The Last to Comment Wins

Anonjohn20

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allied soldiers who participated in WW2.
WW2 Soviets were pretty legendary in their unceasing meat waves. I still wouldn't call them invincible for that. Canada mastered war crimes. The US proved that money can solve almost anything with their near unlimited production.
 

ElijahRyne

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WW2 Soviets were pretty legendary in their unceasing meat waves. I still wouldn't call them invincible for that. Canada mastered war crimes. The US proved that money can solve almost anything with their near unlimited production.
The Germans murdered 4.5 - 7.5 million Soviet Civilians during their occupation. It makes since as to why the Soviet reaction, both in political and civilian environments, was so unceasing.
 

Anonjohn20

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The Germans murdered 4.5 - 7.5 million Soviet Civilians during their occupation. It makes since as to why the Soviet reaction, both in political and civilian environments, was so unceasing.
Sure, but with less corruption, they could have used tactics and strategy rather than, "Let's make all our men charge until the enemy runs out of bullets."
 

ElijahRyne

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Sure, but with less corruption, they could have used tactics and strategy rather than, "Let's make all our men charge until the enemy runs out of bullets."
Hard to do that when most military leaders died before and during the defense and occupation, while also being under supplied.
 

Tempokai

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At the beginning—not of time itself, mind you, but close enough to sound impressive—there was Socrates: a wiry gadfly with a talent for irritating the powerful. Writing? Pfft, not his style. Why jot things down when you could relentlessly badger locals with unanswerable questions? “What is justice?” he’d pester, again and again, until someone either stormed off or spiraled into philosophical despair. He called it “dialectic”; everyone else likely called it “insufferable.”
Eventually, the powers that be had their fill of this ambulatory migraine. Accused of corrupting the youth, Socrates was sentenced to death by hemlock. True to form (and perhaps a flair for drama), he drank the poison, staying loyal to his principles—or just really committed to his bit. Imagine dying for being that guy who won’t stop questioning. Tragic? Sure. Inevitable? Definitely.
Thus, the gadfly planted the seed of Western philosophy, but seeds need tending. Enter Plato, Socrates’ golden boy and the guy who thought, You know what people want? More Socratic dialogues—on paper! Plato built on his mentor’s legacy, founding the Academy, the original philosophical think tank. There, big questions flourished: “What is the meaning of life?” and “Can we make Socrates posthumously tolerable?”
One standout student was Aristotle, who took Plato’s theoretical noodling and turned it into practical frameworks. Abstract metaphors about ideal forms? Not for him. Aristotle wanted answers, not endless riddles. So, he became the godfather of rhetoric, formalizing the art of persuasion for anyone with an argument—or a grift.

Aristotle broke rhetoric into three pillars: ethos (credibility), pathos (emotion), and logos (logic)—because philosophy is nothing if not better in bullet points. Together, these tools became the foundation for winning debates, crafting persuasive speeches, or just selling snake oil with a bit more finesse.

Socrates started the noise, Plato amplified it, and Aristotle made it marketable. The rest, as they say, is philosophy.
 

Anonjohn20

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At the beginning—not of time itself, mind you, but close enough to sound impressive—there was Socrates: a wiry gadfly with a talent for irritating the powerful. Writing? Pfft, not his style. Why jot things down when you could relentlessly badger locals with unanswerable questions? “What is justice?” he’d pester, again and again, until someone either stormed off or spiraled into philosophical despair. He called it “dialectic”; everyone else likely called it “insufferable.”
Eventually, the powers that be had their fill of this ambulatory migraine. Accused of corrupting the youth, Socrates was sentenced to death by hemlock. True to form (and perhaps a flair for drama), he drank the poison, staying loyal to his principles—or just really committed to his bit. Imagine dying for being that guy who won’t stop questioning. Tragic? Sure. Inevitable? Definitely.
Thus, the gadfly planted the seed of Western philosophy, but seeds need tending. Enter Plato, Socrates’ golden boy and the guy who thought, You know what people want? More Socratic dialogues—on paper! Plato built on his mentor’s legacy, founding the Academy, the original philosophical think tank. There, big questions flourished: “What is the meaning of life?” and “Can we make Socrates posthumously tolerable?”
One standout student was Aristotle, who took Plato’s theoretical noodling and turned it into practical frameworks. Abstract metaphors about ideal forms? Not for him. Aristotle wanted answers, not endless riddles. So, he became the godfather of rhetoric, formalizing the art of persuasion for anyone with an argument—or a grift.

Aristotle broke rhetoric into three pillars: ethos (credibility), pathos (emotion), and logos (logic)—because philosophy is nothing if not better in bullet points. Together, these tools became the foundation for winning debates, crafting persuasive speeches, or just selling snake oil with a bit more finesse.

Socrates started the noise, Plato amplified it, and Aristotle made it marketable. The rest, as they say, is philosophy.
Another winner! 10/10
 
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