OldKingCanary
OldKingCanary t1_jcse6ef wrote
Reply to comment by Xendrus in TIL that in WW2, a Marine Corps Corsair pilot used his propeller to chew off the tail of an enemy aircraft after his guns jammed, while under fire from the enemy plane's tailgunner. The enemy plane crashed but the Corsair pilot made it back to base, receiving the Navy Cross for his actions. by hipster_deckard
This happens all. the. time. It's been a very common thing with movies based on real live events. Real life doesn't have to follow storytelling rules and the stories are often seen as bullshit by viewers because no one bothers to check.
OldKingCanary t1_jb514fh wrote
Reply to comment by ThePlanetBroke in Humans Started Riding Horses 5,000 Years Ago, New Evidence Suggests by geoxol
Well we see when horses did come around the culture that first domesticated them basically took over most of the damn world. Like a proto-mongol empire, the yavanna people swept over much of Asia and all of Europe and took over the leadership roles in the civilizations they conquered. That's why Indo European languages and customs are so absurdly wide spread
OldKingCanary t1_jb50rav wrote
Reply to comment by cquinn5 in Humans Started Riding Horses 5,000 Years Ago, New Evidence Suggests by geoxol
I think that may have more to do with how horses are used as domesticated animals. They're like dogs in that they need to understand commands and like dogs the survival of their human depends on the animal so the animals were likely bred to be social and able to take ques. Also a huge thing with horses is getting them to be less excitable and willing to do whatever the human tells them to do. Horses do NOT naturally ride into battle, but they can with the right training and condition.
Basically they're not like farm animals who exist to mostly do simple work or for food. Horses needed to understand complex commands so they were bred to be able to read humans extremely well. Way more so than say a cow or sheep.
OldKingCanary t1_ja2s77d wrote
Reply to comment by anon10122333 in Why the development of artificial general intelligence could be the most dangerous new arms race since nuclear weapons by jamesj
Lol AI instantly eats the rich
OldKingCanary t1_j9rho4x wrote
Reply to comment by TheCloudFestival in TIL that in 1554 Elizabeth Crofts hid in a wall on Aldersgate Street, where she pretended to be a heavenly voice. Reputedly 17,000 people came to listen to her give out anti-Catholic propaganda. by Kurma-the-Turtle
There's a lot of hints that he was also inspired by the local Buddhist "missionaries" (not really but kinda cultural ones) that had been sent by King Asoka a bit over as hundred years before he lived. They were cultural ambassadors in a way.
OldKingCanary t1_jcxitae wrote
Reply to comment by Baguirre1 in TIL: The Government of Canada has an office that creates coats of arms for Canadian citizens, and that all Canadian Citizens may apply to the Governor General for a coat of arms and even an officially-recognized personal flag by ryguy_1
I was sure you were full of it but supposedly I do have one. Can't tell if I'm actually related to that branch or if it's just the crest of the city with the same name though.