Fire at LV Club Sihanoukville
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Re: Fire at LV Club Sihanoukville
He died?LinDa777 wrote:If the Chinese theory is true they’ve killed a lovely man
RIP Veha
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Re: Fire at LV Club Sihanoukville
Jamie read it.
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Re: Fire at LV Club Sihanoukville
kiwiincambodia wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2018 10:23 amHe died?LinDa777 wrote:If the Chinese theory is true they’ve killed a lovely man
RIP Veha
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Re: Fire at LV Club Sihanoukville
In the Long March the CCP were outnumbered, survived the five encirclement and ultimately won. The point being that they were outnumbered but they kept fighting and didn't give up.
Seven months later, in October, Jiang attempted his fifth and final campaign against the 'bandits.' On this occasion he had taken the advice of a German general to adopt a gradual approach. This time a force of 800,000 men was sent in, with air cover and artillery. The Red Army could not take advantage of its previous strengths of higher mobility and local support. Outnumbered and surrounded by GMD forces, it fought and lost a final battle at Ruijin in 1934.
The CCP faced annihilation. Mao decided that the only change the CCP had was to break through the GMD's lines and set up another base. They succeeded in doing this on the 19th of October and then embarked on what became known as the 'Long March.' The Long March took the CCP on a seemingly impossible 9,600km trek to Shaanxi across some of the most inhospitable territory in China. It took 368 days and it led to the death of more than 90 per cent of the 90,000 communists that broke through their encirclement at Jiangxi.https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/IB/Group_ ... d_1946-49)
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Re: Fire at LV Club Sihanoukville
these are the times when they are blinded by an ideology, truthfully i have not seen chinks fight fair in any civilian situation, not to degress, my point being is that they will not attempt such feat of burning down a club unless they are fucking sure they wont get caught
Money is not the problem, the problem is no money
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Re: Fire at LV Club Sihanoukville
On the Long March Mao and his buddies didn't march. They were carried the entire distance in palanquins. Solidarity, brethren!Kuroneko wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2018 2:13 pmIn the Long March the CCP were outnumbered, survived the five encirclement and ultimately won. The point being that they were outnumbered but they kept fighting and didn't give up.
Seven months later, in October, Jiang attempted his fifth and final campaign against the 'bandits.' On this occasion he had taken the advice of a German general to adopt a gradual approach. This time a force of 800,000 men was sent in, with air cover and artillery. The Red Army could not take advantage of its previous strengths of higher mobility and local support. Outnumbered and surrounded by GMD forces, it fought and lost a final battle at Ruijin in 1934.
The CCP faced annihilation. Mao decided that the only change the CCP had was to break through the GMD's lines and set up another base. They succeeded in doing this on the 19th of October and then embarked on what became known as the 'Long March.' The Long March took the CCP on a seemingly impossible 9,600km trek to Shaanxi across some of the most inhospitable territory in China. It took 368 days and it led to the death of more than 90 per cent of the 90,000 communists that broke through their encirclement at Jiangxi.https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/IB/Group_ ... d_1946-49)
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