on โ15-04-2016 01:57 PM
This place was used to enslave the world, so why not buy the t-shirt and coffee mug and take a selfie while you're there! ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Mka8lbEZXY
YT Channel- https://www.youtube.com/user/TRUTHstreammedia/videos
Truthstream Can Be Found Here:
Website: http://TruthstreamMedia.com
FB: http://Facebook.com/TruthstreamMedia
on โ25-04-2016 11:12 AM
New Zealand flew the F-4U Corsair, we never had any.
I didn't say you did.........I said "The Allies"..........or don't you consider Australia to have been allied to the rest of the Commonwealth?
And while it is true that Mossies were built in Australia, none were delivered before the middle of 1943, long after the Japanese threat to Australia ended.
on โ25-04-2016 11:14 AM
Sorry, but my grandfather and uncle were part of Australian forces........I remember them.
on โ25-04-2016 12:27 PM
My uncle was killed in 1944 over the pacific by the Japanese, so the threat was not over.
on โ25-04-2016 12:35 PM
After June 1942, the Japanese were on the defensive........they had lost 4 carriers at Midway, and were busy fortifying their holdings in the Central Pacific.........invading Australia was not on their itinerary.
on โ26-04-2016 10:20 AM
on โ26-04-2016 10:25 AM
on โ26-04-2016 10:56 AM
on โ26-04-2016 11:04 AM
on โ26-04-2016 12:56 PM
You've really got a thing against the US don't you, even to the extent of making up lies. I never said the US won the war, I simply said that without US aid, Britain wouldn't have survived, and Australia might well have been occupied by the Japanese. You are the one inferring that America sticks its nose in where it isn't wanted.........in the early days of WWII, the Commonwealth really, really appreciated that nose.
on โ26-04-2016 01:04 PM
Maybe you should have told the Japanese that they weren't interested in invading Australia after June 1942 because they kept bombing us until November 43.
Nuisance raids don't constitute an invasion.
A telling comment on the prospects of invasion in 1942......
In the hours following the air raids on 19 February, believing that an invasion was imminent, Darwin's population began to stream southwards, heading for Adelaide River and the train south. Approximately half Darwin's civilian population ultimately fled. The panic in the town was repeated at the RAAF base, where servicemen deserted their stations in great numbers. Three days after the attack 278 servicemen were still missing. The exodus south (which later became known as 'The Adelaide River stakes'), and the looting and disorder which subsequently occurred, led the government to hurriedly appoint a Commission of Inquiry led by Mr Justice Lowe which issued two reports, one on 27 March and the other on 9 April 1942. http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/fact-sheets/fs195.aspx