Counties succeeding to form a new state that is still part of the country is much more likely than say Texas wanting to form its own country.Every time I hear this I just palmface. It's never going to work.
Maybe so, but all it ever is is a bunch of people in the backwoods acting on impulse. They never consider all of the machinations of running a state properly.Counties succeeding to form a new state that is still part of the country is much more likely than say Texas wanting to form its own country.
Maybe so, but all it ever is is a bunch of people in the backwoods acting on impulse. They never consider all of the machinations of running a state properly.
Lol. "I DON'T WANT GAYS TO MARRY, I DON'T LIKE THE GOVERNMENT BECAUSE I CAN'T CARRY A GUN TO MCDONALDS AND EXECUTE WHOEVER IS CONSIDERED A CRIMINAL, I WANT TO BE MY OWN STATE SO I CAN DO STUPID REDNECK STUFF
It's like watching a little kid say that he's gonna run away from home and live on his own because his parents banned Twinkies from the snack cabinet.Lol. "I DON'T WANT GAYS TO MARRY, I DON'T LIKE THE GOVERNMENT BECAUSE I CAN'T CARRY A GUN TO MCDONALDS AND EXECUTE WHOEVER IS CONSIDERED A CRIMINAL, I WANT TO BE MY OWN STATE SO I CAN DO STUPID REDNECK STUFF
Oh colorado, your meth problem is almost worse than how many kids smoke pot there
:p If it only was a stereotype...GOP Congressman on Shutdown: "We're Not French. We Don't Surrender."
Putting the obvious stupidity due to using old stereotypes aside, this is the kind of person that has influence over your government.
This too, I've always grown up with very manly men, especially in rural areas where people work pretty much all day and get drunk at night and call it just another day of workIf you ask me the whole "Every Frenchman is a coward" stereotype is BS. I've met people who grew up in France who look like they could easily kick ass if someone pissed them off.
I dunno, I've never, ever heard of anyone outside of the U.S using that stereotype, usually the French stereotype is all about cheese, wine, cigarettes, berets and heavy "hon hon" accent, I haven't heard anyone call me a coward for being French until I got here to Washington, not even in Los Angeles (surprisingly).
Lol, I've been to Spain, Italy, Britain, Kenya, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, Panama, Costa Rica, Chile and other countries, still haven't heard anyone call me a coward for being FrenchWell, then you haven't been in a lot of places :D
Anyhow, "Surrender like French" does not necessarily mean cowardliness. Right now it's some kind of a metaphor that is being used to describe someone who gives up too easy and too fast. Actions of a set of people (French government in this case) cannot define or describe every single individual in French society. It would be stup,id to assume that if France surrendered in WWII 70 years ago then all French people living now are cowards.
Well, again, nobody calls anyone coward for being French. I've heard, however, using this metaphor ("give up like French") in Germany, Italy, Japan, China, GB, Singapore, and former-USSR on different occasions. You can't really expect people in Kenya, Costa Rica, or Panama know much about WWII and France's surrender :DLol, I've been to Spain, Italy, Britain, Kenya, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, Panama, Costa Rica, Chile and other countries, still haven't heard anyone call me a coward for being French.
GB had military that was weaker than French one. Also, GB was at the edge of empire collapse. Nevertheless, GB had been fighting Nazy Germany alone for almost 2 years. France' army was pretty strong; morale is what prevented you from fighting. But it's a totally different story.but sometimes it's the best way out to avoid an almost insured defeat and avoid the loss of oh so many soldiers