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02e000b So we had to take up the challenge or for ever lose the right to be decent, self-respecting inhabitants of a free world. It became necessary for us to forget the rules temporarily so that in the future rules could occupy a permanent, honoured place in a better way of life. John Nichol
6dcdced If we've been forced into a back-alley fight, are we to ignore the essential weapons of the street brawl? John Nichol
99d8a52 Christ came to save men, but a good Pagan will go to heaven, and a bad Nazarene to hell. I am no Platonist, I am nothing at all; but I would sooner be a Paulician, Manichean, Spinozist, Gentile, Pyrrhonian, Zoroastrian, than one of the seventy-two villainous sects who are tearing each other to pieces for the love of the Lord and hatred of each other. I will bring ten Mussulman, shall shame you all in good will towards men and prayer to God. John Nichol
166a999 Nerves got the better of the most experienced pilots during Rhubarbs. On one occasion, two of Robertson's fellow 111 Squadron pilots flew over the Channel up into cloud then came down and slipped over the coast. They spotted a train and shot it up before heading back home. They were surprised on return to be called into the Station Commander's office. What had they been shooting at? A train. Did they damage it? Yes, quite a bit. Did they re.. John Nichol
fd192f7 Major (later General) Curtis LeMay recalled the shock of fog when he flew in to a British airfield for the first time from the US. 'Can you see the runway lights?' the control tower asked the pilot of his aircraft, to which the pilot replied: 'Shit, I can't even see my copilot! John Nichol
ae10a5c In 1941, after a year's experience of bombing Germany, a crucial Air Ministry analysis of photographic evidence had revealed that only 22 per cent of bomber crews who claimed to have hit their target actually got within five miles of it.5 In the more heavily defended Ruhr John Nichol
20b178e But this was life in those days. Today we are a totally different society. We put out bunches of flowers, have little vigils, hold hands and have counsellors to tell us all what to do. It was totally different then. The world events were so monumental that you had no time to think about the people who had fallen by the wayside. If we had had today's attitudes, we would never have won the war. John Nichol