To My Mexican Posters.. [and others]

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  • xcaret
    Banned
    Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
    • Apr 2005
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    #71
    Originally posted by Alibata
    ALA MORALES, MARQUEZ, AND BARRERA...Bring on your best!!!!
    Juan Diaz waiting for his ass.

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    • El Termible
      Banned
      • Jun 2007
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      #72
      Originally posted by Alibata
      ALA MORALES, MARQUEZ, AND BARRERA
      Morales beat Pac, Marquez drew with Pac, and I'll give you Barrera.

      Originally posted by Alibata
      Bring on your best!!!!
      What happened to Mayol and Bautista???

      Comment

      • xcaret
        Banned
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        • Apr 2005
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        #73
        Originally posted by El Termible
        Morales beat Pac, Marquez drew with Pac, and I'll give you Barrera.



        What happened to Mayol and Bautista???
        Their in my sig sleeping and doing the chicken dance

        Comment

        • PrtyBoyDlicious
          OnePunchWonder
          Gold Champion - 500-1,000 posts
          • Nov 2006
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          #74
          Originally posted by VIVA MEXICO!!!
          these filipinos aint nothing. if they try to challenge mexicos best they will lose. they will all getk nocked out faster than the bum buatista.
          WHO'S MEXICO'S BEST?

          PLS NAME 1?

          Comment

          • $iN
            #1 Post 4 Post
            • Aug 2007
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            #75
            Originally posted by PrtyBoyDlicious
            WHO'S MEXICO'S BEST?

            PLS NAME 1?
            Right now, it's clearly JMM. In a rematch, you would have to pick him to box Pac's ears off...

            Comment

            • Juggernaut
              Contender
              Silver Champion - 100-500 posts
              • Sep 2006
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              #76
              Originally posted by El Termible
              Morales beat Pac, Marquez drew with Pac, and I'll give you Barrera.
              Failed to mention Pac KO'd Morales twice, and drew with Marquez who went to Indonesia instead of facing Pacquiao again.

              Comment

              • JaNnO
                The Specialist
                Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                • Jul 2004
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                #77
                Originally posted by bigsmoothh
                i agree with you. most people "no nos quieren porque somos bien vergas" thats the truth. to me these filipinos characters are trying to put on a fight with a country,who not only produces great champs but has been on the spotlight for a while, us mexicans are ****in warriors man, we'll go ahead knock them chip theet out they ****in mouth.
                lol. this statement just made me laugh. as if the mexicans are the only ones who have the right to this word. mexicans fighters are warriors in their own right and so are others who fight and never back down until they've given their best.

                to give you a glimpse of the past and show you how fierce and determined the Filipino warriors are, read the following and maybe, just maybe you may learn that there are other people outside of mexico who embody the meaning of the word "warrior".

                -------------------

                This quote below was written by Cornelius C. Smith, Jr - Thirty year US Army veteran of the Indian wars (he fought Apache, Comanche, Lakota etc.) and the Moro campaigns.

                Smith received a Congressional Medal of Honor for gallantry against the Sioux. For his gallantry he was sent to Mindanao to fight the Moros.

                "In hand to hand combat our soldiers are simply no match for the Moro. If our first shot misses the target, we rarely have time to get off another."

                and this quote:

                “The Indian campaign were not analogous. The Indian Wars were amateur melees compared with the insurrection (by Filipinos in Southern Luzon) waged in 1900…” pg. 138 Millett, The General (Gen. Robert L. Bullard, who helped track the Apache warrior, Geronimo) (sidenote: Another officer who was credited in actually capturing Geronimo was also killed in the Philippines at that time, ironically by a Filipino named ...Geronimo)

                Thus, the development of the Colt 45. The US ARMY had cadaver tests of firearm stopping power as field tested during the Philippine Campaigns. The results swayed the Army into abandoning the .38 caliber Colt and Smith/wesson revolvers for the .45

                Accounts of fierce Moro determination by US soldiers and failed stopping power of the .38 led to the deployment of the "Philippine" often called the "Alaskan" in error. The "Philippine" was a Colt M1878/1902 D.A. Army revolver with a large trigger guard and longer trigger . The modification was for increased leverage to allow for a stiffer mainspring necessary to fire Frankford Arsenal ammunition.

                On October 8th, 1903 General William Crozier addressed the automatic pistol issue. Supported by the above Thompson-Lagarde studies, by early 1906 and numerous modifications later, the new Colt .45 M1905 automatic was government issue.

                *data from the book - The Colt Model 1905 Automatic Pistol, John Potocki
                Last edited by JaNnO; 08-16-2007, 10:07 PM.

                Comment

                • Alibata
                  Dugong Maharlika
                  Super Champion - 5,000-10,000 posts
                  • May 2004
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                  #78
                  Originally posted by JaNnO
                  lol. this statement just made me laugh. as if the mexicans are the only ones who have the right to this word. mexicans fighters are warriors in their own right and so are others who fight and never back down until they've given their best.

                  to give you a glimpse of the past and show you how fierce and determined the Filipino warriors are, read the following and maybe, just maybe you may learn that there are other people outside of mexico who embody the meaning of the word "warrior".

                  -------------------

                  This quote below was written by Cornelius C. Smith, Jr - Thirty year US Army veteran of the Indian wars (he fought Apache, Comanche, Lakota etc.) and the Moro campaigns.

                  Smith received a Congressional Medal of Honor for gallantry against the Sioux. For his gallantry he was sent to Mindanao to fight the Moros.

                  "In hand to hand combat our soldiers are simply no match for the Moro. If our first shot misses the target, we rarely have time to get off another."

                  and this quote:

                  “The Indian campaign were not analogous. The Indian Wars were amateur melees compared with the insurrection (by Filipinos in Southern Luzon) waged in 1900…” pg. 138 Millett, The General (Gen. Robert L. Bullard, who helped track the Apache warrior, Geronimo) (sidenote: Another officer who was credited in actually capturing Geronimo was also killed in the Philippines at that time, ironically by a Filipino named ...Geronimo)

                  Thus, the development of the Colt 45. The US ARMY had cadaver tests of firearm stopping power as field tested during the Philippine Campaigns. The results swayed the Army into abandoning the .38 caliber Colt and Smith/wesson revolvers for the .45

                  Accounts of fierce Moro determination by US soldiers and failed stopping power of the .38 led to the deployment of the "Philippine" often called the "Alaskan" in error. The "Philippine" was a Colt M1878/1902 D.A. Army revolver with a large trigger guard and longer trigger . The modification was for increased leverage to allow for a stiffer mainspring necessary to fire Frankford Arsenal ammunition.

                  On October 8th, 1903 General William Crozier addressed the automatic pistol issue. Supported by the above Thompson-Lagarde studies, by early 1906 and numerous modifications later, the new Colt .45 M1905 automatic was government issue.

                  *data from the book - The Colt Model 1905 Automatic Pistol, John Potocki

                  Nice!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                  Comment

                  • JaNnO
                    The Specialist
                    Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                    • Jul 2004
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                    #79
                    Originally posted by loui_ludwig
                    They called Bautista the next Pacquiao. But there will be no Pacquiao. That is like saying there will be a next Michael Jordan or the next JC Chavez. Pacquiao, besides the way he fights, that made him popular is that the way he interacts with the people. With the Filipinos, they see him as one of them, just part of the crowd, cuz he came also from poverty.
                    That's called a figure of speech. Everybody knows there is only one person to call himself, unless of course they allow human cloning.

                    I agree that Pacquiao is popular because most Filipinos can identify themselves with him besides being humble, religious and accomodating.

                    Comment

                    • kadyo's
                      Grand Son
                      Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
                      • Nov 2004
                      • 23628
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                      #80
                      Originally posted by JaNnO
                      lol. this statement just made me laugh. as if the mexicans are the only ones who have the right to this word. mexicans fighters are warriors in their own right and so are others who fight and never back down until they've given their best.

                      to give you a glimpse of the past and show you how fierce and determined the Filipino warriors are, read the following and maybe, just maybe you may learn that there are other people outside of mexico who embody the meaning of the word "warrior".

                      -------------------

                      This quote below was written by Cornelius C. Smith, Jr - Thirty year US Army veteran of the Indian wars (he fought Apache, Comanche, Lakota etc.) and the Moro campaigns.

                      Smith received a Congressional Medal of Honor for gallantry against the Sioux. For his gallantry he was sent to Mindanao to fight the Moros.

                      "In hand to hand combat our soldiers are simply no match for the Moro. If our first shot misses the target, we rarely have time to get off another."

                      and this quote:

                      “The Indian campaign were not analogous. The Indian Wars were amateur melees compared with the insurrection (by Filipinos in Southern Luzon) waged in 1900…” pg. 138 Millett, The General (Gen. Robert L. Bullard, who helped track the Apache warrior, Geronimo) (sidenote: Another officer who was credited in actually capturing Geronimo was also killed in the Philippines at that time, ironically by a Filipino named ...Geronimo)

                      Thus, the development of the Colt 45. The US ARMY had cadaver tests of firearm stopping power as field tested during the Philippine Campaigns. The results swayed the Army into abandoning the .38 caliber Colt and Smith/wesson revolvers for the .45

                      Accounts of fierce Moro determination by US soldiers and failed stopping power of the .38 led to the deployment of the "Philippine" often called the "Alaskan" in error. The "Philippine" was a Colt M1878/1902 D.A. Army revolver with a large trigger guard and longer trigger . The modification was for increased leverage to allow for a stiffer mainspring necessary to fire Frankford Arsenal ammunition.

                      On October 8th, 1903 General William Crozier addressed the automatic pistol issue. Supported by the above Thompson-Lagarde studies, by early 1906 and numerous modifications later, the new Colt .45 M1905 automatic was government issue.

                      *data from the book - The Colt Model 1905 Automatic Pistol, John Potocki
                      Nice info bro.

                      Comment

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