Well I fell a lot of us are more friends with Mexico despite the racism at the borders, us citizens actually like south of the border for countless reasons compared to the less freedoms and regulation laws and banned rights/privileges in Canada
@@mikeohawk95 we are not friends we are allies and that it we took land by force from them and we have Texas remember you USA history we are only allies
Well car flipping Randy and his Compadres are pretty bad at swimming through entire oceans. But tentacle boy over here, he's content living a life of pranking fishermen.
I mean, with just assault rifles, night goggles, grenades, tanks, etc, vs the kraken the size of a whole city, the keeper of the virtual world (this world) and the people who adapted to Ohio, and the fact that you can't even escape Ohio.
@@RobloxCabbage22115bro be referencing a fictional event from a horror strategy game about a crazed founder of a Pizzaria killing kids and stuffing their corpses into animatronics-
There are a few significant U.S. Military assets in Ohio such as Wright-Patterson Airbase and the Cleveland Coastguard Base and numerous Reserve and Guard posts for all the branches throughout the state. There is significant industry which could convert to weapons production (if it isn’t already in weapons production to some capacity which many companies in Ohio are) as well as significant agriculture which would help feed troops and non-combatants. There are many veterans living in Ohio as well as very proficient hunters. Also, Ohio has the Great Lake border to the North, the Appalachian Mountains along the Eastern border, the relatively strategically significant Ohio River along the Southern border and a whole bunch of corn-fed Hoosiers to the West; borders would be relatively easy for friendly forces to fall back and regroup and reengage from Ohio but those same borders would be relatively if not significantly difficult to penetrate by enemy forces. I don’t take this meme (or any really) seriously but to entirely disregard Ohio in a situation like that would be a serious strategic mistake in my opinion.
P.S. I’m pretty sure areas of Ohio are likely to be in the first echelon of strikes on the U.S.A. by potential adversaries such as China, Russian Federation, etc… Which of course would almost certainly trigger a “Launch on Warning” for whoever the President of the U.S.A. might be at the time and then most likely result in a “Mutually Assured Destruction” scenario for everyone.
@@johndeer8191: Wasn’t being serious. I’m a retired AF officer, so I’ve taken classes at WPAFB. Still, they’re primarily a logistics hub, so yes, we’d be good in that respect, but offensively mute.
@@johndeer8191 : WPAFB is not an offensive, but research & development facility. But that can change in the time it takes to land aircraft. The base is a secondary hub (with Maxwell AFB) for three AF1's - which stage every week for a few days. Ohio can be fiercely libtard, but also fiercely patriotic. Love the take on this meme🙂
The best part is when I was just watching this and thought it was a normal trend until ohio comes and mexico and canada are like oh no we forgot ohio “down in ohio swag like ohio” 😂
Vast swathes of it was never “your” land anyway though. Modern day AZ, NM, and most of Texas was controlled by Navajo, Apache and Comanche tribes, who constantly raided INTO Mexico. Comanche were especially brutal to Mexicans.
@Raka-n3t Actually it was. If we're going by your logic most of the midwest and eastern seaboard didn't belong to Britain or the U.S. since there were tribes living there already. In fact some report that indigenous civilizations from Tennessee to Georgia were quite large and sophisticated. Unlike the decentralized British colonies though, what is today the U.S. southwest was part of the viceroyalty of New Spain from California to parts of Wyoming down south to Central America up to near Panama. And the capital of New Spain, Mexico City was highly centralized meaning all of those territories were under their domain. This isn't theory, these were the legitimate borders of New Spain, and were as well, minus Central America (which broke off to become independent countries immediately after the independence wars) the borders of an independent Mexico. In fact at one point Mexico City oversaw and administered territory claimed and explored by Spain from Alaska to Florida and Louisiana. And oversaw the capitancy general of Cuba, the Philippines, Formosa (Taiwan), and trade and conquest in east Asia for Spain. Also Spain had initiated sending settler colonists from Central Mexico along the Camino Real (Royal Road), which originated in Mexico City, and went up north through several established cities and towns up to New Mexico (Santa Fe) and Texas. That trend didn't stop after independence as the Mexican government kept sending colonist settlers north to Texas and New Mexico and California after independence from Spain. Note that the borders of New Spain were also recognized by treaties with France Britain, etc. or by wars. When Napoleon invaded Spain, capturing the king, Mexico chose to become independent and after it did, those same boundaries at the time (California to Colorado to Texas) minus Central America remained in place, all centrally controlled by the government seat in Mexico City.