Q: Why did the psychology major cross the road?Fat Cat wrote:Stick to your simplified reality. Life outside of the fishbowl would be overwhelming for a delicate person like you.
A: To pick up 3 credits. And he got 3 more going back.
Moderator: Dux
Apparently you can at least be something in between- from the article:Fat Cat wrote:Then what is its use? Can I be a sheepwolf?
I would disagree a bit. The British soldier is not so much a product of British culture as much as he is a product of the British military's culture.Jack wrote:The Christian thing far from falls apart, the Falklands proves only that Brits love to kill and are a savage culture. Long before the Falklands the Brits were well known as hearty, exuberant killers. History supports this view.
Interestingly, their air arm, particularly their naval air arm, was very professional and top notch. We had Argentine exchange pilots fly with us in our training command (early 90s), and I got to know a few of them. If they had had a few more Exocets and better fusing for their dumb bombs, things could have turned out differently.Batboy2/75 wrote:The main reason that Argentinia got their asses handed to them is that Britain's army was a modern professional Army with a leadership that was mostly developed on merit. Argentinia's Army was the product of a 2nd world dictatorship and with a leadership built upon patronage and connections.
BB2/75
I'm in the middle of the first book, Quicksilver, right now based on the recommendation of one of our denizens (Crusty perhaps?). I'm not sure what I'm reading or why, yet it's keeping my interest as a story and with tidbits of historical insight into a time about which I know very little.Hagbard Celine wrote:Baroque Cycle
finished this up over the weekend, great trilogy. Stephenson gave a good shake at how newton, leibniz etc may have acted and even thought. Not too shabs. Lots of fun, with a pretty reasonable level of "thinking" involved for a mass market recreational book.
Mao wrote:Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party
Yeah, the first book you scratch your head alot, then you get into it.DrDonkeyLove wrote:I'm in the middle of the first book, Quicksilver, right now based on the recommendation of one of our denizens (Crusty perhaps?). I'm not sure what I'm reading or why, yet it's keeping my interest as a story and with tidbits of historical insight into a time about which I know very little.Hagbard Celine wrote:Baroque Cycle
finished this up over the weekend, great trilogy. Stephenson gave a good shake at how newton, leibniz etc may have acted and even thought. Not too shabs. Lots of fun, with a pretty reasonable level of "thinking" involved for a mass market recreational book.
Jack,Jack wrote:Just went and purchased this book this evening, am on page 20 or so. What a story.steamboatwillie wrote:The Long Walk by Slavomir Rawicz
After being totally brutalized by the Soviets and packed off to Siberia in 1941, this guy walked from a gulag several hundred miles north of Lake Baikal, south through Mongolia, etc., and ultimately to India.
I've changed my mind. The idea behind the book is thought provoking. The book itself offers very little except some random ramblings.Skinny wrote:Fooled by Randomness. The hidden Role of Chance in the Markets and Life. By Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
Great shit.
Whatever kind of fighter you are (markets, cage, ring, business, whatever) you should read that book to get the perspective right.
If you da bitch you can skip it.
I'm getting hooked.Hagbard Celine wrote:Yeah, the first book you scratch your head alot, then you get into it.DrDonkeyLove wrote:I'm in the middle of the first book, Quicksilver, right now based on the recommendation of one of our denizens (Crusty perhaps?). I'm not sure what I'm reading or why, yet it's keeping my interest as a story and with tidbits of historical insight into a time about which I know very little.Hagbard Celine wrote:Baroque Cycle
finished this up over the weekend, great trilogy. Stephenson gave a good shake at how newton, leibniz etc may have acted and even thought. Not too shabs. Lots of fun, with a pretty reasonable level of "thinking" involved for a mass market recreational book.
ab g-d wrote:I can't understand how, given the training they did, the cavemen beat the dinosaurs.
No shit? Huh.BeefHeart wrote: In the last two weeks I've read WWZ and the Long Walk. WWZ is a hoot, Max is after all Mel's son..
Hmmm, further discussion eh. I wonder if this is a secret to getting a woman jump started. It's got to be better than "wanna bang".nafod wrote:You missed the obviously. This is wife porn...the fact that she read it first is about 90% of the pleasure of the whole experience. I find the books to be good jumping-off points for further discussion.Fat Cat wrote:Meh. Porn is easier.
Almost 3,000 pages of novel! It defies classification as you and others have stated but it was worth the effort and I learned a lot. I got Cryptonomicon in the buy two get one free section at B&N and will get to it sometime soon. Good recommendation.BeefHeart wrote:I was the Stephenson recommender: don't forget Cryptonomicon published before the Baroque cycle, but subsequent in continuity.
In the last two weeks I've read WWZ and the Long Walk. WWZ is a hoot, Max is after all Mel's son.
As for the Long Walk, I don't have seeahill's world traveler knowledges but I don't know that Rawicz needs debunked. I believe it is something like Castaneda's first book-- I think Rawicz believed it happened that way, and that, in itself, makes it wothwhile.
Mao wrote:Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party