DBWI: how did you live the war?

Ok Since today is the first anniversary of the treaty of San Fransico ending the 8 years war between all 25 american nations, let me ask you how did you live the war? Did you fight in the texan desert? in Canada? California? any other front? how did it start for you and how did it end for you?
 

MrP

Banned
Well, being born in Britain, I served in the 7th International Brigade's Medical Section during the fighting in Louisiana. Didn't see much action, fortunately. But those sights will stay with me forever.
 
The war was a hell of a fight for me. I live right where the Qubecois EF came down into New York, they pushed within 40 Miles of Albany and the New Englanders cut us here off from Trade by Taking New York. I served in the Milita around the Start of the Hudson River. They were Hungery times for us, I remember having to eat Shoe Leather once...
 
My part I was in Canada and fought in the Great lakes theater. I fought both in Pensylvania with our allies of the Free Republic agaist the slaver and also in Michigan agaist the commies.
 
I was a 28 year old light infantry private protecting British Columbia when this fiasco started and a 36 year airmobile commando captain invading Pennsylvania when the Americans finally ran out of sharp objects to throw at each other.
 

MrP

Banned
Landshark said:
I was a 28 year old light infantry private protecting British Columbia when this fiasco started and a 36 year airmobile commando captain invading Pennsylvania when the Americans finally ran out of sharp objects to throw at each other.

Not the Captain Landshark? The Hero of Harrisburg?

I take my hat off to you, Captain. You did some pretty damn' brave things that day.
 
I was with the Imperial German expeditionary force in the kingdom of New England, after Premier Breton of Quebec backstabbed King Rockefeller instead of joining forces against the Republic of New York.
I was part of the 2nd imperial mountain rangers. Maybe you have heared of us, we fought in the battle of Boston, together with the famous 35th Maine under the immortal Colonel Andrew Keane. I think that without our two units sacrifice, the royal palace would have fallen...
I would later get the Iron cross first class from the Kaiser himself, in front of the Weltreichstag.
Two years later, my unit was deployed in Pacifica. It was a lot of hard fighting. Now, after the war was finally over, I've decided to settle here in the Northwest. Luckyly, you can get around in Seattle quite well with only one leg...
 
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MrP said:
Not the Captain Landshark? The Hero of Harrisburg?

I take my hat off to you, Captain. You did some pretty damn' brave things that day.

There's a fine line between bravery and total fucking stupidity.

Guess which side of it I was on.
 
Have ever of you guy had discrimination? Not as bad as black in U.S.A, but you know small "remark" on you're origin that's generally good at pissing you off a bit (just before having bullet coming all the way).


Me it was because my families were Quebecois who had immigrate to Canada during the faminies, although I was able to speak fluent english (with a very good accent) they could always spot me and the most racist soldiers always kept to annoy me.
 
Andromedos said:
I was with the Imperial German expeditionary force in the kingdom of New England, after Premier Breton of Quebec backstabbed King Rockefeller instead of joining forces against the Republic of New York.

I remember that prick Breton. After he declared UDI from the rest of the Dominion of Canada my unit was airlifted to Ontario before taking part in the Battle of Montreal.

We should have let the French Canadian loyalists have Breton. They wanted him dead even more than the rest of us.
 
Landshark said:
I remember that prick Breton. After he declared UDI from the rest of the Dominion of Canada my unit was airlifted to Ontario before taking part in the Battle of Montreal.

We should have let the French Canadian loyalists have Breton. They wanted him dead even more than the rest of us.

You were at Montreal, at that Time I had a Platoon out in the Berkshires, that was bad fighting. We gave the New Englanders and those Kraughts just what they desreved after Burning Troy, NY
 
Andromedos said:
Landshark, you served in British Columbia? Were you in the second battle of the northern Cascades?

Up until Ross Lake. Then I got to spend a month in a temporary hospital in Vancouver.
 
I was young when the war started, and my part of Texas didn't see much action until the end. My father was an TAF man, and during his first tour in 1998, he contributed to Operation Brimstone and bombed the shit out of the Brits when they tried to bolster Louisiana against us. When I was 13, the British and the Germans decided to resort to their cowardly terror bombings and they destroyed the Metroplex, so we had to flee to the countryside and fight from there. I didn't see much action, but I killed my fair share of the enemy, with my father's own shotgun.

I hate them, and I hate all the revisionists who downplay the bombings. I saw them happen, I saw the bombs fall. They inflicted far more damage than the old Federal government did when they attacked us when we left the Union in the '30s. I'm glad we drove them back into the sea. Louisiana was ours to start with!
 

NapoleonXIV

Banned
I was in Maryland. No fighting here at all.

We used to take picnic baskets down to McHenry Beach and watch the naval battles out in the International waters of the Chesapeake.
 

MrP

Banned
Tetsu said:
I was young when the war started, and my part of Texas didn't see much action until the end. My father was an TAF man, and during his first tour in 1998, he contributed to Operation Brimstone and bombed the shit out of the Brits when they tried to bolster Louisiana against us. When I was 13, the British and the Germans decided to resort to their cowardly terror bombings and they destroyed the Metroplex, so we had to flee to the countryside and fight from there. I didn't see much action, but I killed my fair share of the enemy, with my father's own shotgun.

I hate them, and I hate all the revisionists who downplay the bombings. I saw them happen, I saw the bombs fall. They inflicted far more damage than the old Federal government did when they attacked us when we left the Union in the '30s. I'm glad we drove them back into the sea. Louisiana was ours to start with!

Hell, man! You still getting that old propaganda? I was with the team that helped the survivors from the Metroplex. That was a crashed Texan fighter, mate. Let me tell you from one who knows.
 
Anglos. Pfff. Always thinking about their petty wars.
Just look to South America, instead. I went as a volunteer to Venezuela, in support of the People's Republic of the Glorious Path.
I came there as a military counsellor and found a new life - a wife, two children, and a rank of colonel in the Higher Staff. The Presidential palace in Caracas is actually my second house - guards don't even bother to check my iris with bio-scanners, they know me.
It has been a harsh war down there, you know, the Congressualists were savage. They basically lost because they massacred way too much people - and we hadn't any mercy for those we caught. Venezuela has been the worst butchery of the bloody damned conflict, if considered a sideshow by many.
1,5 million casualties, 90% civilians, are not like saying it. I can still remember the stench of rotting corpses after the battles, see the massacred civilians lined up under a wall torn to shreds by machine gun fire, or hear the pleads of mercy of the greasers we caught and, by their very luck, only shot in the back of the neck. Sure, problems we had - like when we hanged that cardinal-archbishop who had given his benediction to those sons of a bitch as they tortured - you remeber that video that leaked on the WebNet, don't you? But the Pope will soon revoke his excommunication. We do not want to persecute good Catholcis, whoi are the overwhelming majority here - we're not that self-proclaimed socialist madman in Cuba.:D
 
Things I'm proud of (Feel free to make you're own list):

-Me and my mens have liberated 3 plantations

-My Silver Thunder medal


Things I'm less proud of:

- the first thing I won't talk about it even under torture.

and the others (in longer list)

-A little trip to a bordello in San Fransisco in Chinatown (Come on nearly all of us did it at least once!) was nice but I caught a little *disease* nothing bad but it was embarassemnt
 
MrP said:
Hell, man! You still getting that old propaganda? I was with the team that helped the survivors from the Metroplex. That was a crashed Texan fighter, mate. Let me tell you from one who knows.

forget it.. they like having someone to hate... especially since we and the germans are among the superpowers only makes them even more madder...

(OOC whats the POD for this)
 
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