French once were our "Erbfeind" (enemy of heritage) and today my cousins (cute girls - real hotties ;) ) are French. When I was a member of the German forces I worked together with many French comrades. Therefore I never gave much on the widespread "cheese eating surrender monkey" stammering here on FR. Most of them are the finest soldiers you can think of.

It would be a great achievement if the whole West (and that includes France) could find together again. Maybe the example of this old fighter will remember some of our friends who have a different opinion, that not all French are waving white flags.

Greetings from Lake Constance (Germany)

Andreas


10 posted on 11/10/2006 6:49:49 AM PST by Atlantic Bridge (De omnibus dubitandum.)
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To: Moose4

It's things like this that indicate how "pussified" Western society has become. It's just damned sickening!!!


11 posted on 11/10/2006 6:51:34 AM PST by xc1427 (It's better to die on your feet than to live on your knees...Midnight Oil (Power and the Passion))
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To: Republicain

I heard on Bill Bennett this morning the US has 9 WW1 vets left.


12 posted on 11/10/2006 6:52:57 AM PST by Sybeck1
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To: Republicain

What a terrible tragedy World War I was! It didn't have to happen.


13 posted on 11/10/2006 6:57:14 AM PST by popdonnelly
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To: CatoRenasci; Moose4; 2banana
Amen to that. Sad that the French people today bear little resemblance to the grizzled and determined poilu of that era. Those men endured a horrible war for four long, bloody years, at a cost in blood unknown to this country except perhaps for our home-grown Civil War. The French of WWI held off the hun hordes in a grimly determined manner and survived a slaughter never seen before in history. We today can only look back in amazement and horror at the battlefield of those days. I can't imagine this or any country today enduring such trauma. Today we have smart weapons and push-button assaults, but also sacrifice on the ground as always by the grunts in boots, but the scale back then is just overwhelming.
14 posted on 11/10/2006 6:58:48 AM PST by chimera
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To: xc1427

"Pussified," perhaps, but the fact is that World War I was a useless, mindless, stupid slaughter. In the end, it destroyed an entire generation of Europe, gave Communism the foothold it needed to begin a reign of terror around the world, and so horrified the men who became Europe's leaders that when Hitler rose twenty years later, they wouldn't consider armed force to stop him until it was too late.

}:-)4


15 posted on 11/10/2006 7:00:30 AM PST by Moose4 (Baa havoc, and let slip the sheep of war.)
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To: Moose4
Sir Martin Gilbert has an absolutely fantastic single-volume history of the Great War that concentrates more on the human side of the conflict than a simple retelling of dates and places. I highly recommend it. It's a very sobering read.

What's the title?

16 posted on 11/10/2006 7:02:53 AM PST by HIDEK6
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To: Moose4

Here in England, many public places, and places of work, old schools etc have plaques comemorating the fallen in the Great War.

It is sobering as you say to see how many men were lost, even in quite small communities.

Personally I feel a lot of blame towards the military leadership at the time, whose idea of tactics was to send men at walking pace, into massed machine gun, artillery, and gas attack.

No wonder few of survivors, (including one of my Grand-Fathers who survived being captured)would talk about it.

I tried to find a picture of war graves, but unfortunately single photos can't capture the scale of the cemetaries.


17 posted on 11/10/2006 7:03:43 AM PST by plenipotentiary
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To: Atlantic Bridge
When I was a member of the German forces I worked together with many French comrades. Therefore I never gave much on the widespread "cheese eating surrender monkey" stammering here on FR. Most of them are the finest soldiers you can think of.

Aw - come on. I even give my Southern accented boys a good ribbing or two, from time to time, about losing the War of Rebellion. Like you never asked a French comrade (after a couple beers in the pub) why do the French plant tress on the Champs Elysees? (So the German Army can parade in the shade.).

18 posted on 11/10/2006 7:07:57 AM PST by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: StarFan; Dutchy; alisasny; BobFromNJ; BUNNY2003; Cacique; Clemenza; Coleus; cyborg; DKNY; ...
RIP Monsieur Floquet...

Please FReepmail me if you want on or off my ‘miscellaneous’ ping list.

19 posted on 11/10/2006 7:08:59 AM PST by nutmeg (In 2008 we will crush the Democrats like the cockroaches they are! -- Mark Levin 11-8-06)
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To: Moose4

The world had never seen anything like it. The evil by-product of WWI was the fear of "here we go again" thanks to Hitler. You have brought up a valid point.


20 posted on 11/10/2006 7:16:00 AM PST by xc1427 (It's better to die on your feet than to live on your knees...Midnight Oil (Power and the Passion))
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