Why Do Canadians Go Ballistic During War

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @Simplehistory
    @Simplehistory  3 месяца назад +635

    This video was made possible thanks to everyone on the Simple History Patreon: www.patreon.com/simplehistory

    • @pyeitme508
      @pyeitme508 3 месяца назад +6

      BRUH

    • @bww9450
      @bww9450 3 месяца назад +5

      Uh Canada!

    • @BramdeKoning-x5n
      @BramdeKoning-x5n 3 месяца назад +5

      Simple history you forgot leo major.

    • @YoonGaramThePscyhopath-x1e
      @YoonGaramThePscyhopath-x1e 3 месяца назад +2

      Deadpool: No One Said My.
      Country Name In Front Of Me!.
      Logan/Wolverine: You Know What?.
      Don't Make Me Angry About My Home.
      Trevor: Hey Is A Word From Canada OK?.
      (A Word From Few Canadian.
      That Is Not Very Nice To Us).

    • @RandomEmergency392
      @RandomEmergency392 3 месяца назад +2

      why'd you change the thumbnail

  • @AssimilationKaelThas
    @AssimilationKaelThas 3 месяца назад +13747

    Canadian here.
    They taught us in school, that our units formed at the time of conscription kept people from the same community together.
    So, you fought alongside your family and friends. Seeing them die, would tend to induce strong feelings.

    • @scottdelahunt586
      @scottdelahunt586 3 месяца назад +1064

      There's a road in Winnipeg that was renamed to Valour Road after three men who lived so close to each other each won the Victoria Cross for actions in WWI. There's a Heritage Minute about it and the men.

    • @silverblueshadow
      @silverblueshadow 3 месяца назад +377

      i thought when they said we canadians fought valiantly, it's just what every textbook would say re: their own troops. i didnt know we're THAT much of a fighting beast. now it's up to us to live up to the legacy while maintaining ethics

    • @petermaxwell6748
      @petermaxwell6748 3 месяца назад +280

      I think you meant "enlistment", not "conscription".
      Canadians volunteered(enlisted) in both WWI and WWII. Enlistment campaigns allowed friends, family, and neighbours to serve together in the same unit. While it led to increased unit cohesion, it likely also contributed to revenge killings of POWs.
      Conscription only began to be implemented in January of 1918, and it was only after amendments to the Military Service Act in mid-1918, ending most exemptions that conscription started to be implemented in earnest. In WWI only 47,509 conscripted were even sent overseas, starting in May of 1918, with only 24,132 reaching France before the Armistice was signed on November 11, 1918.
      In WWII conscription played an even smaller role, with only 2,463 conscripts being put on the front lines, out of hundreds of thousands of soldiers, before Germany surrendered in May of 1945.

    • @ranvijaysingh5459
      @ranvijaysingh5459 3 месяца назад +50

      @@scottdelahunt586 it’s a bus stop now😢 it’s sad such history goes unnoticed every day buy almost every one

    • @zoloftsucks-archive7608
      @zoloftsucks-archive7608 3 месяца назад

      When was this? Are you guys still ready for war?

  • @theredscourge
    @theredscourge 2 месяца назад +4607

    Canadian here, we found out that the longer a war lasts, the more likely we won't survive, so we just decided to end them as fast as possible, and it turns out the other side surrenders faster when they're terrified.
    Also, the Brits forgot to tell us that there were rules.

    • @itsmrhunter
      @itsmrhunter 2 месяца назад +166

      Thank you for your service. You type extremely well for a 95+ year old

    • @HistoryObliterates-o4k
      @HistoryObliterates-o4k 2 месяца назад +80

      @@itsmrhunter Can't tell if this is sarcastic or real.

    • @daveengland8931
      @daveengland8931 2 месяца назад +78

      that "also" threw me off guard, thanks for that lmfao
      true yet funny, love it.

    • @theredscourge
      @theredscourge 2 месяца назад +107

      @@itsmrhunter I thought it was you young whipper-snappers with your new-fangled texting and your acronyms and your TikToks who tend to not type so well.

    • @Mr-__-Sy
      @Mr-__-Sy 2 месяца назад +20

      Lmao that last line checks everything about you

  • @jasonrand5995
    @jasonrand5995 3 месяца назад +7365

    Nova Scotian here. I remembere a vet talking, rather bluntly, about killing Germans crude and brutally (wont get into it cause NSFW).
    My dad asked why he did such horrid things, and I still remember the vets reply.
    "Cause I wanted to go home".

    • @androidsystem5850
      @androidsystem5850 3 месяца назад +173

      Damm

    • @blammela
      @blammela 3 месяца назад +69

      My GPa had similar stories

    • @siouxxi
      @siouxxi 3 месяца назад +68

      Fellow nova scotian, I never see vets, pretty rare

    • @Trigger200284
      @Trigger200284 3 месяца назад +222

      @@siouxxiuhhh because WWII ended almost 80 years ago…

    • @cameron3578
      @cameron3578 3 месяца назад +15

      I have a feeling I know who you're talking about

  • @abouttime5000
    @abouttime5000 Месяц назад +1045

    Many Canadian soldiers were frontiersmen and farmers, lumberjacks, trappers, construction workers, railroad workers, and they were simply tough as nails.

    • @DaveGIS123
      @DaveGIS123 Месяц назад +33

      In WW1, many Canadian soldiers were immigrants from Great Britain who still felt loyalty to the "mother country".

    • @lisarobb3064
      @lisarobb3064 Месяц назад +13

      Damn right! 🇨🇦

    • @AuntyKsTarot
      @AuntyKsTarot Месяц назад

      you mean racist white settlers who were already used to raping women wherever they visited

    • @Spark-vf4rm
      @Spark-vf4rm 26 дней назад +31

      @@DaveGIS123living in Canada back then would have been 10x more gruelling than Britain aswell. Winter is rough today let alone before all this advancement

    • @tr335hy
      @tr335hy 25 дней назад +18

      @@DaveGIS123 i feel like a lot of canadians were also pissed off they got dragged across the ocean to fight another country's war and wanted to get it over with asap

  • @huntery3568
    @huntery3568 2 месяца назад +2719

    As a Canadian immigrant, my observation is:
    Canadians are very polite, and place a high value on playing by the rules. When there are rules, Canadians will operate within them.
    If you break the rules, Canadians get very, very upset.
    If there are no rules at all, Canadians will quickly make it clear why there really should have been rules in place.

    • @HiRye
      @HiRye 2 месяца назад +210

      Interesting take. As a conservative thinking canadian, I tend to agree. Everyone is free to live, so long as they comply with what we deem to be basic, civilized behavior.

    • @RemiCouture
      @RemiCouture 2 месяца назад +117

      Yes, and it explains why I get upset with people that can't simply follow rules.

    • @cookiesup2music
      @cookiesup2music 2 месяца назад +14

      complacency pretty much.. that's why we still have a king. sad, sad stuff. weak people in my homeland.

    • @CaeridLock.
      @CaeridLock. Месяц назад +32

      Fool me once, shame on you...and that's all, that's it

    • @BFRZ89
      @BFRZ89 Месяц назад +45

      That's what I always tell my wife from the Philippines. This is Canada, not the Philippines. We have rules, and rules create order. Follow the rules, or else.

  • @Banditt42
    @Banditt42 3 месяца назад +5826

    An American Veteran said in a Documentary I was watching on the Italian campaign:
    If you can't take control of a city bring in the Canadians. They will clear it in a day. Tell them their is booze in there, and they will clear it in hours.

    • @288theabe
      @288theabe 3 месяца назад +429

      As a Canadian, WHERE???? 😂😂

    • @icky_mack
      @icky_mack 3 месяца назад +129

      ​@@288theabeto late hoser.

    • @Killer1986Chris
      @Killer1986Chris 3 месяца назад +262

      Try telling our forces that the city has the puck.

    • @cruisinguy6024
      @cruisinguy6024 3 месяца назад +24

      there is booze **

    • @danielloewen2857
      @danielloewen2857 3 месяца назад +57

      ​@@Killer1986Chris 30 minutes tops

  • @robertwillsea3338
    @robertwillsea3338 3 месяца назад +14833

    "It ain't a war crime the first time". Canadians when they go to war

  • @Mrkabrat
    @Mrkabrat Месяц назад +819

    If memory serves, the canadian reasoning was "This is a war, the sooner we end it, the sooner we go home. So why play nice?"

    • @DamienDarkside
      @DamienDarkside Месяц назад

      Canadian here, we gets jobs done. Tell us there is beer, it's done in hours.

    • @MsBluebot
      @MsBluebot Месяц назад +43

      Canadian here 🇨🇦 honestly it makes sense like I’m in this stupid war and the sooner the war is over the sooner I can go back home away from all this

    • @TheAureliac
      @TheAureliac Месяц назад +15

      My first thought as well. And especially during WWII, they were fighting an especially monstrous enemy that would not be sated by winning a little territory here or there. So achieving victory as efficiently as possible made sense.

    • @commonlootplayer6833
      @commonlootplayer6833 Месяц назад +13

      Lot of them were fighting with friends and family, who were being killed until the enemy line was broken where the enemy surrendered. Canadians weren't a big fan of that, and if you killed a lot of their soldiers there was really no reason for you to stay alive

    • @AntonsVoice
      @AntonsVoice 19 часов назад +1

      Not to mention, all the reasons the guy gave? It's just all of the above.

  • @canardcoincoin1582
    @canardcoincoin1582 3 месяца назад +3102

    My theory is that Canadian are polite and expect reciprocity. If you broke peace and make them stand up from his warm and cozy chair. he'll make sure you never do that again.

    • @TiL_Deimos
      @TiL_Deimos 3 месяца назад +295

      @@canardcoincoin1582 we canadians are built around respect and tolerance for others. breach that tolerance and you will reap what you sow. 🇨🇦

    • @electrochocc
      @electrochocc 3 месяца назад +78

      ​@@TiL_Deimossadly, there are a lot of Canadians that breach that tolerance on a daily basis

    • @goosefromcanada
      @goosefromcanada 3 месяца назад +15

      lol we’re having theories of war now

    • @nephicus339
      @nephicus339 3 месяца назад +7

      Can confirm.

    • @West-rn-showvn-ist-chick
      @West-rn-showvn-ist-chick 3 месяца назад +65

      @@electrochoccIt takes a lot for us Canadians to be so called “intolerant”… 3rd and 4th generation Canadians who’s ancestors literally built up this country like many members of my ancestors, cleared the land for farming, built houses themselves, had absolutely no handouts.. plus paid taxes for generations and now we see immigrants coming in and receiving government assistance, huge grants and subsidies, driving new vehicles, and taking advantage of our welfare system! Of course we are fed up! They get more money in grants than Canadian citizens to open businesses or take over businesses and hire their family members who can barely speak the language! Cause housing shortages and rents to skyrocket!! Ffs! There’s a point where being too tolerant is detrimental! My blond kids are not going to get affirmative action or diversity hired!! We have every right to be absolutely pissed! We’re paying for their luxury!

  • @blueballs9712
    @blueballs9712 3 месяца назад +1976

    My great-uncle served with many Canadians in WW2. He said they were just built different. Any time we speak about his experience at war, he always brings up the Canadians. He still raves about how little they seemed to be bothered by certain horrific conditions. They just shrugged it off and kept moving. He jokes around sometimes and says they were like a bunch of lions who weren't afraid of gunshots. They went for the kill. "Brutal and respectable men" is what he says.

    • @ELee-zv5ud
      @ELee-zv5ud 3 месяца назад +190

      That's because even as late as WW11 most of the population was rural, had survived the depression and worked in mines, farms, lumbering, fishing and so were used to very primitive living conditions, brutal winters and massive poverty. Only the strong lasted. Electricity had not arrived in much of the prairies or north until the 50s or later for the north. e.g., There were houses in Toronto no less that still had dirt floors until after WW11.

    • @abelis644
      @abelis644 2 месяца назад +60

      ​@@ELee-zv5ud
      And we survive our brutal winters by helping each other.
      6 months of cold toughen us up!!!

    • @abelis644
      @abelis644 2 месяца назад +18

      Don't forget our winters!!!

    • @bollocks42o
      @bollocks42o 2 месяца назад

      My Welsh grandpa decided to move to Canada after fighting alongside them in WW2 🥰 Happy to be born Canadian

    • @anari234
      @anari234 2 месяца назад

      ruclips.net/video/g1awwAgU_t8/видео.html The Canadians Arrive.

  • @havokvladimirovichstalinov
    @havokvladimirovichstalinov 3 месяца назад +9984

    Remember: Canada is the reason behind a large portion of the early Geneva Conventions

    • @Deere2154D
      @Deere2154D 3 месяца назад +928

      Suggestions

    • @taggie_
      @taggie_ 3 месяца назад +320

      Oh that might be true but I promise you that's all in the past. We aren't that 'uptight' and 'tough'. Lets Give credit to our neighbour down south.

    • @soulknife20
      @soulknife20 3 месяца назад +188

      ​@@taggie_We do love our war crime sticks

    • @kylemackinnon5696
      @kylemackinnon5696 3 месяца назад +290

      You mean the checklist?

    • @viper_1889
      @viper_1889 3 месяца назад +47

      Hush now that's a Secret

  • @grimrot
    @grimrot Месяц назад +137

    I live in the Canadian prairies and grew up around a few veterans. These men and women grew up with incredible hardship homesteading in the harsh environment that we live in. It is no shock to me that they were unfazed by the harsh conditions and ruthless in battle. Most of them were second or first generation immigrants and had come from extreme poverty. They wanted the future to be better for their children and grandchildren and fought fiercely for freedom. I couldn't be more thankful.

    • @JB-uu2ht
      @JB-uu2ht 10 дней назад

      Fought vehemently to make Canada the 51st state under Trump's America😂
      Yeah no when you guys elected a Fidel Castro communist you lost everything your ancestors fought for. Good luck on that one all your hard men and women are long gone.😂

    • @brittanybecker170
      @brittanybecker170 5 дней назад +3

      Yah, its hard to be put off by cold and muck when you've spent winters where its -40 C before you add the windchill and running water meant you'd take a pail and hurry to the pump.

  • @oli9881
    @oli9881 2 месяца назад +2231

    Canada during peacetime: "I'm sorry"
    Canada during wartime: "You're sorry"

    • @ThepursuitofHappiness-fb8iy
      @ThepursuitofHappiness-fb8iy 2 месяца назад

      American : there's more than 4 genders

    • @Sinjon_Dakin
      @Sinjon_Dakin Месяц назад +18

      More like “you’re sorry?”

    • @BigERacing
      @BigERacing Месяц назад +7

      @@Sinjon_Dakin Actually the question mark goes after the ".

    • @chrisallain2908
      @chrisallain2908 Месяц назад +8

      No no no, canadians during peacetime “i’m sorry”
      Canadians during war time “im sorry”

    • @theoddfellow8106
      @theoddfellow8106 Месяц назад +14

      "I'll make you sorry"

  • @KS-xk2so
    @KS-xk2so 3 месяца назад +881

    I remember reading an account of when a German officer was captured, the Allies thought they had a spy in their midst, because the Germans had successfully predicted several Allied attacks along the trenchlines in a row.... when asked how the Germans could've known exactly where the Allies planned to attacked the trenches he simply replied "We knew wherever you put the Canadians was going to be where the push was."

    • @J1407b_slugcat
      @J1407b_slugcat 3 месяца назад +55

      That’s actually wild-

    • @bradkubota6968
      @bradkubota6968 3 месяца назад +129

      Yes, The Germans primary information they wanted from accross the front line was, "where are the Canadians". This became known to the allies and tried to use it for advantage.

    • @pulleyfm8585
      @pulleyfm8585 2 месяца назад +51

      Canada's forces had basically no conscripted soldiers in ww1 or ww2. Historically just surviving in Canada meant you had to be tough as nails and ultimately you had to help your community no matter the danger or self sacrifice involved. To not help people around you was literally not an option because everyone at some point needed something to just survive. When your military's backbone is that strong of a core belief in what they're doing AND then combine it with men that were already used to living in harsh conditions. When you have units built of that fortitude you're going to use them where they can be the most effective.
      Even with the world become more global and most nations seeing their historic values erode there's a lot of Canadians who went to the Ukraine to fight. Think Canada's third for men that went behind the US and Georgia but there's not much in it really.

    • @reillysharp4890
      @reillysharp4890 2 месяца назад +2

      @@elliotsadowy1371I haven’t heard about dieppe in forever holy crap it’s been like 10 years

    • @vernonmcphee6746
      @vernonmcphee6746 2 месяца назад +15

      @@bradkubota6968 My father was a WW2 Canadian veteran and part of the routine when their units were shifted they were ordered to remove all Canadian identifying badges/insignia precisely for that reason. Towards the end of WW1they secretly moved the Canadian Corps in a series of night marches to another section of the line miles away for the same reason so the Germans would think the attack was coming in the original location.

  • @danb239
    @danb239 3 месяца назад +894

    As a Canadian who was in the Army it's sad to see other Canadians and Americans rip on our Army out of pure ignorance. Just because it is small dosen't mean it isn't respected. Some of the best snipers in the world are Canadian, Rob Furlong/ Dallas Alexander and his team had the records for longest confirmed kill.
    I know it was a long time ago but World War 1 Canada was BADASS, they were the first to get attacked by gas in the battle of Ypres, they had too piss on cloths so they could breath through them and repelled the attack. Battle of the Somme there was 1.2 million casualties in 5 months, Britain lost 57,000 troops on day 1, the most on a single day in Britain's history. Canada shows up and uses the creeping barrage for the first time, takes multiple positions and wins the battle. There was also Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele among others, pretty amazing for a Country fighting together for the first time as an independent military.

    • @dippshow
      @dippshow 3 месяца назад +28

      Thank you for your service buddy!

    • @carlchong7592
      @carlchong7592 3 месяца назад +22

      We're good shots because we're cheap on the ammo budget. C9 gunners quickly mutter "budget cut" as a guideline for how long a burst should be. Quickly say Budget Cut. That's how long you hold the trigger down for as a Canadian SAW gunner.

    • @Orthanderis
      @Orthanderis 3 месяца назад +40

      Interesting to note, JTF2 is widely considered the best search and destroy special forces in the world because that's all they specialize in. Navy seals, SAS, and other T1 groups are the best of the best but they also serve other functions; JTF2 purpose is singular; fly in via helicopter, kill everything, leave.

    • @shortyipper
      @shortyipper 3 месяца назад +44

      @@sommebuddy YOu just have a massive hateboner for Canada don't ya bud?
      also @danb239 on the sniper note. A buddy of mine, one of his grandma's was teaching the boys how to shoot Nazi's in WW2. So in essence she's the grandmother of modern sniping.

    • @danb239
      @danb239 3 месяца назад +101

      @@sommebuddy Please explain who won the battle of the Somme then if Canada didn't. It was a stalemate until the Canadians showed up. Canada captured strategic positions Courcelette, Theipval Ridge, Ancre Heights and Regina trench. They captured Desire trench on November 18th 1916 and that was the end of the battle.
      As for the creeping barrage, this is directly from a world war 1 historical website: Although considered as a battlefield tactic as early as 1915 (and initially deployed by Bulgarian artillerists during the Adrianople siege of March 1913) the so-called 'creeping barrage' was not actually deployed until August 1916 by the British (Sir Henry Horne) during the Battle of the Somme on the Western Front. I'm not saying they invented it but they were the first to successfully implement it and perfected it. The British and Henry Horne weren't successful in using it and had 419,000 casualties during that battle. I have never heard of the British using it during the Boer war, after some research it seems that this was the first use of the barrage and it was used as covering fire, not the same as creeping barrage.
      Calling my history abysmal while trying to diminish the accomplishments and valor of the Canadians who faught and died in world war 1 is truly pathetic and classless. I joined the Army when I was 18 and was in the same regiment as some of the men who faught in these battles, I really don't need a history lesson from a keyboard warrior.

  • @ConfusedWonkie
    @ConfusedWonkie Месяц назад +187

    I was born and raised in Canada, I think it’s more like we enjoy the happy warm days with family and friends but if you break the peace then you have made us get up from our warm cozy lives… may God have mercy on you. We do not forget

    • @craigwilliams1900
      @craigwilliams1900 Месяц назад +9

      Lest we forget

    • @ronneanderson6794
      @ronneanderson6794 Месяц назад +4

      This is the explanation

    • @joeblog2672
      @joeblog2672 22 дня назад +5

      Yep. Take us away from our beer and other delightful indoor cold weather activities and you had better have a god to pray for mercy to because you won't get it from us! The thought of being forced away from this is making me angry right now!

  • @echowhiskeylima5276
    @echowhiskeylima5276 3 месяца назад +1375

    I remember reading somewhere they were so vicious cause they viewed it as a job to get done and go home.

    • @zerospace101
      @zerospace101 3 месяца назад +80

      Funny enough it was

    • @DavidPhaneuf-Dorval
      @DavidPhaneuf-Dorval 3 месяца назад +150

      I talked to a veteran once and told me the same thing!! He said I had a kid and a wife and I need to get out of here fast for them... So like a job you get up get it done and get back to my loved ones.. the stories of that man 😬😱😨

    • @TheDanLevy
      @TheDanLevy 3 месяца назад +23

      Basically Wayne from Letterkenny. Finish up fighting this war & get back home for some choring 😅

    • @louisdesautels8462
      @louisdesautels8462 3 месяца назад

      If I was send in a contry far away to combat for the people who colonize me and my friend die in front of me, I wont let those German live one more then second. (Btw I'm Canadien)

    • @1SilverDollar
      @1SilverDollar 3 месяца назад +37

      ​I wonder if that job mentality didn't further fester the battle rage. Encouraged to be a gold soldier not because of glory or duty but because everyone deserves to get his work and come back able.
      Maybe just my brain overthinking but when others watch they buddies go down it shatters the glory mentality as the reality hits like a truck. 'My poor friend. We were supposed to march forth easily and become heros to our folks and the nation.' With a less righteous mindset it makes it less terrifying and more frustrating instead. 'He was supposed to do a tour and come home. Now the ijots gunned him down recklessly.' That kinda feeling could have made it more pertinent to take revenge and do finish the job because it's the _least you can do._

  • @wendellswendell2001
    @wendellswendell2001 2 месяца назад +460

    Saskatchewan native here. We say "Quit when it's finished, not when you're tired"

    • @craigwilliams1900
      @craigwilliams1900 Месяц назад +1

      Wendel Clark man I see, I upvote.

    • @MsBluebot
      @MsBluebot Месяц назад +4

      Reminds me of captain America honestly “I can do this all day”

    • @theencolony5595
      @theencolony5595 18 дней назад +8

      It's always cool seeing a fellow Saskatchewanian in the wild!

    • @MsBluebot
      @MsBluebot 18 дней назад +2

      @@theencolony5595 fr!

    • @RealBoiJare
      @RealBoiJare 17 дней назад +2

      I’m from Sasky as well!

  • @DeNihility
    @DeNihility 3 месяца назад +5797

    In school, we were taught that Canadians treated PoWs exceptionally well. What they didn't teach us was that these PoWs weren't captured by Canadians themselves, those PoWs were sent to Canada by their allies to hold on to, since they rarely ever took prisoners at all. 💀

    • @288theabe
      @288theabe 3 месяца назад +333

      Canada had room to hold them 😂😂

    • @gilliesiut2332
      @gilliesiut2332 3 месяца назад +268

      Our POW’s where actually any German or Japanese civilians that happened to be living in Canada who where put into holding camps

    • @mikeemmons1079
      @mikeemmons1079 3 месяца назад

      @@gilliesiut2332 Liberals, again. If you check, every horrible act performed by our government originated from a Liberal, or proto-liberal, in the case of Sir John A. government.

    • @stinkypete2892
      @stinkypete2892 3 месяца назад

      ​​@gilliesiut2332 not entirely true. The patterson armories in medicine hat ab housed captured German troops and I'm sure it's not the only one

    • @Atlas_high-gaming
      @Atlas_high-gaming 3 месяца назад +123

      ​@@gilliesiut2332You're thinking of the second world war

  • @katie_jeanes
    @katie_jeanes Месяц назад +123

    If anyone has any time today, please look up 104 year old recites in Flanders Fields . He was my Papa ( grandpa’s) neighbour here in Toronto for many years. He’s since passed away, but it’s amazing.

    • @Adam-cl2nq
      @Adam-cl2nq 15 дней назад +8

      NO WAY!! as a canadian living in quebec they show us that poem at school a lot during november

    • @-He4v3N_1s_Fu1L-
      @-He4v3N_1s_Fu1L- 9 дней назад +1

      i'll definitely go listen to it. in flanders fields is a banger

    • @vlad-tf9sf
      @vlad-tf9sf 9 дней назад +1

      I did :)

    • @katie_jeanes
      @katie_jeanes 9 дней назад

      @@vlad-tf9sf aww, thank you.. He was such a sweet man.

    • @katie_jeanes
      @katie_jeanes 9 дней назад

      @@-He4v3N_1s_Fu1L- thank you 😊 Him and his wife were so kind to me when I used to visit my papa

  • @paddington1670
    @paddington1670 3 месяца назад +2914

    Never forget, Canada declared war on Japan after Pearl Harbor attack before the Americans did. Canada was already into it, and was willing to go all in, every time.

    • @SnailOXD
      @SnailOXD 3 месяца назад +431

      Canada: "we see where this is going, alright you're on Japan"
      US: "Wait Canada, we haven't declared war yet"
      Canada: "Yet :)"

    • @BlargKing
      @BlargKing 3 месяца назад +188

      @@kenk7282 Yeah declared war on *Germany* in 1939, not Japan.

    • @lalitmehra4652
      @lalitmehra4652 3 месяца назад +28

      Well canadians were with others in the commonwealth army with the brits so that explains a lot

    • @TheRealAaronSmith
      @TheRealAaronSmith 3 месяца назад

      ​@@kenk7282try to follow along.

    • @TheRealAaronSmith
      @TheRealAaronSmith 3 месяца назад +28

      ​@@lalitmehra4652no, it doesn't. That may be where we were deployed, but it has nothing to do with being part of the Commonwealth.

  • @danielmcturk3961
    @danielmcturk3961 3 месяца назад +1629

    My Grandfather was a Major in WW2 and once told me that "War is terrible and should be avoided at all costs but when it is upon you do what it takes to get it done quickly and efficiently. Its not a game, there is no honor, just do the job. The longer a war goes on the worse the suffereing and collateral damage".

  • @bluehealer81
    @bluehealer81 3 месяца назад +954

    On my wife's side of the family, her great-great grandfather was a full-blooded Mohawk from Ontario. He fought at Vimy Ridge and was wounded charging a machine gun nest, he recovered and he went to re-enlist, but he was denied, not just for his injury, but also because it was discovered he was only 15 years old and had lied on his original application. Wow, right?

    • @TheEDFLegacy
      @TheEDFLegacy 3 месяца назад +18

      Dayum. 😳

    • @AaronCubitt96
      @AaronCubitt96 3 месяца назад +46

      As an Ojibwe bear clan, yeah. straight 🪖 warriors

    • @HughTube-ni6kb
      @HughTube-ni6kb 3 месяца назад +35

      IN WW2 every single man capable in Curve Lake volunteered. Every single one. To join, they had to give up their status. What community was your ancestor from? I taught in Tyendenaga and served with several in the RCN and Army. No one is tougher than the Kanien'kehà:ka

    • @henryhernandez46
      @henryhernandez46 3 месяца назад +2

      Good movie material. My respect

    • @vazken9178
      @vazken9178 3 месяца назад +3

      And in 2024 we now have tampons in the men’s bathroom on military bases.

  • @ElAnciano767
    @ElAnciano767 Месяц назад +60

    Canadian here. The bit about the Devil's Brigade was a bit one-sided. It was truly a joint USA/Canadian operation. The biggest flaw was that the Canadians were paid Canadian military wages, which was consideribly below that of their US partners. They were all superbly trained, but werre never used for their intended role which was to be an invasion of Norway. The rest is pretty accurate. They suffered a casualty rate of approximately 1:20 vs the Germans they engaged and had a capture rate of approximately 1:200 in terms of the prisoners they took.

  • @Reapous
    @Reapous 3 месяца назад +676

    A story I heard from the Devil's Brigade was during an operation where they had to scale a cliff/hill face, some members would slip and fall to their deaths. But instead of screaming, giving away their position during this covert mission, they just saluted and fell with silence into the depths below...
    Sounds like folklore, or tall-tales, but boy is it a good one.

    • @ralphvelthuis2359
      @ralphvelthuis2359 3 месяца назад +34

      Ive heard this was a true story.

    • @jeanlannes4396
      @jeanlannes4396 3 месяца назад +20

      There is a similar story involving soldiers of Alexander the Great, while he was subduing the Sogdians in what is now Afghanistan.

    • @AnyEnglishWord
      @AnyEnglishWord 3 месяца назад +27

      MY GRANDPA WAS IN THE DEVILS BRIGADEEEEE

    • @AnyEnglishWord
      @AnyEnglishWord 3 месяца назад +14

      @@ralphvelthuis2359my grandpa was in the devils brigade

    • @HashknightGaming
      @HashknightGaming 3 месяца назад

      If you love your boys, you don't make a sound.

  • @HiimAbyss
    @HiimAbyss 3 месяца назад +380

    I grew up close to the Valcartier base in Quebec, so active-duty uniforms and veterans were a common sight in my city, Val-Bélair. As a teenager, I worked at a convenience store and had the privilege of meeting several WWII veterans from the R22ER and the 2nd Canadian Division during the mid to late 2000s and early 2010s.
    One WWII veteran, who must have been well into his 80s or even 90s at the time-I never asked-would come in and sit with me at night until closing. He shared incredible tales of the Canadians on D-Day. You could almost see the horrors he witnessed in his eyes as he told the stories. I learned more from that single man than I ever could from any video or history class. I wish I had asked for his full name so I could honor him properly in this comment.
    Rest in power Bob and thank you for your service.

    • @QuitYoJibby-JabbinFool
      @QuitYoJibby-JabbinFool 2 месяца назад +13

      This is the single greatest comment here. RIP Bob 🙏

    • @abelis644
      @abelis644 2 месяца назад +4

      You should write down his stories, don't let them disappear!!!

    • @HiimAbyss
      @HiimAbyss 2 месяца назад +1

      @@abelis644 Its been over 10 years ago, my memory is working agaisnt me lol. I dont think i would be able to do it justice.

    • @HiimAbyss
      @HiimAbyss 2 месяца назад +2

      @@abelis644 Maybe i will

    • @mr.jordwell9084
      @mr.jordwell9084 2 месяца назад +2

      Hey Raise my glass to Bob! and thanks for taking nightmares so the rest of us can dream.

  • @titojuani20
    @titojuani20 3 месяца назад +1789

    Never ask a Woman about her age
    Never ask a man about his salary
    Never ask a survivng ww1 Canadian veteran what they did during WW1

    • @Jet-ij9zc
      @Jet-ij9zc 3 месяца назад +28

      From the story told in this comment section it looks like a lot of them liked to talk about it lol

    • @lorpal1
      @lorpal1 3 месяца назад +32

      WW1 vets would be over 100 years old…

    • @TooTallDean
      @TooTallDean 3 месяца назад +69

      The last Canadian WW1 died several years ago

    • @walterholder6077
      @walterholder6077 3 месяца назад +3

      Or 2

    • @skybladebloodheart4247
      @skybladebloodheart4247 3 месяца назад +11

      i think were out of those now actually.... last one died at the ripe old age of 109 in 2010

  • @adampatterson
    @adampatterson Месяц назад +97

    Many of the Canadian Devil's Brigade members were from Edmonton's Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry. My Dads brother was in that infantry but not the Devil's Brigade.

    • @joeblog2672
      @joeblog2672 22 дня назад +3

      A contingent of volunteers from the PPs fought in Vietnam. American colleagues said nobody fought harder than they did, and they didn't even have to be there! I wouldn't want to to tangle with any unit with that name. You just know it's not a good idea!

  • @manks5491
    @manks5491 3 месяца назад +1332

    There's no in between with a Canadian. Either one of the nicest person you could come in contact with, or an absolute feral animal. Idk why we're like this but that's how Canadians are

    • @danb239
      @danb239 3 месяца назад +146

      Some of the nicest people are actually animals as well, you just don't want to piss them off.

    • @manks5491
      @manks5491 3 месяца назад +27

      @@danb239 precisely

    • @zerospace101
      @zerospace101 3 месяца назад +70

      Beware the quiet nice ones. They are the first to let that rage take over

    • @rally_chronicles
      @rally_chronicles 3 месяца назад +4

      ​@@zerospace101😶😈

    • @Gabryal77
      @Gabryal77 3 месяца назад +45

      We don't like bullies

  • @OnlyIfiCould
    @OnlyIfiCould 3 месяца назад +2021

    I what I like to consider a side effect of holding all that anger in for such long periods

    • @princeofpokemon2934
      @princeofpokemon2934 3 месяца назад +40

      The same can be said about other people such as the Americans and Europeans

    • @bobthecomputerguy
      @bobthecomputerguy 3 месяца назад +115

      This can also be seen when they play hockey.

    • @BeingSleepySucks
      @BeingSleepySucks 3 месяца назад

      If we didn't have hockey we would be bloodthirsty warriors. But with it we still are, just slightly more sated.

    • @joshuaingram571
      @joshuaingram571 3 месяца назад +26

      That and a need to burn off pancakes and syrup.

    • @DarthJarJar_542
      @DarthJarJar_542 3 месяца назад

      @@princeofpokemon2934no Americans love to go to war

  • @rlgmedia5364
    @rlgmedia5364 3 месяца назад +606

    My grandfather was in the Canadian army from 1915 to 1919. He told me how in the last weeks of the war when the German lines were collapsing and the allies would need to run to keep up with the retreating German. According to him the Germans would leave men behind to ambush the Canadians even though everyone knew the war was almost over. So when the ambushers ran out of ammo or nerve they would try to surrender. In my grandfather's words "we didn't take prisoners"

    • @guyperson754
      @guyperson754 3 месяца назад +31

      I’m Canadian as well. Your grandfather was a madman but also a fucking hero. I cannot imagine the horrors he must have gone through in that time and still make it home.

    • @ACTUALLYRICH
      @ACTUALLYRICH 3 месяца назад +6

      My great uncle was an officer in the war and grandfather a pilot based in Scotland flying for the CAF/RAF during ww2

    • @jknowlesphoto2498
      @jknowlesphoto2498 3 месяца назад +7

      That's when my grandfather was wounded by a sniper - chasing the Germans through Europe. He said they weren't even allowed to stop and help wounded civilians.

    • @FundyisleLegacy
      @FundyisleLegacy 3 месяца назад +3

      I remember hearing a story about prisoners, they had two train loads of German prisoners, but only one train and a river near by to dump half the bodies in

  • @Sweety_fruit
    @Sweety_fruit Месяц назад +16

    As a Canadian, this was a wonderful video ! Very well done and love the ‘’drawing’’ type of video !

  • @paddington1670
    @paddington1670 3 месяца назад +1659

    Dont forget, Canadians went further inland than any other army during the first D DAY landing, on the SECOND most difficult beach behind Omaha. The only country's army to complete their day one objectives.

    • @D-6106
      @D-6106 3 месяца назад

      We don’t like dying so if we make it so nobody wants to fight us we can stop mass death by simply joining the group chat as it were’

    • @Wataru-Endo-Dragon
      @Wataru-Endo-Dragon 3 месяца назад +46

      We were also hitting the least fortified beach but ya it was pretty kewl

    • @BuhBaBiBeBo
      @BuhBaBiBeBo 3 месяца назад +40

      ​@@Wataru-Endo-Dragon Canadian politeness

    • @IntrebuloN
      @IntrebuloN 3 месяца назад +88

      @@Wataru-Endo-Dragon The video isn't really accurate anyways. Interviews with vets reveal we lost all our armour in the first hours and units got split up. Proceeded forward anyways forming ragtag squads using creative tactics and makeshift weapons to defeat enemy armour and emplacements. One vet in particular described run ins on foot with S.S units and over running them and catching officer posts off guard because of how quickly they proceeded forward.

    • @joemac4533
      @joemac4533 3 месяца назад +2

      A short 6 year war lol

  • @jon9021
    @jon9021 3 месяца назад +546

    I remember watching a documentary years ago. They had interviewed a WWI German veteran (this was in the 1970’s)..& they were scared of Canadian troops coming into the line..BUT if they heard the skirl of the pipes indicating a Canadian highland unit, they became TERRIFIED as they knew they would take no prisoners.

    • @madisonrogers9575
      @madisonrogers9575 3 месяца назад +46

      im proud to have served as 5th generation highlander

    • @whoopass2rb
      @whoopass2rb 3 месяца назад +13

      @@madisonrogers9575 Thank you for your service! What an honour.

    • @andrewdonatelli6953
      @andrewdonatelli6953 3 месяца назад +23

      My great uncle was a Seaforth Highlander. He was killed in the final month of WW I. Friends from Belgium were the first to visit his grave in 2018, 100 years after he died.

    • @andrewb9940
      @andrewb9940 3 месяца назад +19

      bagpipes are the only instrument considered a weapon of war. ( scottish canuck )

    • @HughTube-ni6kb
      @HughTube-ni6kb 3 месяца назад +3

      A hundred years ago, a taste of the Claymore would cost you an arm and a leg.

  • @jknowlesphoto2498
    @jknowlesphoto2498 3 месяца назад +844

    My Grandfather (Canadian) was shot by a sniper in WW2 as he drove a motorcycle in a convoy. He hit the tailgate of the truck in front of him and woke up days later in a military hospital. He told me once that when they found the sniper (in a ditch) he had dropped his rifle and was laughing maniacally. When I asked what they did with him, he looked genuinely surprised at the question and said flatly - "they shot him."

    • @pancakebuffalo.gaming
      @pancakebuffalo.gaming 3 месяца назад +57

      I mean they're not lying, at the very end they DID shoot him, it's everything that happened between laughing and shooting that he left out 😂

    • @frontdoor3417
      @frontdoor3417 3 месяца назад +6

      Id give you a funny look too ngl lol

    • @DaveGIS123
      @DaveGIS123 3 месяца назад +42

      Snipers are almost always killed, no matter what side they were on. Snipers are universally hated. If caught, they were usually treated "In the 'traditional' way..."

    • @metaford3746
      @metaford3746 3 месяца назад +8

      ​​@@DaveGIS123yeah there even cases where if they spot the sniper location even if it only like one dude
      they would call in a airstrike instead of attemping to push torward him or counter snipe

    • @KellyTour-d9s
      @KellyTour-d9s 3 месяца назад +6

      I have a brilliant picture of my gramps riding a Harley(I think) through Germany.,Machine gun in one hand and a cig in the other.Covered in unmentionable muck.

  • @Wunderkind04
    @Wunderkind04 Месяц назад +13

    As a Canadian, I can tell you that we store all of our pent up anger in our geese.
    When war time comes, we channel that rage.

  • @johnrandolph1989
    @johnrandolph1989 3 месяца назад +7457

    And remember, Deadpool and Wolverine are canonically confirmed Canadians.

    • @K3ntucky123
      @K3ntucky123 3 месяца назад +326

      Trevor was canadian doe

    • @Canadianvoice
      @Canadianvoice 3 месяца назад +148

      Long before it was a trendy movie too.

    • @Canadianvoice
      @Canadianvoice 3 месяца назад

      Same with ryan renoylds the whole reason you have that greatneas.​@@K3ntucky123

    • @Hrrrrrrrrrreng
      @Hrrrrrrrrrreng 3 месяца назад +305

      Fun fact: Super man was also originally written by a Canadian, and is based on Ontario. The Fraser valley is also referred to as “little Hollywood”

    • @GizmoGary
      @GizmoGary 3 месяца назад +134

      wolverine was a WW1 and WW2 veteran, he probably sliced up thousands of jerries

  • @Zhornax
    @Zhornax 3 месяца назад +2802

    Canadians be like: "we're so sorry for being absolute killing machines".

  • @Nick-mp1zh
    @Nick-mp1zh 3 месяца назад +626

    There are three things all wise men fear. The sea at storm, a moonless night...
    And the anger of a gentle man

    • @Rafel_ll
      @Rafel_ll 3 месяца назад +11

      Kingkiller Chronicles? A man with taste I see...

    • @ZatralTMF
      @ZatralTMF 3 месяца назад +29

      Alternatively: "demons run when a good man goes to war"

    • @catalhuyuk7
      @catalhuyuk7 2 месяца назад +6

      Should add, a woman’s scorn.

    • @Nick-mp1zh
      @Nick-mp1zh 2 месяца назад +10

      @@catalhuyuk7 fair enough, my wife scares me more than most men I know.

    • @catalhuyuk7
      @catalhuyuk7 2 месяца назад +6

      @@Nick-mp1zh
      I understand, I’m a Canadian woman. ♥️🇨🇦

  • @meeveling
    @meeveling 16 дней назад +5

    as a canadian we were taught that canadians were few but furious in war. we were also taught that we were considered canon fodder, sent into impossible situations as ‘tests’ to battles. i think this is why the forces were so viscous. it was win or die in a lot of situations. dieppe is a battle often forgotten, which was the first test run for d-day. a lot of canadian soldiers died on that beach.

  • @Super_Canadian
    @Super_Canadian 3 месяца назад +683

    If it’s not Hockey season we gotta let all that pent up aggression out some how

    • @AgentDan
      @AgentDan 3 месяца назад +3

      Oh no

    • @HammerJammer81
      @HammerJammer81 3 месяца назад +26

      Well WWII began just before Hockey Season, can you blame us?

    • @Super_Canadian
      @Super_Canadian 3 месяца назад +24

      @@HammerJammer81 these yanks don’t understand hockey, it’s like if it’s not football or McDonalds season lmao

    • @silentstarproductions2469
      @silentstarproductions2469 3 месяца назад +2

      THIS IS SO TRUE!

    • @Matty_4200
      @Matty_4200 3 месяца назад +3

      Fu*ckin right 👍

  • @Goc4ever
    @Goc4ever 3 месяца назад +251

    Well done Simple History, well done. The Canadians were often overlooked in history explanations and i'm so glad channels like you, Yarnhub, The Front and many others acknowledged their exploits in war time. Aside from their ruthlessness and efficiency as shock troops the Canadians made themselves known through acts of heroism like Léo Major who singlehandendly liberated the city of Zwolle and for being the most proactive in providing help for the Dutch and for giving sanctuary to the royal family of the Netherlands which led to the two countries to become close allies and friends.

    • @jakecannanite4558
      @jakecannanite4558 3 месяца назад +18

      He's honestly one of the reasons the Dutch are so friendly to Canadians (and why Americans put Canadian flags on their backpacks)

    • @sommebuddy
      @sommebuddy 3 месяца назад

      And Dieppe, where they lost the bulk of their force in a poorly led raid, or the advance to Caan, where their screwups allowed thousands of Germans to escape the Falaise pocket....be truthful about history.

    • @Da_Rivulet
      @Da_Rivulet 3 месяца назад +4

      Yarnhub mentioned
      Day significantly improved

    • @ViratKumarSingh-zv6ey
      @ViratKumarSingh-zv6ey 3 месяца назад +3

      Yarnhub rocks

    • @OTDMilitaryHistory
      @OTDMilitaryHistory 2 месяца назад +2

      There are Canadians out there telling our stories. Just saying.

  • @kayleavansolkema8752
    @kayleavansolkema8752 3 месяца назад +323

    My grandfather fought in WWII. He lied about his age and joined the airforce at 16. At 18 he was in a plane that somehow had something on fire on the wing. They were flying somewhere towards England. He CLIMBED OUT OF THE PLANE and ONTO THE WING mid flight and kicked the burning thing off and stopped the fire, then returned to his position. He told other stories too, but this one happened to be a big deal and the Montreal Gazette even published an article about it!
    Edit - I called my dad and he elaborated: a light exploded inside the plane and landed on the gas tank. Grandad kicked it off the gas tank but it was still in the fuselage. He somehow got it out, but the side of the fuselage was on fire. At this point he was using a fire extinguisher on the flames on the fuselage, hanging out of the body of the aircraft. The article was called 'Ahuntsic Flier Proves Heroic' - 1940 publication.

    • @ma77bc
      @ma77bc 3 месяца назад +19

      I had a neighbor who also lied about his age to join the Air Force. He was a gunner, and luckily never needed to fire his guns. The one time he was going to fire his gun, it jammed... Which turned out to be a good thing, since the plane he was going to fire at was an ally, not the enemy. We only knew him for a couple years, but my dad used to go over almost every night to hang out with him, share a beer and listen to his stories. When my dad would walk into his house, he'd already have a beer waiting for him. He died at age of 92.

    • @rainyee-pc5lf
      @rainyee-pc5lf 3 месяца назад +4

      do you know what the article is called?

    • @graceyjewels7148
      @graceyjewels7148 3 месяца назад +2

      Talk about badass and brave! I guess you do what you need to do to live but that’s impressive!

    • @OutdoorsWithChad
      @OutdoorsWithChad 3 месяца назад +7

      No disrespect, but that did not happen. You can't climb onto a smooth wing with a 200mph wind pushing you off.

    • @wilholmrykes6589
      @wilholmrykes6589 3 месяца назад +3

      @@OutdoorsWithChadSeconded. Unless you were harnessed to the plane in some way, you’d be blown right off the wing and, die. This is clearly just a tall tale.

  • @visualartsbyjr2464
    @visualartsbyjr2464 Месяц назад +6

    For most of my social circles “you never start a fight, do everything you can to finish it” (or any variation there in) was a motto I heard from all generations. Also; no such thing as fighting dirty, it’s just fighting.

  • @markorr999
    @markorr999 3 месяца назад +147

    The First Special Service Force (Devils Brigade) was my uncle's unit. He won a Distinguished Service Cross.
    Orr, Ross, W.
    Staff Sergeant, Canadian Army
    Fifth Company, Second Regiment, Special Service Force
    Sate of Action: August 26, 1944
    Citation:
    The distinguished service cross is presented to Ross W. Orr, Staff Sergeant, Royal Canadian Army, for extraordinary heroism in action near Villeneuve-Loubet France on August 26th, 1944. When the only route for urgently needed supplies was cut off by three enemy machine guns emplaced along the road, Staff Sergeant Orr, without orders, elected to remove this obstacle. After selecting three men to provide covering fire, he approached alone to within seventy-five yards of the first gun. Armed with a submachine gun, he jumped into the middle of the road and demanded surrender. The enemy gunner immediately opened fire on him, but Staff sergeant Orr stood his ground and seriously wounded both of the crew with effective fire. Under continued assault by this four-man team, the other two machine gun crews finally surrendered, and the road was opened for desperately needed supplies. Soon afterward the fifth company occupied a castle on a hilltop to protect this supply route and Sergeant Orr immediately organized the area against counterattack. The enemy, two hundred strong, strove continuously and fiercely to dislodge his group from this stronghold. In the face of death-defying circumstances, Sergeant Orr with his submachine gun put an enemy machine gun which was covering an approaching demolition party out of action. The demolition party was dispersed with heavy losses by rifle fire and hand grenades effectively used under Sergeant Orr’s direction. In another similar counterattack, Sergeant Orr fired his submachine gun from a blazing barn into an attacking enemy formation. This attack was broken up and resulted in heavy losses to the enemy. Approximately one hundred fifty enemy losses were sustained during the day. A great many of these casualties were inflicted by Sergeant Orr and his platoon. His superb leadership and inspiring personal example throughout the battle were a major contributory factor in the destruction of the enemy defense line that seriously threatened to delay the advance of the entire regiment.

    • @BrookieMacc
      @BrookieMacc 2 месяца назад +7

      That’s incredibly badass, glad I spent the time reading all that lol

    • @infinitrixgaming4705
      @infinitrixgaming4705 2 месяца назад +6

      It's thanks to heroes like that that we can live the life we are living right now, I hope he have and had a great life after the war! It's sad that we do not talk more about the war heroes of our own country and how they affected the way we can live now.

  • @Noob-Toast
    @Noob-Toast 3 месяца назад +882

    People always forget that the second most deadly beach was Juno

    • @tacolord4209
      @tacolord4209 3 месяца назад +41

      Probably the deadliest for Germany, but german casualties were never counted for juno

    • @jballan
      @jballan 3 месяца назад +65

      My great grandfather was shot in the face and just kept fighting, he thought it was only mud spray. Told us the story at thanksgiving in the early 2000s.

    • @Orthanderis
      @Orthanderis 3 месяца назад +83

      It's also important to note that, not only was it the second deadliest beach, it was the only beach that had to deal with an elite SS tank regiment, and it's also the only beach that accomplished it's 1st day objectives.

    • @Brewskie86
      @Brewskie86 3 месяца назад +14

      As everyone knows, the most deadly battle was the battle of Schrute farms.

    • @ryantron9
      @ryantron9 3 месяца назад +26

      If I recall, didn’t the Canadians actually drive into Juno beach too far and had to go back?

  • @prodigaldog2747
    @prodigaldog2747 3 месяца назад +323

    You forgot about Leo Major, who liberated the town of Zwolle single handedly, he captured 93 germans on his own. He was mad cause his friend died. One of 3 people who got the Distinguished service medal in 2 seperate wars

    • @Xerxes7695
      @Xerxes7695 3 месяца назад +9

      Bro sounds like a Rimworld character.

    • @shotgunguy1993
      @shotgunguy1993 3 месяца назад

      They did a whole video on that guy before ruclips.net/video/eFf1UfVa8Lc/видео.html

    • @skurt258
      @skurt258 3 месяца назад +53

      ​@Xerxes7695 it gets better... he lost his eye in the war and wore an eyepatch because "It makes me look cooler"... he broke his back, both ankles, and a few ribs and was put in a military hospital and told he was going to be discharged... where he proceeded to sneak out of the hospital and lived with a dutch family for a week... he then rejoined his battalion and volunteered to scout the city if Zwolle with his friend... which is when his friend was killed and he proceeded to take the entire city single handedly by using grenades to fake mortarfire and multiple stolen guns to fake reinforcements, all to inflict terror on the german soldiers... by the morning there were no german soldiers left in town... they all either died or fled in fear thinking the entire canadian army was storming the town...

    • @Mr.Anders0n_
      @Mr.Anders0n_ 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@skurt258he was going to head to Berlin to capture it as well but he had run out of cigarettes... Aren't you confusing him with Rambo?

    • @Stingzay_y
      @Stingzay_y 3 месяца назад

      ​@@Mr.Anders0n_ Rambo is nothing compared to him

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Месяц назад +12

    Fantastic tribute to my home, Happy Remembrance Day 🇨🇦❤🕊.

  • @mr.unoriginal5674
    @mr.unoriginal5674 3 месяца назад +1091

    Side note though my great great grandfather said “we were there to do a job and it was to kill not make friends..”
    Edit jeez 914 likes that’s more than I thought I’d get thanks!

    • @Cuz.im.batman
      @Cuz.im.batman 3 месяца назад +11

      And now the Germans are our allies aka "friends" 🌈

    • @onelowvdub
      @onelowvdub 3 месяца назад

      but if needed we can flip the narrative ​@@Cuz.im.batman

    • @peter9477
      @peter9477 3 месяца назад +8

      ​@@Cuz.im.batman but without the quotation marks.

    • @Cuz.im.batman
      @Cuz.im.batman 3 месяца назад

      @@peter9477 nah we'll always have an eye on them

    • @ummoof7069
      @ummoof7069 3 месяца назад

      @@Cuz.im.batman Don't need to, they are owned just like the rest of us, that was the whole point of ww2 to bring Germany back under the heel of the internationalist, the only people keeping an eye on them are politicians and the same goes for us which is why we see outsiders flooding our lands and a massive drop in intelligence and masculinity so we could never revolt against those who seek to replace us lol

  • @VilleKristian-qj8fx
    @VilleKristian-qj8fx 3 месяца назад +1336

    "Remember no prisoners they will eat your rations"is wild 💀

    • @TheDeadEyeSamurai
      @TheDeadEyeSamurai 3 месяца назад +160

      "You'll have to share your poutine and Maple syrup."
      "I'll require all their blood in return."

    • @kithkindeck
      @kithkindeck 3 месяца назад +95

      @@TheDeadEyeSamurai Look man, if we only have enough syrup for one pancake, I'm eating that pancake or I'm eating you. That syrup is making its way into my body one way or another.

    • @shorgoth
      @shorgoth 3 месяца назад +26

      You have to consider that our supply lines were across the atlantic and we got no help from France and Britain to take care of that and we were a much less industrialized country than the USA.

    • @The_Foxy2039
      @The_Foxy2039 3 месяца назад +19

      @@kithkindeckas a Canadian, I approve this message

    • @djangel3108
      @djangel3108 3 месяца назад +18

      ​@@sommebuddy As a Canadian who has ate and enjoyed Poutine several times, what?

  • @Unwise-
    @Unwise- 3 месяца назад +167

    I'm a Canadian with many great uncles and a couple of grandfathers that fought in "The War" with stories of even more from the first. What I heard is that Canadian troops may have been less merciful because they were so far from home. They were among the first from overseas to fight in Europe, soon after UK in both wars, and it was a faraway exotic place for early 20th Century young men. There was no going "home" on leave, not until after the war was over, some were there for years on end unlike many of their British allies. Plus they were often used as cannon fodder on the front lines. They basically wanted to end the war ASAP and many weren't ready to take breaks or indulge in the niceties of civility in war that was en-vogue in Europe. Some of them may not have had the same gentlemanly aspirations although certainly a minority went as far as commit war crimes.

    • @Ggb427neo
      @Ggb427neo 3 месяца назад +4

      And people from farm and I talk from experience are juggernaut in terms of strength this makes them killing machine with all in one.

    • @jaquigreenlees
      @jaquigreenlees 3 месяца назад +6

      @@Ggb427neo well du-uh, the work day starts before sunrise and ends at sunset, there is no weekend or holiday time. Life on a farm pre wwII was manual labour until the job was done. Take that work ethic in a work hardened body and give them the job of killing enemy troops, you have the perfect base for a terrifying trooper being given the weapons and job to kill enemies.
      Growing up on a pig farm, if we weren't in school we were either feeding / watering the pigs or shovelling the pig crap from dawn to dusk.

    • @Zyo117
      @Zyo117 28 дней назад

      Well, they weren't considered war crimes until we did them, anyway

  • @Paperhats69
    @Paperhats69 День назад +2

    I can tell you it’s because the phycos we have up north. Something with the weather and being so remote up north turns people very dark.

  • @silentstarproductions2469
    @silentstarproductions2469 3 месяца назад +208

    As a Canadian, this might be my new favourite Simple History video!

  • @juice6199
    @juice6199 3 месяца назад +212

    Theres an anger that comes with being kind and patient most of the time.

    • @TLHockeyCards
      @TLHockeyCards 3 месяца назад +8

      Facts

    • @AegixDrakan
      @AegixDrakan 3 месяца назад +15

      "Demons run when a good man goes to war" is the saying. Because when a patient and polite person snaps, they can go several bridges too far.

    • @mr.jordwell9084
      @mr.jordwell9084 2 месяца назад +2

      Or when Hockey is over... and you ran out of maple syrup

    • @joshjonson2368
      @joshjonson2368 2 месяца назад

      So kind they're giving their own population assisted suicide while moving in millions of indians 😂

    • @FreddyFuFu
      @FreddyFuFu 3 дня назад +1

      Like a pressure cooker

  • @BenKuyt64
    @BenKuyt64 3 месяца назад +131

    So back in high school, I had the chance to speak to a number of WW2 veterans (This was 2011, there was thankfully a large population of them in Canada still). When asked what it was like, the consensus feeling was they were doing a job as well as they could to just make it back home. One of them said "The other guys were doing the same, but we did our job better."

  • @MaskedCanadian13
    @MaskedCanadian13 15 дней назад +3

    Canadian here. There are many instances where Canadians can either become the best people you'll ever fight alongside with, or be the WORST NIGHTMARE EVER whenever fighting against them in terms of an actual war. We've only had like 2, maybe 3 border skirmishes with our neighbours, and they always ended peacefully. First with what could've been an actual war over a pig (man they were hateful towards eachother in the past), and another known as the Whiskey War, between the Danes and us Canucks. If you ever meet a Canadian who is always nice to you, just be prepared for when a war breaks out, because you might have to be on their side to prevent them from going berserk towards you. Don't worry, I didn't forget about the Dutch, because we're always gonna be around for our Dutch friends.

  • @Dreamer66617
    @Dreamer66617 3 месяца назад +258

    my grandfather drove a tank into D-day. he was an Olympic athlete and a black belt. When he had a heart attack he tried to fight the first responders, they had to tie him to the stretcher with sweaters. Absolute maniac. Loved that man so much. Yet he taught me all about baking and cooking...

  • @etiennesharp
    @etiennesharp 3 месяца назад +198

    Mike Myers: "Don't mistake civility for weakness. You do so at your peril"

    • @keith6706
      @keith6706 27 дней назад +1

      That's a companion to "Peaceful and harmless are not synonyms".

  • @ArchonKain
    @ArchonKain 2 месяца назад +177

    Great granddad was a pilot, had horrible PTSD but he flew 93 missions and came out of every single one of them with multiple takedowns and confirmed, took out German train supply lines.
    He died of old age on Canadian soil, what he did was nothing short of incredible, but I wouldn't wish any human walk in his shoes, he told my grandma that he had to just forget about having friend "The next time you'll see them, they'll probably be a smoke trail headed towards the ground" cannot imagine the mental torment like that.

    • @logarithmic7
      @logarithmic7 2 месяца назад +7

      Grandpa saw the irony of terminating 36 supply trains only to end up surviving a deadly train crash in Canada 44 years later. As he jumped from the twisted flaming railcar, the only thing that broke his fall was a massive pile of wheat ironically in which he'd spend farming in SK post the ww2.

    • @alexlupei1228
      @alexlupei1228 2 месяца назад +5

      Maybe it wasn't irony - maybe it was your grandpa's Maker talking to him. As in: yes he took many lives... but then he spent the rest of his life growing living things (plants of wheat), which keep people alive (people gotta eat).
      Maybe he was given a second chance and also was shown why, at the same time

  • @kjw79
    @kjw79 16 дней назад +3

    I came back to comment on this video: took my sweet Mom to a demonstration making flint knives. She is so tender and loving with babies and animals and friends with everyone. Visits seniors and plays piano. So I was speechless when she tossed the knife in her hand, then made the most brutal thrust and upper cut, in the air! Where did she learn this?! lol thought of this video. Her family has been in Canada since at least 1825.

  • @ovskii96
    @ovskii96 3 месяца назад +245

    Canuck here. Early on in WWI, Canadians had to dig their trenches mostly with their hands because the shovels they were sent *had a giant hole in the middle* (the shovel heads were supposed to be used as "rifle shields", but were useless as shovels and shields). So yeah, the Canadians were *very pissy* after this.

    • @EeveetoUmbreon25
      @EeveetoUmbreon25 2 месяца назад +41

      "I spent 6 hours digging this trench with my bare hands, im not letting someone take it from me"

    • @alphaallnightgaming7885
      @alphaallnightgaming7885 2 месяца назад +14

      That’s a cruel joke lol, “ here! We’ve got these brand new shovels to dig trenches, we put a hole in them so they’d be more useful!” Lmaooo

    • @ovskii96
      @ovskii96 2 месяца назад +17

      ​​​@@alphaallnightgaming7885It actually was. A lot of historians think the Shield-Shovel was a money-making scheme at the expense of the soldiers, because the shovels had no practical use besides breaking up dirt for hand-scooping.

    • @TuberTugger
      @TuberTugger 2 месяца назад +4

      @@EeveetoUmbreon25 You want me to dig a trench with my bare hands? I'll take their trench instead, with my bare hands.

    • @FPVivid
      @FPVivid 2 месяца назад +2

      the MacAdam shovel! ruclips.net/video/qvuZf4v4MLU/видео.html

  • @DPCP-h9u
    @DPCP-h9u 3 месяца назад +415

    Canadians in peace:
    "Lovely morning, eh?"
    Canadians during war:
    "PEACE WAS OPTIONAL! AND SO WAS MY MERCY!"

    • @cyber1ifeconnor
      @cyber1ifeconnor 3 месяца назад +8

      Bro 😂 thats so good!

    • @bluenine85
      @bluenine85 3 месяца назад +20

      BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD, SKULLS FOR THE SKULL THRONE, PANCAKES FOR THE PANCAKE STACK

    • @Elemblue2
      @Elemblue2 3 месяца назад +7

      You can only afford to be nice if you can pay the toll. The toll is the opposite.

    • @wcjerky
      @wcjerky 3 месяца назад +6

      "Lovely mourning in the morning, eh?"

    • @mr.jordwell9084
      @mr.jordwell9084 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@bluenine85 Guardsman: CADIA STANDS!
      Canadian Soldiers: CANADIA LAUGHS!!! ... wait... Major are supposed to take prisonners.
      Major: You keep it, you feed it!
      Canadian Soldiers: No one.. NO ONE TOUCHES MY MAPLE SYRUP!!!

  • @adamleblanc5294
    @adamleblanc5294 3 месяца назад +90

    The main reason Canadians got a reputation for not taking prisoners, particularly at Vimy Ridge, was because they were often the first wave to reach the enemy lines. It was often impossible for them to actually take prisoners, because when one group of Germans were trying to surrender, there would be another a couple hundred meters away still shooting at them. In those types of situations, it's impossible to actually safely take a POW.

    • @gung2549
      @gung2549 3 месяца назад +1

      As a Canadian if I was forced to fight for some euros I wouldn't take prisoners either. Would never give my life for Europeans though

    • @yermom014
      @yermom014 2 месяца назад +3

      @@gung2549 There wasn't any forcing, Canadians were still quite loyal to the UK and saw it as an obligation.

    • @ronbelanger4113
      @ronbelanger4113 13 дней назад

      @@gung2549 Hoser reply.

  • @atealab6152
    @atealab6152 Месяц назад +4

    Thank you Solid Snake for the history lesson.

  • @Karen-p9t5g
    @Karen-p9t5g 3 месяца назад +84

    Independent thinkers. The crazy thing so many of our soldiers were in their mid teens, not hardened men.
    A lady friend of my mother was a 15 year old prairie girl, she volunteered to help. Declined she took a train to Montreal, was declined again. Worked on a ship to England, offered again to work, this time she lied about her age. She was accepted to drive ambulance in France on the front. Survived the war, was a total force to be reckoned with.

    • @VojvodaSloboda
      @VojvodaSloboda 2 месяца назад +1

      I got a few names for you which you might find interesting to learn about.
      -Milunka Savic. Most decorated female soldier in history, achieved in ww1.
      -Dragoljub Jelicic. Child soldier who was awarded the rank of Lance Corporal at 14 years old by the King himself.
      -Momcilo Gavric. Corporal at 8 years old, Awarded by Legendary Field Marshall Misic.

    • @brendensangster3571
      @brendensangster3571 2 месяца назад +1

      My dad was from a farm town in rural Ontario lied about his age at 15 and joined the infantry. I grew up in Bew Brunswick hard military and joined aswell. Definitely repressed anger in. My whole family haha.

  • @NoobZxReviewZ
    @NoobZxReviewZ 3 месяца назад +56

    My grandad William "Sam" Magee was a veteran of the Devils Brigade. He fought on Monte La Difensa and used to tell me stories about it (with some details removed like slitting throats and killing people). Major thank you to this channel for giving his unit its well deserved props.

  • @bredsheeran2897
    @bredsheeran2897 3 месяца назад +546

    “Geneva Conventions” ❌
    “Canadian and Polish Convention for the Safety of Others During War” ✅

    • @ethanor
      @ethanor 2 месяца назад +10

      Geneva Checklist

    • @northamericanintercontinen3207
      @northamericanintercontinen3207 2 месяца назад +4

      @@ethanorchecklist ? THEN HOW THE HECK DO WE ADD THE NEW STUFF ? (Mexican ready to dish it out)
      Like waterboarding with live hand grenades

    • @PlanetJohnny
      @PlanetJohnny 2 месяца назад +14

      In Canada, it's the Geneva Leaderboard.

    • @BloonHero666
      @BloonHero666 Месяц назад

      *Geneva Recommendations

  • @IkeaShark3937
    @IkeaShark3937 Месяц назад +3

    5:25 after this, the Canadians became the most enthusiastic about using poison gas in the western front. A German soldier said that the Canadians would gas “anything that moved” and a Canadian soldier said “if we could eradicate the Germans with only poison gas, we would gladly do so.”

  • @PelsckoPolesko
    @PelsckoPolesko 3 месяца назад +562

    Don’t forget that most Canadians were fighting as brothers and fathers, family members seeing each other die to German machine gun fire, that also fueled their vengeance

    • @thesolargamer9751
      @thesolargamer9751 3 месяца назад +43

      especially in the maritime provinces (nova scotia New Brunswick etc)

    • @FKamau
      @FKamau 3 месяца назад +16

      That explains a lot.

    • @Frostfirerotation
      @Frostfirerotation 3 месяца назад +22

      Aaaaand what did you think half the of the German conscripts were?

    • @PelsckoPolesko
      @PelsckoPolesko 3 месяца назад +3

      @@Frostfirerotation obviously brothers and fathers. I never said they weren’t?

    • @Frostfirerotation
      @Frostfirerotation 3 месяца назад +20

      @@PelsckoPolesko So the real question is, why didn't the Germans act the same way then? Considering they're utterly vilified in every other instance.

  • @dancampbell189
    @dancampbell189 3 месяца назад +243

    You've got a country where it snows half the year, every settlement is remote, and most of it is less than two generations from being hewn out of the wilderness.
    Then you take all the boys from the farms, mines, logging camps, and indigenous reserves, send them thousands of miles from home, throw them into a muddy ditch, and tell them "When all the guys in that ditch over there are dead, you get to go home."
    What else did you expect?

    • @sourloaf
      @sourloaf 3 месяца назад +7

      > every settlement is remote
      What? Canada has several major cities. Toronto is the 4th largest city by population in North America, Montreal the 9th, Calgary the 19th, Edmonton the 26th, Ottawa the 29th. 90% of Canadians live within 160 kms of the US border. The vast majority of us aren't living in remote wilderness.
      > most of it is less than two generations from being hewn out of the wilderness
      Again, what? Two generations is 20 to 30 years ago. Canada became a country 157 years ago with colonies predating that by centuries.
      You got the snow right at least.

    • @dancampbell189
      @dancampbell189 3 месяца назад +22

      @@sourloaf - How did you miss the references to trench warfare? Obviously I'm describing conditions during the Great War

    • @SmallScreenCo
      @SmallScreenCo 3 месяца назад +12

      @@dancampbell189 Your comment invoked the time of The Great War no problem. I don't know how Sourloaf missed it unless they just read the first sentence, got excited to correct you and didn't finish reading.

    • @ak-gp6ug
      @ak-gp6ug 3 месяца назад +12

      @@sourloaf now. this was a 100 years ago buddy

    • @blackwavearcade3ms
      @blackwavearcade3ms 3 месяца назад +2

      lol what?

  • @osseo9947
    @osseo9947 3 месяца назад +82

    My Grandfather (Canadian) was involved in Dieppe as an engineer, he avoided conversations about the war and stated it wasn't anything to brag or be proud about.

  • @fvkijay
    @fvkijay 29 дней назад +27

    Canadian here.
    I, I just wanted to say Canadian here.

  • @alexanderleach3365
    @alexanderleach3365 3 месяца назад +3066

    In war, always respect the Canadians.

    • @AFAHeavyGunner65
      @AFAHeavyGunner65 3 месяца назад +152

      Cause if you don’t, they’re gonna use your blood as maple syrup

    • @eaglewarrior7979
      @eaglewarrior7979 3 месяца назад +42

      Not anymore they’ve gotten soft. Same thing with America or any western country

    • @GamerFrisco
      @GamerFrisco 3 месяца назад +4

      Why?

    • @Ufgbja
      @Ufgbja 3 месяца назад +92

      @@eaglewarrior7979 wanna go to war with em?

    • @Bundysvideos
      @Bundysvideos 3 месяца назад

      @@eaglewarrior7979hi Putin puppet

  • @Koalalover70
    @Koalalover70 3 месяца назад +463

    As a Canadian I can confirm that we go berserk

    • @Nemy_Pred
      @Nemy_Pred 3 месяца назад +15

      I concur.

    • @stuartpostma8244
      @stuartpostma8244 3 месяца назад +18

      This Canadian can confirm this

    • @EPICtimPogwater
      @EPICtimPogwater 3 месяца назад +6

      So real

    • @youngdenard264
      @youngdenard264 3 месяца назад

      Quebec dude are the fighter,Anglo are the femboy who shoot each others

    • @markbrown9558
      @markbrown9558 3 месяца назад +8

      Canadian and going beserk on this comment.

  • @matthewrooke819
    @matthewrooke819 3 месяца назад +318

    It makes so much sense now why Wolverine and Deadpool are both Canadians.

    • @matthewcao2279
      @matthewcao2279 3 месяца назад

      Isn’t Wolverine Australian?

    • @miguelsuarez1842
      @miguelsuarez1842 3 месяца назад +21

      @@matthewcao2279actor yes - Comic book Lore no

    • @NowYaKnow965
      @NowYaKnow965 3 месяца назад +14

      @@matthewcao2279He's from a small town in the middle of nowhere. Cold Lake, Alberta, Canada.

    • @zdvxr
      @zdvxr 3 месяца назад +10

      @@matthewcao2279Wolverine is from northern Alberta and Deadpool is from Regina.

    • @joshwall6960
      @joshwall6960 3 месяца назад

      Ha cold lake of all places ​@NowYaKnow965

  • @keithbezanson1990
    @keithbezanson1990 Месяц назад +7

    Great uncle Herb Pepper from Truro NS was part of the first devils..... R.I.P passed away in 2018 I do belive at age 98

  • @marcleslac2413
    @marcleslac2413 3 месяца назад +952

    Canada in peace: sorry, to hit you, no im sorry.
    Canada in war: BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD, SKULLS FOR THE SKULL THRONE! MILK FOR THE KHORNE FLLLLAAAKKKESSSS!!!

    • @dcamaro0173
      @dcamaro0173 3 месяца назад +90

      Valid point also to add Canada in peace "hello how are you? What a fine day"
      Canada in war: "pave my path with corpses, build my castle with bones"

    • @thesnowmexican763
      @thesnowmexican763 3 месяца назад +39

      Historically accurate, Canada believed in Chaos before GW made it cool

    • @ZagstrakEadSmasha
      @ZagstrakEadSmasha 3 месяца назад +22

      We'z are more Orks den Spikie boyz as we enjoy krumpin gitz wif big dakka and krumping gitz in da funniest ways possible. WAAAAAAAAGH!

    • @marcleslac2413
      @marcleslac2413 3 месяца назад

      @@thesnowmexican763 if nato article 5 happens, eastern european nato members and canada itself are the most likely to summon khorne demons

    • @notsure6915
      @notsure6915 3 месяца назад +1

      Aksho kharneth akhash

  • @iyam7852
    @iyam7852 3 месяца назад +105

    Its like that one friend that is super kind but not to be messed with when mad

    • @LAB3NTLEY
      @LAB3NTLEY 2 месяца назад +2

      🤣🤣

    • @everybody48
      @everybody48 2 месяца назад +5

      as a Canadian i am that friend

    • @catalhuyuk7
      @catalhuyuk7 2 месяца назад

      I think our rage is just below the surface waiting patiently for a chance to escape. ♥️🇨🇦

    • @TuberTugger
      @TuberTugger 2 месяца назад

      I'm not polite because I'm nice. I'm polite because you damn well also be polite.

  • @VigilanteAgumon
    @VigilanteAgumon 3 месяца назад +773

    You also have to remember that Canadians (as British North Americans) managed to set Washington D.C. on fire during the War of 1812.

    • @Daniel2k25
      @Daniel2k25 3 месяца назад +9

      I was reading about this lately and if I recollect / understand correctly there was a huge element of British distracting in this instance and it was not Canadian ingenuity or force alone that got them there.

    • @Daniel2k25
      @Daniel2k25 3 месяца назад +6

      also, Canada obviously did not exist and saying it's Canada is disingenuous
      with that in mind
      I have heard a large number of New Brunswickers even, who may have technically been Nova Scotians at the time, travelled by walking to take part

    • @danb239
      @danb239 3 месяца назад +37

      ​@@Daniel2k25Canada wasn't a country until 1867 and was a colony so of course it was considered the British.

    • @ChineseChicken1
      @ChineseChicken1 3 месяца назад +3

      That very night a hurricane came through and put the fires out as well as scattering the British Army.

    • @cyber1ifeconnor
      @cyber1ifeconnor 3 месяца назад +33

      ​@@ChineseChicken1so only the forces of nature could hold them? Cool 😂

  • @BennyBsolo
    @BennyBsolo 6 дней назад +4

    Always remember ........ We VOLUNTARILY joined BOTH World Wars !!

  • @fdgod1931
    @fdgod1931 3 месяца назад +334

    Just like the people France in a Revolution you don’t mess with Canadians in War.

    • @Ironknuckle100
      @Ironknuckle100 3 месяца назад +39

      French people fighting other people = hello kitty.
      French people fighting other French people = the expendables.
      -Heavenly Father

    • @fdgod1931
      @fdgod1931 3 месяца назад +5

      @@Ironknuckle100 i was waiting for that reference.

    • @Ironknuckle100
      @Ironknuckle100 3 месяца назад +1

      @@fdgod1931 happy to oblige.

    • @youngdenard264
      @youngdenard264 3 месяца назад

      @@Ironknuckle100you should learn about the “Furia Francese”

    • @Ironknuckle100
      @Ironknuckle100 3 месяца назад

      @@youngdenard264 I tried googling it but all I got was the meaning of the words individually. Fury and belonging to France. I think. Ok what’s it about?

  • @idkidk2459
    @idkidk2459 3 месяца назад +72

    You had me at brass knuckles. That has to be the most badass wartime weapon ever. Especially when the enemies have firearms.

    • @TuberTugger
      @TuberTugger 2 месяца назад +7

      Lefty and Righty never run out of bullets and never jam.

  • @GideonGrimmGaming
    @GideonGrimmGaming 2 месяца назад +107

    Look, when you’re stuck being polite all the time and the only release is hockey, war ends up being a great anger management tool.

    • @joesalyers
      @joesalyers 2 месяца назад +4

      This is a really underrated comment HAHAHAHA! Hockey its like Boxing with the bonus of a team sport on ice!

    • @VesBox-s2g
      @VesBox-s2g Месяц назад +2

      gotta take advantage of the power play

    • @flamingrubys11
      @flamingrubys11 Месяц назад +1

      imagine if aawar cancels a hockey season

  • @malcolmallen31
    @malcolmallen31 Месяц назад +1

    Canadian here
    I can remember the mayor of the town next to us (Kincardine) was Charlie Mann, he was a member of the 'black devils' during ww2 and listened several times both in person and on TV about the ruthlessness of what they did to the Germans. He was an incredible man!

  • @Atlas79115
    @Atlas79115 3 месяца назад +342

    This is why I found it hilarious when Obama famously said " I don't find Canadians to be particularly scary." He is obviously not a student of history. There's a reason why they are polite most of the time, because when it's time to go to war all that pent up rage can finally be released. Mistaking kindness for weakness is the gist of it.

    • @buckodonnghaile4309
      @buckodonnghaile4309 3 месяца назад +1

      Canadians of today are a far cry from their ancestors. The odds of suburban and urban Ontario or B.C youth taking up arms to defend their nation is laughable. There are no arms anyway.

    • @ryyzan3055
      @ryyzan3055 3 месяца назад +7

      I find it funny how you’re obsessed with Obama enough to mention him on a video about Canada, a whole eight years after he left office. Like you’re obsessed fam. You ok??

    • @Thalanox
      @Thalanox 3 месяца назад +70

      ​@@ryyzan3055 He's one of the most recent three presidents of our neighbors down south. Why should he be considered an irrelevant cultural measurement stick?

    • @toaster3822
      @toaster3822 3 месяца назад

      He is an idiot

    • @idrinkbreastmilk2883
      @idrinkbreastmilk2883 3 месяца назад

      ​@@ryyzan3055he holds the record for most bombs dropped on Syria and won the noble piece price somehow

  • @robertreid9720
    @robertreid9720 3 месяца назад +41

    Germans: What are you, special forces?
    Canadian: No, im just an outdoor enthusiast.

    • @mr.jordwell9084
      @mr.jordwell9084 2 месяца назад +6

      Canada: is that an intervention UN?
      UN: No, it's a convention... the Geneva Convention. You got to stop those war crimes.
      Canada: Geneva what now? *Stabs a German prisoner*

  • @alex25425
    @alex25425 3 месяца назад +153

    My history teacher thaught us that a lot of the Canadian intensity came from the fact that we got roped by force in this conflict, and most Canadian didn't care at all about Europe, so being forced into a war you don't care, in a place you don't care, fighting people you don't care about (comparatively to, say French and Germans, who were basically neighbors, had relatives across the border, etc.), and away from you home, familly and dreams, the Canadian soldier basically said: "I don't care how we have to do it, but we'll make sure this war is quick so we can go back to our side of the Atlantic.
    As to the validity of this, no idea, but I can understand the sentiment, so I'd think it's plausible

    • @wesker911
      @wesker911 3 месяца назад +5

      Can confirm, we don't like getting swept up in others stupidity. We deal with a lot of our own.

    • @MrChit-od9po
      @MrChit-od9po 3 месяца назад +2

      Im Canadian and never heard that, I'll keep an eye out for your theroy, but I doubt it

    • @daveengland8931
      @daveengland8931 3 месяца назад +5

      if its WW1 then no we truly wanted to be there (at first lol) 70% of the CEF was of british decent, yet they only made up a small percentage of overall immigrants of the time,
      if its WW2 then yeah youre right, we deff did not want to be there at all.

    • @poultryfornicator4412
      @poultryfornicator4412 3 месяца назад +1

      Many supported the Crown and its endeavors. Issue was taken though, mostly by the Francos and western provinces- who many of predominantly germanic descent didn't care much for england's affairs and just wanted to do their thing- farm. There were still enough loyal to the Crown to support in smaller capacities/numbers from mostly the Franco, as wheat was in short supply due to early frosts and small harvests + war effort, and the prairies stepped it up to help keep things going.

    • @daveengland8931
      @daveengland8931 3 месяца назад +3

      @@poultryfornicator4412 it also cannot be understated the efforts of eastern canadian communities, they had much smaller populations than their western/central counterparts but still contributed entire pals battalions.
      but well said about the franco canadians, we couldnt have done it without them.

  • @pseudopetrus
    @pseudopetrus Месяц назад +3

    True, Canadians are very patient, and really try to be nice, but we expect the same, and if we don't get that, all bets are off.

  • @zacharygriffin2041
    @zacharygriffin2041 3 месяца назад +56

    You should have mentioned the Battle of Dieppe, the precursor to D-Day. Despite heavy casualties and an overall failure, some Canadian units actually achieved their objective. Without the lessons learned at Dieppe the allies wouldn’t have properly prepared for D-Day. I mean Dieppe deserves its own video.

    • @smithy86
      @smithy86 2 месяца назад +4

      My grandpa fought in dieppe one of the lucky few to escape, then later fought on Juno and went on until the end of the war

    • @MrDiddlebug
      @MrDiddlebug 2 месяца назад +1

      The crappy part was that the entire thing was basically a test run, and Canadians were once again picked to be the Guinea pigs. I can somewhat understand why, because Canadian ground troops hadn't really done as much up until then (unlike the RCAF), but it does make us feel a bit like an afterthought, eh? Ah, colonials.

    • @OTDMilitaryHistory
      @OTDMilitaryHistory 2 месяца назад

      @@smithy86 Did he move from a 2nd Division unit to a 3rd Division one? That would have had been the case for that to happen.

  • @inputnamehere1
    @inputnamehere1 3 месяца назад +50

    My uncle visited France often in the 70s and the 80s, and he would regularly drink for free or have his restaurant tab taken care of when an old timer heard his French Canadian accent because a lot of them knew someone that was rescued by our people in WW2, if not themselves.

    • @eastvandb
      @eastvandb 3 месяца назад +1

      Yeah, my father did his post-doctorate in the Netherlands in the 50s. He was sometimes embarrassed to say he was Canadian because everyone would insist on buying him drinks. (He missed the draft by six or seven months, so he had not been there during the war.)

  • @michiganmafia
    @michiganmafia 3 месяца назад +144

    Heres a shocker, people who grow up and live in a rough environment and work hard to survive tend to make good soldiers. Obviously this doesnt apply to most modern Canucks, or Americans, but back then people had to work a lot harder in general, even in a nice climate

    • @fastestdino2
      @fastestdino2 3 месяца назад +27

      I agree for sure with people who live in our cities (cough cough Toronto/Montreal/Ottawa). I think our rural areas and smaller cities have a lot stronger people and natural fervor though.

    • @michiganmafia
      @michiganmafia 3 месяца назад +10

      @@fastestdino2 For sure, Im a born and raised farm boy, and I have respect for anyone who knows the true meaning of a hard days work

    • @ChristopherLaHaise
      @ChristopherLaHaise 3 месяца назад +6

      We still have JTF-2, the elite squad that the Navy SEALS defer to in war.

    • @jasonbrisco
      @jasonbrisco 3 месяца назад +5

      Rural reserve units, to this day, out perform urban units...

    • @Ayden-vi1io
      @Ayden-vi1io 3 месяца назад

      Why tf you throwing shade at Americans?

  • @PTa-n9r
    @PTa-n9r Месяц назад +2

    Let's thank these amazing heroes for the wonderful world we have today.

  • @fatherobama7658
    @fatherobama7658 3 месяца назад +168

    We say sorry now so we don’t need to do it later.

    • @288theabe
      @288theabe 3 месяца назад +13

      Pre-emptive sorry 😂😂

    • @Cuz.im.batman
      @Cuz.im.batman 3 месяца назад +1

      We've been apologizing for almost 80 years... when does it end.

    • @mzdtmp2
      @mzdtmp2 2 месяца назад

      Don't lie, ya'll say "sore-ey", not sorry. 😋

  • @bblvrable
    @bblvrable 3 месяца назад +299

    You don't go undefeated in war by playing by 'rules'. You go undefeated in war by making your enemies fear you more than death itself.

    • @Gameprojordan
      @Gameprojordan 3 месяца назад

      What an ignorant statement that psychopaths have used time and time again through history to justify their attrocities. I guess you support the Mai lai massacre in Vietnam since that was a shock and awe tactic to scare the enemy except it resulted in an entire village of innocent people being wiped off the face of earth

    • @runner3033
      @runner3033 3 месяца назад +19

      There's only one rule in war - don't lose.

    • @darkspire6666
      @darkspire6666 3 месяца назад +7

      Well said eh

    • @JohnYourMama
      @JohnYourMama 3 месяца назад +1

      you win by completing the geneva to do list

    • @Bumblebee2361
      @Bumblebee2361 3 месяца назад +2

      And that's how you get charged for war crimes.

  • @nicholas8228
    @nicholas8228 Месяц назад +36

    As a Canadian veteran I’d say one of the biggest stories that could describe our tenacity is the story of Leo Major
    Look up “the one eyed scout who liberated a whole town by himself” if you are interested

    • @CaeridLock.
      @CaeridLock. Месяц назад

      David currie, Aubrey cosens, smokey Smith, George topham, tons of real stand up gents out there

    • @JayLee-od8ob
      @JayLee-od8ob Месяц назад

      Plenty of bayonet charge stories of little or no ammunition remaining. Stories of popularizing cqc with shotguns and crude hand tools. Very sad stories mostly.

  • @TheReelFishinator
    @TheReelFishinator 27 дней назад

    My great grandfathers experience in world war 2 his best Pal was walking infront of him, stepped on a land mine killing him instantly. My grandfather was paralyzed from the waste down, he laid there for 6 days while friendlys were heard retrieving bodies. He managed to raise his hand high enough to be saved. He told me he thought he was going to drown because he couldn’t move and it was raining for days. As a Canadian I can safely say I would do anything for my country and my people ❤

  • @uberreaktor4836
    @uberreaktor4836 3 месяца назад +220

    They usually transfer their anger and hatred to the geese.
    Bit problematic to do that when you're overseas.

    • @hamaljay
      @hamaljay 3 месяца назад +27

      Cobra chickens.

    • @LM-oi3sf
      @LM-oi3sf 3 месяца назад +29

      The only crime against humanity we would never commit is unleashing our geese on the enemy.

    • @mikeramone003
      @mikeramone003 3 месяца назад +16

      Release the Geese!

    • @isabelleblanchet3694
      @isabelleblanchet3694 3 месяца назад

      @@LM-oi3sf The attack cobra chicken are way too dangerous for the world. We like to keep them secret, as our ultimate weapon.

    • @LM-oi3sf
      @LM-oi3sf 3 месяца назад

      @@isabelleblanchet3694 We occasionally use them as anti aircraft weapons, but no-one suspects a thing, shhhh

  • @M0J4-XD
    @M0J4-XD 3 месяца назад +252

    Make fun of the Canadian army all you want.
    Just remember, we never lost a war.
    Edit: It's ironic how i started ww3 in the replies 💀

    • @TRUMPONTHEGO
      @TRUMPONTHEGO 3 месяца назад +16

      Facts

    • @zdvxr
      @zdvxr 3 месяца назад +30

      We have small numbers of soldiers but historically that hasn’t stopped us at all from completing our objectives

    • @psssshhh7730
      @psssshhh7730 2 месяца назад

      Didn't we the independence war twice?

    • @M0J4-XD
      @M0J4-XD 2 месяца назад +19

      @@psssshhh7730 im pretty sure we just asked and got it.

    • @sarahk8637
      @sarahk8637 2 месяца назад +4

      Lost in Afghanistan, just ask the Talibans who now rule it.

  • @mallowalt2240
    @mallowalt2240 2 месяца назад +30

    one of my great grandfathers was in the devils brigade, we still have his knife and stickers from the war. apparently, according to him, it turns out the phrase wasn't translated properly and further confused and terrified the germans. i remember foggy memories of hearing stories about them sneaking into camps after taking out their patrols, and then dispatching the sleeping germans in their camp. having those stickers haunted me as a kid, considering their implications. they'd be slapped on helmets placed on the heads of corpses. grim stuff.