#1
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OT - Royal Restoring RCAF and RCN
Great day for the Canadian Forces, could'nt be more happy
CANFORGEN 147/11 VCDS 021/11 151502Z AUG 11 RESTORING THE HISTORIC NAMES OF THE ROYAL CANADIAN NAVY, THE CANADIAN ARMY AND THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE. UNCLASSIFIED THE CDS IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT THE GOVERNMENT IS RESTORING THE HISTORIC NAMES OF THE ROYAL CANADIAN NAVY (RCN), THE CANADIAN ARMY (CA), AND THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE (RCAF) THE INITIATIVE TO RESTORE THE HISTORIC NAMES OF CANADA’S THREE FORMER SERVICES IS AIMED AT RESTORING AN IMPORTANT AND RECOGNIZABLE PART OF CANADA S MILITARY HERITAGE. THESE WERE THE SERVICES THAT FOUGHT AND EMERGED VICTORIOUS FROM THE SECOND WORLD WAR AND KOREA AND CONTRIBUTED TO THE DEFENCE OF EUROPE AND NORTH AMERICA FROM THE EARLY DAYS OF THE COLD WAR. THESE WERE ALSO THE SERVICES THAT PAVED THE WAY IN TERMS OF INTERNATIONAL PEACEKEEPING MISSIONS THE CHANGE WILL BE IMPLEMENTED BY RENAMING THE THREE ENVIRONMENTAL COMMANDS. MARITIME COMMAND WILL BE NAMED THE ROYAL CANADIAN NAVY LAND FORCE COMMAND WILL BE NAMED THE CANADIAN ARMY AND AIR COMMAND WILL BE NAMED THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE. IN THIS WAY WE WILL REGAIN AN IMPORTANT PART OF OUR COLLECTIVE HERITAGE WITHIN A UNIFIED EFFECTIVE CANADIAN FORCES COMMAND STRUCTURE MORE DETAILED INFORMATION WILL BE PROMULGATED BY YOUR RESPECTIVE CHAINS OF COMMAND AS IT BECOMES AVAILABLE FOR GREATER CERTAINTY, ALL CURRENT RESPECTIVE COMMAND ORDERS, RULES, DIRECTIVES, INSTRUCTIONS OR SIMILAR INSTRUMENTS REMAIN IN FULL FORCE AND EFFECT UNTIL AMENDED TO REFLECT THE NAME CHANGE OF THE COMMAND The Big question now is will the Royal Canadian Airforce ask for their Old Ranks back?
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I will not hide. I will not be deterred nor will I be intimidated from my performing my duty, I am a Canadian Soldier. |
#2
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God save the Queen!
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Better to reign in hell, than to serve in heaven. |
#3
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Seems like a very cool development. My understanding was that the amalgamation into Canadian Forces didn't even deliver any real cost savings in terms of streamlining logistics and admin, which was the (if I'm not mistaken) logic for kicking esprit de corps in the crotch when the decision was made way back when.
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#4
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Good for our northern cousins! An army deserves to be called such.
Why doesn't the Canadian Army get a "Royal" moniker? Are the Canadians suffering from the betrayal by the British Army all those years ago? Talk about sins of the father!
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“We’re not innovating. We’re selectively imitating.” June Bernstein, Acting President of the University of Arizona in Tucson, November 15, 1998. |
#5
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Possibly because unlike the "rebel scum" most of those who were a part of the British Empire respect our history.
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#6
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So instead of using the money to get new equipment and improve or pay out the pension plans for retired vets, millions of dollars will now be spent repainting and changing all the official paperwork from HMCS to RCN etc.
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************************************* Each day I encounter stupid people I keep wondering... is today when I get my first assault charge?? |
#7
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Commonwealth armies don't get "Royal" tacked onto the overall organization's name, rather it is assigned to individual regiments or corps that warrant it for one reason or another. For the Royal Navy I think this is because that organization traditionally belonged to the crown, rather than being raised by nobles or officers who had a warrant to recruit a regiment. Same for some army specialist/technical fields and (much later) the air forces.
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#8
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Quote:
The longer I serve the more I think they should do some extensive testing and just shoot the dumbest general or admiral in the force in the face once a year to encourage the rest to try as hard ad they can to be smarter than a developmentally disabled redneck banjo player. |
#9
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I think that I read somewhere that some units had earn the term 'Royal' for heroism ad loyality on the battlefield. Like the Aussies and New Zealanders having earning the Royal title for their armed forces after WW1 & WW2 and the losses they suffered fighting the Japanese and Germans.
in my 2300ad campaign the British Army had earned the title Royal British Army due to the pacification/reunification campaigns that restored His Majesties Government of King Harry.
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Fuck being a hero. Do you know what you get for being a hero? Nothing! You get shot at. You get a little pat on the back, blah blah blah, attaboy! You get divorced... Your wife can't remember your last name, your kids don't want to talk to you... You get to eat a lot of meals by yourself. Trust me kid, nobody wants to be that guy. I do this because there is nobody else to do it right now. Believe me if there was somebody else to do it, I would let them do it. There's not, so I'm doing it. |
#10
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Makes sense to me -- circa 2000 to 2030 or so, the UK (and plenty of other places) will live or die based on how their ground forces manage to work miracles with just about nothing to work with and what not. If that doesn't earn a "Royal" then I don't know what would.
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#11
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The reason why the the British, Canadian, Australia, and New Zealand Armies do not have Royal in their titles, is because they are all descended from "New Model Army", which was formed by the Parliamentarians in the English Civil War, hence no royal in it's title.
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"You're damn right, I'm gonna be pissed off! I bought that pig at Pink Floyd's yard sale!" |
#12
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Quote:
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************************************* Each day I encounter stupid people I keep wondering... is today when I get my first assault charge?? |
#13
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Because British and Commonwealth armies use the regimental system as opposed to the divisional, indivdual naming conventions can be complicated.
We have some "royal" regiments and some non-royal. Two examples are the Royal Tank regiments and Royal Dragoon guards while two non-roya regiments are the Rifles and the 9th/12th lancers.
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Better to reign in hell, than to serve in heaven. |
#14
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Quote:
"It is good to kill, from time to time, an admiral to encourage the others"-Voltaire
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Lieutenant John Chard: If it's a miracle, Colour Sergeant, it's a short chamber Boxer Henry point 45 caliber miracle. Colour Sergeant Bourne: And a bayonet, sir, with some guts behind. |
#15
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Quote:
In other cases, it has to do with the traditional ownership of a given asset by the crown, versus foot and cavalry regiments raised by guys given commissions to do so. The Royal Artillery, for instance, is because people besides the Crown having access to cannon was discouraged quite a ways back, historically. I think other Corps, like the Royal Engineers acquired the Royal title to recognize or indicate that their skills were such that you couldn't trust the Honorable Lord Chumbly-Bumbly to scare up some of them in time of war and that they needed to be managed and administered much more like a centralized bureaucracy and military force than the infantry and cavalry did at the same point in history. |
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