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Contestants in this elimination style competition face
cinematic martial arts challenges of increasing difficulty,
from one on one battles to taking down the Crazy 88.
Opponents, who wear sensors to accurately detect disabling
hits use practice equipment and are drawn from the pool of
applicants
Linacre School of Defence
http://www.sirwilliamhope.org/ For [DIYMatt] [pocmloc, Sep 12 2012]
No tank charge?
http://www.guardian...lish-cavalry-charge [normzone, Sep 12 2012]
Pedant moment - cavalry vs calvary
http://wiki.answers...cavalry_and_calvary I had to learn this one the hard way myself..."Calvary is the name of a place, the hill where Christ was said to be crucified. Cavalry is a term used to describe horse-mounted soldiers" [normzone, Sep 12 2012]
Gethsemane
http://www.poetryfo...ion.org/poem/176148 Rudyard Kipling [8th of 7, Sep 12 2012]
US Cavalry Scouts
https://en.wikipedi...into_Pozorrubio.jpg There was still quite a lot of cavalry around duing WWII. The last cavalry charge by the US Army was as late as 1942 during the battle of Bataan. [DrBob, Sep 13 2012]
Polish Cavalry
http://www.polamjou...h/cavalry_myth.html Not quite as suicidal as they have been portrayed. [DrBob, Sep 13 2012]
'Flashman at the Charge' by George MacDonald Fraser
http://www.amazon.c...d=1347622407&sr=8-1 [DrBob, Sep 14 2012]
The SCA
http://en.wikipedia...reative_Anachronism [CraigD, Sep 14 2012]
Dagorhir
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagorhir [CraigD, Sep 14 2012]
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Annotation:
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Does anybody know the history of why fencing is a
[legitimate] sport but sword fighting isn't? Fighting with
actual, blunt swords sounds like a lot more fun. When
you're a kid the adults will come and stop you from putting
an eye out, and when you're an adult nobody else seems to
want to swordfight. What's up with that? </rant> |
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// Fighting with actual, blunt swords sounds
like a lot more fun // |
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In fact, blunt swords aare about as far from
fun as it's possible to get. |
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Cavalry swords do not in fact have a sharp
edge. They are long, heavy, and blunt. If they
were sharp, the blade would cut through tthe
victim and might jam in bone. This could
cause the rider to be unhorsed. |
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Thus the cavaly sabre is designed to inflict
massive crush and impact injuries, but
bounce off so as to remain under the rider's
control. |
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Refreshing to get some serious info 8th of 7th. I could never understand from my knowledge gleaned from movies, why horses were not shot from under the riders
during a cavalry charge. They make much larger targets surely and a cavalry soldier will look pretty sheepish on foot charging from a couple of hundred yards away. |
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I hate bloodless sports. Unless it is my own blood being shed. |
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Infantry weapons- even en masse- are
surprisingly ineffective against a fast-moving
target like a horse. To traverse a rifle and
hold an aim is not easy; rifles are typically
designed for accuracy at longer ranges, the
essence of which is a stable weapon that can
be held very still. |
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The usefulness of cavalry was ended by the
advent of barbed wire and machine guns. |
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//Does anybody know the history of why fencing is a
[legitimate] sport but sword fighting isn't?// |
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It's called kendo, and enjoys a modicum of popularity
in Japan at least. |
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[8th] do you have any evidence for that? When rifles were introduced to warfare the old-fashioned tactic of charging with men or horses resulted in casualty rates like ~9000 killed and ~37000 wounded (plus 3000 dead horses) at the Battle of Gettysburg. |
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// Does anybody know the history of why fencing is a
[legitimate] sport but sword fighting isn't? // |
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Modern fencing (which, as practiced by the SCA,
encompasses three different forms: foil, epeé (sp?), and
saber), has its roots in the middle renaissance, when
gentleman of means no longer found it necessary to resolve
their differences by dueling to the death (because money
and politics are more effective weapons) and began
'dueling for fun'. Like most things that start out serious and
evolve into a game, style and technique gradually became
more important than the need to kill your opponent as
quickly and efficiently as possible. |
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'Real' swordfighting, however, is still alive and well (by this
I mean midieval-Europe battlefield fighting, using
broadswords and stout shields; Kendo is very different, but
no less 'real'). The
SCA uses rattan weapons, but there are semi-underground
groups that fight with 'live' blades: real swords with filed
edges and blunted points. They hurt like a bastard.
Whether the participants use rattan or live steel, real
swordfighting is brutal, unglamorous, and the fights rarely
go on for more than a minute, diminishing the appeal as a
spectator sport (but it sure is fun!). |
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// why horses were not shot from under the riders during
a cavalry charge. // |
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They frequently were, but usually not deliberately. There
was a certain amount of 'gentlemen's honor' involved in
this, but more significant is the fact that horses were a
valuable commodity; if you shoot the horse, all you have is
more tough, bitter meat than you can carry with you or
eat in one sitting, but if you shoot a man off of his horse,
you can then take his horse for yourself. Free horse! |
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// do you have any evidence // |
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The development of the rifled musket increased the effective range of infantry weapons, but not the rate of fire. Springfield-pattern rifles loaded with Minié balls pushed out combat ranges and increased casualties especially when couples with the "mass" tactics employed in warfare up to 1815. The era of "classical" or Napoleonic warfare is generally considered to end at Waterloo (Where the Brits and their allies gave the filthy frogs another right bashing, as usual). |
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But the rate of fire didn't change. Tactics were slow to adapt. In Napoleonic warfare, cavalry fulfilled several roles; as scouts, as a fast mobile reserve, as a flanking force, and as "shock troops". Before the advent of motor vehicles, the horse represented the only method of giving forces cross-country mobility at reasonable speeds. Some mounted troops used horses for mobility, like (originally) dragoons, who dismounted and engaged on foot. |
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The US Civil War is the first modern or "industrial" war, where technological capability and manufacturing capacity began to have a really significant impact. The war started with muskets, mass maneuver and muzzle loading cannon and ended with rail-mounted artillery, machine guns, breechloaders and aerial observation. |
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As [Alt] points out, horses - especially in war - were particularly valuable. And the reluctance of soldiers to kill an animal should not be discounted; after all, the horse itself is not an "enemy". In societies that were still predominantly rural and unmechanized, the perception and value of horses was very different. |
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Many of the equine casualties were probably caused by poor tactics on the part of commanders, and by the growing impact of crew-served weapons, perhaps firing explosive ammunition. |
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In WW1, cavalry was present but rarely able to be deployed effectively. But horses were used as draft animals by all forces in huge numbers, and even in WWII the German army was highly reliant on horse power. |
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A smoothbore musket has a semi-accurate range of about 100m, and a horse can gallop at 40km/h. The musket takes 30 sec to reload, and the horse covers 100m in ten seconds or less. So the infantryman has basically one shot, and before he's reloaded the cavalry are on him.
Push the range out to the 400 or 500m of a rifled musket and he might get two aimed shots, even three. |
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A Vickers or an MG07 can fire up to 600 rounds a minute and keep that up for hours at a time. |
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Cavalry charges are not effective against infantry in prepared positions, but against a formation in the open field they can be devastating ... until the advent of fully automatic weapons, which can deploy a "curtain" of fire which will kill anything, man or beast, that it touches. |
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Thanks to the Poles, we also know for certain that horse
calvary is not effective against tanks. |
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<note: typo left in place for posterity purposes> |
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Obtaining that data was tragically expensive,
however. |
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While there is no substitute for a practical
test, it is not unreasonable to suggest that the
relevant commanders should have
considered their tactics in the light of
evidence available some twenty years
previously. |
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[Alterother], are you certain you don't mean "cavalry" ? (link) |
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What a dreadful faux pas. I'm rather disappointed that it
was not met with more ridicule. |
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I've read two separate anecdotal accounts, one 2nd-hand
and one 1st-hand-by-proxy, stating that the Polish cavalry
commanders believed the German tanks to be wooden
mock-ups mounted on truck chassis. Even if it is true, I
can't imagine how they thought it would make a
difference. |
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[norm], considering the historic implications
of" Calvary" in relation to suffering nobly
endured, [Alt] may well be correct. |
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Was there a specific battle responsible for causing the demise of Cavalry units and were they more or less universally disbanded overnight? |
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Not really. Tradititionalists stuck with horse cavalry long
after the advent of mechanized warfare made it woefully
obsolete. In addition to the aforementioned suicidal charge
of the Polish cavalry unit against a German Panzer
formation in '39 (which is officially regarded as apocryphal
but is mentioned in so many memoirs and first-hand
accounts that it is most likely true to some degree), the
United States Army, widely considered to have been the
most-mechanized mechanized military service of WWII,
only traded in their horses for armored cars, trucks, and
half-tracks in
1938-'41. Many former mounted-cav soldiers, especially
those in recon units, used every excuse they could think of
to saddle up when they found horses on the battlefield. |
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Mounted cavalry units are still around today, although they
are strictly for ceremonial purposes. Modern cavalry
troopers ride around the battlefield in helicopters and
armored personnel carriers, although many still bear the
image of a horse on their unit insignia. |
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In 1914, during the retreat from Mons- right
at the start of the war- the action at Néry
showed the vulnerability of cavalry in
modern warfare. |
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Both sides maintained large forces of cavalry
throughout the war, but circumstances in
which they could be used in their intended
role of exploitation of a breakthrough
occurred very rarely; only during the retreat
of the German army in late 1918 did Allied
cavalry forces have an opportunity to make
themselves useful. |
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Following the war, many cavalry regements
were converted to armoured units, or into
"mechanised cavalry" using armoured cars to
allow them to act as scouts. |
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Soviet forces used ponies during several
winter campaigns to provide superior
mobility to their troops, but the men would
dismount short of the FEBA and move into
contact on foot or skis. |
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WWI & WWII marked not only the end for mounted cavalry,
but also the relegation of horses from the front lines to the
baggage train. The US Army used horses for transport
purposes as late as the Korean War, though not widely. |
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During the WW2 the Germans built a GHQ Officer's Mess with stables attached for around six horses. This was in the Suez Canal Zone, presumably for the top brass. I would imagine the horses would have been for recreational purposes rather than military. |
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//I would imagine the horses would have been for
recreational purposes rather than military.// |
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Well, the battlefield can get /so/ lonely at night. |
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The scottish officers would have preferred sheep. |
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Believe T. E. Lawrence favoured a camel hump. |
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// the Germans built a GHQ
in the Suez
Canal Zone. // |
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Can you cite a source for that? There's a
suubstantial body of evidence that indicates
that they didn't get quite that far East
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I was attached to this particular Officers Mess in '54. It was common knowledge the three GHQ Officer's Messes were constructed by the German military. |
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//I was attached to this particular Officers Mess //
Ah, yes. Easily done if you aren't used to using a hammer & nails on a regular basis. Putting up a notice or something were you? |
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// Germans built a GHQ Officer's Mess with stables
attached for around six horses. // |
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I too question the geographical veracity of this statement,
given that the English held eastern Egypt as tenaciously as
they have since held the notion that Monty was a brilliant
tactician and not simply a bumbling, self-aggrandizing
opportunist, but I also posit that, given the nature of the
Afrika Korps' supply difficulties, this was not a stable but
was in fact an open-air meat locker. |
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"Free French soldiers participated in the Allied North African campaign, in Libya and Egypt." |
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Well, that would explain it ... |
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"Many former mounted-cav soldiers, especially those in recon units, used every excuse they could think of to saddle up when they found horses on the battlefield." |
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Having owned several horses and been foolish enough to train a wild mustang, I can understand that. |
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Having had to pay for keeping just one horse,
we can not. |
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Having been stepped on by a horse, I'm leaning towards barbequus. |
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No Dr. Bob. No Hammers or nails, I trained as an indentured apprentice chef at a London Hotel for five years and was then called upon by Her Majesty to unleash my gut wrenching, sewer blocking skills on unsuspecting British Officers in the Canal Zone. Claims I was a mass murderer were never proved. The Officer's toilet block however enjoyed a prolonged rise in popularity during my period of duty. I neither asked for or sought written confirmation the buildings had been German at the time, as you don't, taking instead the word of senior ranks as Gospel. The stable block was, however, real, with the rear wall providing the opportunity for a blessed relief on many an occasion for lads returning from a night on the town. I kid you not. |
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Ah
it is indeed possible that the
establishment was constructed by German
POWs. |
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Of this I know not, Suffice to say it was soundly constructed using permanent materials. Now on a different tac. I recently viewed a screening of The Charge Of The Light Brigade, with Errol Flynn, where he led a troop and galloped into the fray from what I suspect would have been be a goodly distance and wondered how far it would be between Balaclava and the then Indian border. Mayhap you are able to enlighten me? |
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You should read 'Flashman at the Charge' (by George MacDonald Fraser), wherein our hero makes exactly that journey. |
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Thank you for that, I shall endeavor to do so. |
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linky. Enjoy! Your life will never be quite the same again. |
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// Does anybody know the history of why fencing
is a [legitimate] sport but sword fighting isn't? //
Though not an Olympic, pro, nor School (at least
any I've seen) sanctioned sport, I've had great fun
having pretty serious sword fights, one-on-one,
team melee, and big (200+) "wars", in 2 different
club/societies: the SCA, where the swords etc are
thick and blunt but hard, so helmets and armor
are required, and Dagorhir (see links), where the
swords etc. are padded, so they aren't. If this
sounds like fun, go and watch/join in - both
groups are pretty widespread in N. America, and
usually a friendly, welcoming lot. |
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Craig D.
Sounds like fun. I dare say it would attract a certain following. For me though, the prospect of getting continually thwacked with a missile wielded by a stranger of questionable self restraint has about as much appeal as being hit by a lynch pin aimed squarely at the middle of my forehead with a force to cause what little brain I possess to
ooze from each ear. |
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// Having been stepped on by a horse, I'm leaning towards barbecues.//
Make sure you cut the head and tail off and wipe it's bum first. |
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As incontrovertible proof of the certifiable
insanity of horse owners, not only do they
engage in the highly dubious activity of
keeping a half-tonne block of muscle
practically as a domestic pet, they then
proceed to weaponize it by nailing bloody
great lumps of steel to its feet. |
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Owning a horse means you commit to daily care of a high maintenance animal which will over its lifespan require the same of you as the humans in your life. Nothing insane about people who shoulder all that, better than people who only stable an X Box. |
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Humans don't get ill if you just look at them
and then require stupefyingly expensive visits
from the vet. Humans don't need the farrier
every 6 weeks. Humans don't require huge
amounts of feed lugging in, and the resultant
steaming heaps of manure carted away. At 5
years old, many humans are capable of
washing themselves, feeding themselves,
dressing themselves. Horses are totally
dependant throughout their lives. |
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As companion animals, dogs are infinitely
superior. As transport, they are slow,
hideously uncomfortable, and ridiculously
expensive. As a means of converting hard-
earned cash into bugger all, they are
unsurpassed. |
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There is, however, a place for the horse in the
modern world, and it's inside a ring-pull tin
labelled "Meaty chunks in jelly". |
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Horse lovers are not insane in the accepted
sense of the word. It's just that inside their
tiny branes, instead of "common sense" they
have a little sign that says "Horses. What a
good idea". |
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The (very basic) cost of humans over a lifespan is paid for either weekly or monthly via your paycheck. Add to that the variable and often significant oncosts which occur in general living and the detrimental picture you're trying to paint, 8th of 7, becomes rather different. By all means have your prejudices but support them with all the facts. |
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//dogs are infinitely superior. As transport, they are slow, hideously uncomfortable, and ridiculously expensive// |
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I think we can all agree with the second and third of the four points raised above, anyway. |
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All very true observations. In my experience, with few exceptions, it is the female of our species who is the villain of the piece, infusing dreams of owning a house on a ten acre block of land on unsuspecting hubby during the pre marriage ritual.
That achieved, the Wiley creature embarks on reading aloud ads for horses from the morning newspaper at the breakfast table. Ponies for children, the best tackle,riding habit, latest upmarket horse float and towing vehicle follow, with weekend relaxation a forgotten dream for the next ten years as trips to pony clubs and gymkhanas take precedence. |
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Strange how the bitterness and resentment
never fades
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//Crouching Trellis, Hidden Haha// [marked-for-tagline] |
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Interesting to note that of the many varied submissions on the subject, little information has been offered on the scimitar sword about whether they were considered superior or inferior to the saber in battle. |
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I read somewhere that scimitars were curved to avoid the whole 'sticking in bone while riding without having to sacrifice sharpness' angle... and that katanas curve from the folding process when making the blade. |
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I don't know for certain if either of those statements are true. |
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Not another attempt at a logical fallacy... |
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Did I end my first attempt? |
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Hey, hey ! We were here first ! There's a
queue, you know. Take a numbered ticket
and stand in line like everyone else
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Churchill is said to have coined Queuetopia (1950), to describe Britain under Labour or Socialist rule. |
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He let's me call him Winston. Well, he doesn't stop me from calling him Winston anyway. |
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Scimitars and katanas are both curved to maximize the
length of the cutting edge, due to the sweeping, fluid
slashing style for which they are designed. Straight-edged
swords are either designed for a brutal perpendicular
hacking attack (midieval broadsword) or for straight, quick
thrusting (the Roman gladius). Think of the difference
between slicing a tomato and chopping through a side of
beef. They are weapons with different intended
applications, both equally deadly. |
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What if you want to slice a beef tomato ? |
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