Louanne Learning
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Musta been a hell of a break-up.Howe fled the memory of an unhappy love affair and sailed for Greece, where he joined the Greek army as a surgeon.[5][9]"
Yeah. Most folks just sob into a beer. This mad lad decided to go amputate legs in a foreign war.Musta been a hell of a break-up.
True. If you want an example of a Victorian who never did anything half-measured or sane, just look at Major-General Charles Stanley Gordon. (In brief, Gordon was a British Army officer, was sent to Sudan with orders to evacuate garrisons, but instead he chose to defend the city of Khartoum, leading to a famous and ultimately fatal siege against the Mahdist forces in 1885).Victorians. They never did anything half-measured, or sane.
Kitchener soon discovered that his exposed mounted forces on his far-right flank were under pressure. He observed, ‘By 6.30 am the Egyptian Cavalry, which had been driven in, took up a position with the Horse Artillery, Camel Corps, and four Maxims on the Kerreri ridge’. Before the Anglo-Egyptian zareba the enemy were greeted by rifles, machine guns, artillery and howitzers. It was killing on an industrial scale and the Dervishes did not stand a chance. Kitchener’s British, Egyptian and Sudanese infantry opened fire with section volleys at 2,000 yards and stopped the Dervishes at 500 yards. The fire was such that the riflemen became deafened by the din and almost blinded by the resulting smoke billowing over their ranks. ‘Rifles grew red-hot; the soldiers seized them by the slings and dragged them back to the reserve to change for cool ones,’ adds Steevens. ‘It was not a battle, but an execution.’ Churchill’s ears may have detected the different rates of fire by the infantry. The British were equipped with the bolt-action magazine-fed Lee-Metford rifle, while the Egyptians and Sudanese were armed with the much older single-shot breechloading Martini-Henry rifle. The latter was a weapon he had handled as a school boy at Harrow. Lacking a magazine, the Martini had a much slower rate of fire. The Dervishes with their ancient rifles and homemade ammunition, supported by their swordsmen and spearmen, struggled to respond to the storm of searing metal. Further slaughter became a pointless task. ‘Cease fire please!’ Kitchener ordered one British regiment. ‘Cease fire! What a dreadful waste of ammunition!’
What police department allows use of dum-dum bullets?A final curious point: dum-dum bullets are banned in war, but can still be used for hunting and by police departments.
To be honest, I don't know. I was simply quoting the wikipedia article about them, which in turn was quoting a 2012 paper from the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers Institute in Newtown, CT.What police department allows use of dum-dum bullets?
Care to elaborate?And therein lies the reason why consulting Wikipedia for reliable information is a problem.
Care to elaborate?
Sorry, I thought you'd a specific point on the topic. Yeah, skepticism with wiki and any other source is advisable and increasingly so with the application of AI.Not particularly. Suffice it to say it's not peer-reviewed research.
And therein lies the reason why consulting Wikipedia for reliable information is a problem.
I'd gotten into a "discussion" with someone either on the old WF or on the .com counterpart. I used a wikipedia article as a source in trying to make my point.Sorry, I thought you'd a specific point on the topic. Yeah, skepticism with wiki and any other source is advisable and increasingly so with the application of AI.
Yep....any rando can just edit a wikipedia page or even make one.
Non-controversial subjects featured on wiki are just as likely to contain misinformation as controversial ones when they are addressed by people who haven't done their research. If someone wrote that the Teapot Dome Scandal took place in Sweetwater County, Wyoming during Harding's administration would you really just accept that bit of misinformation because surely no one would have any reason to get the location wrong? If I wrote that the spout of Teapot Dome was blown off during a rare high altitude tornado in 1978, would you believe that because you read it on the internet?
It's one thing to begin a research project by checking out documents mentioned in the footnotes, but treating Wiki like a primary source? Nope.
It was a corruption scandal, all right, but Teapot Dome Oilfield itself is in Natrona County, WY, about 25 or 30 miles north of where I'm sitting right now. Teapot Rock is a little closer, and looks nothing like a teapot anymore. THIS appears to be a well-researched article, if you're really interested.I don't know enough about the Teapot Dome Scandal to comment on where it took place, but I know it was a major corruption scandal in the mid-1920s, so I'd imagine it took place in Washington? Please correct me if I'm wrong.![]()