Mr. Speaker, I listened to my colleague with great interest. I was baffled with the way he historically rhymed off some figures. He talked about Hong Kong. He talked about Dieppe. Now he says if they do not behave, we are going to go in there.
I wonder if my hon. colleague remembers which side of the allies the Serbian people were on. I wonder if he remembers or if he knows that these people might have been under Hitler at that time and they were impoverished. They were under the German boot. Can he tell me if he remembers which side they were supporting? Was it the partisans not only of Serbia, but the partisans in Italy, or the partisans in France, or the partisans in Greece? I could go on and on. He mentioned nothing about it.
The member talked about the Battle of Britain. Has my hon. colleague dismissed all the people under hardship during that period of our history, or has he simply chosen to ignore them?
My hon. colleague talked about our ability to keep sending troops in and how they are undernourished and what the troops do not have. Has my hon. friend across the way a sense of dignity to say that we must act and act in peace without sending bombs in, but get the people back to the negotiating table, or has he forgotten that part of history too?