"Champ, creating your own Heavenly Kingdom is simple. All you've gotta do is fail the civil service examinations a few times, say you're the brother of Jesus sent by God to reform China, and then start the most destructive rebellion in Chinese history. Can't get any simpler than that, Champ."
bump for spicy meme
Bumperonie, neighborino!
Literally a hero, can you imagine how many more chinks there would be if he hadn't done what he did?
Were the Trojans a different people from the Greeks?
Did they look different?
All illustrations paint them as looking almost identical to the Greeks, but modern Turks are a lot more swarthy.
Come to think of it I'm not even sure if the Trojans spoke the same language.
ILIOTES WERE RACIALLY ARYANID, CULTURALLY ARYAN —UNTIL THEY WERE CONQUERED BY TURANIANS FROM THE EAST—, AND SPOKE "LUWIAN".
AKHAIANS WERE RACIALLY CROMAGNONEADERTHALID (PELASGIANS/MARITIME TURANIANS), CULTURALLY TURANIAN, AND SPOKE "MYKENAIAN".
>>3323543
>turks
>trojans
>>3323563
So you're saying that Trojans looked like modern Iranians then?
Hello Anons, do you guys have free pdfs of Historical spear/pole arm techniques? Oriental or Occidental it doesn't matter.
I'm a cheap goy scum so I don't have the money to buy translations.
"Newly discovered human-like footprints from Crete may put the established narrative of early human evolution to the test. The footprints are approximately 5.7 million years old and were made at a time when previous research puts our ancestors in Africa -- with ape-like feet."
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/08/170831134221.htm
Maybe the white mans ancestor weren't black or African after all? Are there more evidence like this? Has it been hidden on purpose?
b-but we wuz first humanz n shiet
>>3323519
keyword: may
This fucking dumb board...
>>3323525
Dumb /pol/acks ruin this board.
The weirdest thing about these foot prints is their age.
>Maybe the white mans ancestor weren't black or African after all?
You know we are not talking about Homo sapiens here? Or even about the genus Homo?
Come on anon, drink with us. Your react?
pull dick out
>ywn drink and gamble with Vietnamese farmer-militia
>ywn have loads of port with Portuguese navy privates
>ywn drink whiskey with your British father-in-law
>how about you drink fragmentation, you fucking frogs?
*throws grenade*
*puts on sunglasses*
*cool-ly turns 360 degrees and moonwalks*
>desert warfare
>mountain warfare
>plains warfare
>jungle warfare
>Arctic warfare
>naval warfare
>Urban warfare
>rural warfare
>all shit
Why does literature about war always emphasize about how brutal the environs are and is there any kind of place that is relatively easy to conduct war in?
>>3323413
ummm plateau and forest warfare
>>3323413
Brainlet can't even mathematically factorise.
It's not that environs are brutal - it's that war ruins everything. War by its nature makes everything difficult.
>>3323413
Who says rural warfare is shit?
Rural, moderate climate. But even then, much of WWI was fought here (northeast France and Belgium).
Post historical crossover episodes
>>3322837
What kinds of things did the first universities teach? Was it mostly all math, language (Latin/Sanskrit/Greek), and ancient history/myth?
Which university is the oldest on earth: University of Bologna in Italy, founded in 1088, or Nalanda University in India, supposedly founded in 500?
How would the world today be like if education/universities weren't burned down by religious fanatics?
i.e., The Nalanda University was burned down around the late 1100s because it didn't have a copy of the Quoran in the library.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/oldest-university-on-earth-is-reborn-after-800-years-2042518.html#gallery
and also, the Library of Alexandria was burned down by the Christians (I think).
>>3322621
>What kinds of things did the first universities teach
Liberal arts, law, theology, medicine.
>Which university is the oldest on earth
Bologna is the first proper university in the modern sense of term. The concept of university itself comes from the Western tradition.
>How would the world today be like if education/universities weren't burned down by religious fanatics
We'd know of more ancient scriptures and authors than we do now. Nothing drastic probably, as Aristotelian thought would most likely still dominate the West.
>What kinds of things did the first universities teach?
Medicine, Law, Theology
> Was it mostly all math, language (Latin/Sanskrit/Greek), and ancient history/myth?
no
>Which university is the oldest on earth: University of Bologna in Italy, founded in 1088, or Nalanda University in India, supposedly founded in 500?
>Which one is the oldest, the oldest one or a newer one?
>How would the world today be like if education/universities weren't burned down by religious fanatics?
less uneducated edgelords shitting up the board everytime someone bothers visiting
>>3322621
>How would the world today be like if education/universities weren't burned down by religious fanatics?
No such thing occurred. Garbage meme pagan texts explaining how to most properly sacrifice a goat accused of homosexuality is not something anybody is missing
>Istanbul will never, ever be under Gr*ek, or Christian hands again.
Feels good man.
reminder that stalin did nothing wrong, the kulaks had it coming, most of the people sent to the gulags were violent criminals, stalin took a broken, backwards country and turned it into an industrial nuclear superpower, and that communism only collapsed because of cia interference
Kulaks were murdered through starvation, taking food from them, whereas in most famines there is a lack of food due to causes outside of anyone's control, therefore Holodomor was an intentionally orchestrated genocide, obviously to suppress Ukrainian nationalism.
Most violent criminals were recruited by the NKVD, most people sent to gulags were political prisoners.
Russia was in the process off modernization before ww1 and even had a protodemocratic parliament, the Duma. Nicky, for all his flaws, believed a government like that of his relatives was inevitable and would not have stopped it. Communism collapsed because it is an inherently flawed ideology that wrongly demonizes essential economic freedoms.
>>3323316
nice try, cia shill
>>3323325
The cia lie all the time just like Cambodia!
Except when they didn't
Or that time about Korea!
except it was also true
Or that time they lied about south africa!
ect.ect.ect.
How far back do Indian-Russian relations go? How did they start? Are there any modern influences on each other?
>>3322448
Pretty much ever since the islamic (even though theres nothing islamic about it) revolution (more like communist revolution), russia started paying attention more to iran. then the mass arming of iranians started and anti-israeli hate started, anti-american hate also started.
>>3322448
Britain didn't allow that
>>3322448
>Are there any modern influences on each other?
Some songs are popular in Russia from India, like Parvati Khan's Jimmy Jimmy Aaja Aaja
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAU_pHaSfLU
Also, I believe there's an influence from Ancient Indian dances onto Ukrainian dances
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmsDCmJqfK4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVvs1NO84Gc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xy5QW1aSCzc
Not too sure about the history, but ik there's something about them being together from the coldwar
Who are some good documentary guise to look out for?
Why does a caste system exist in Indian society? Why didn't the Dalits just revolt against the Brahmin and Kshatriya?
>>3323234
Because they're not egalitarians like subhuman westerners.
>>3323234
>Why didn't the Dalits just revolt against the Brahmin and Kshatriya?
Because they really are inferior.
>>3323234
Don't know
Is the principle which prevents a person acquainted in all aspects of a certain role, but without certification of said from any form of institution, from being considered as a potential occupant of said role in the minds of potential recruiters, beneficial or negative from an economic standpoint?
In your opinion is licensure of net benefit or loss to society as a whole? What affect do you believe it has to the individual?
Is there any place for the state enforced licensing of any specific profession?
To clarify, "acquainted in all aspects of a certain role" does not specify strict schooling, as in training received from an institute, but does intend a general competence in a specific field.
I thought of this question after reading some free market economists who are strongly in favour of deregulating (mostly) all industry, and can not think of a benefit to licensure that would or could not be enacted by market forces.
Can you expose the context? What country? What policies? Are you talking about theory or you want examples?