To believe that is an insult to the spirit and principles our country was founded on.golgoj4 wrote:
That wasnt for our benefit. That was to embarass the brits. Stop actling like they actually cared.The_Shipbuilder wrote:
Without the Marquis de Lafayette, Louis XVI, General Rochambeau, the Admiral de Grasse, ad infinitum, you'd be eating crumpets and tea instead of those Spicy Habanero Doritos, Jojoba. I know the truth hurts, but without France there would be no United States of America. Period.
Our struggle for nationhood, and our attempt to found a country based on individual liberty, rallied people around the world to our cause. We found great friends in Prussia, Poland, and especially in France. Many came over and risked their lives to fight for the liberty and freedom that you enjoy.
I'll give you a single example: The Marquis De Lafayette. He was so passionate about the American cause that he
- fought and was wounded as a volunteer soldier in the Revolutionary War
- received no pay for commanding a division in the Revolutionary War
- took a boat back to France during the war to personally petition Louis XVI to assist America
- used HIS OWN PERSONAL FUNDS to support American troops during the war
- was quoted after the Siege of Yorktown as saying "Humanity has won its battle. Liberty now has a country."
- named his first-born son "Georges Washington Motier de La Fayette"
Yet you say the French didn't really care. You say the French were in it to spite Britain. Your statement is completely ignorant, golgoj4. When you insult the French who risked and gave their lives for America, like I said before you insult the spirit and principles our country was founded on. You suggest that the things this country is based on wouldn't be enough to inspire allegiance, and that spite for another country would have been a stronger source of inspiration.
Those French were better American patriots than you are.