Message from @Trashboat
Discord ID: 505209438286774282
Plebs
>having cell walls at all
>laughs in single cell
The Romans built an Imperium while eating their wheat, barley, wine and olive oil while the Scythians did what exactly?
they had bitchin' chariots
Yeah they had cool horses and bows which was pretty cool tbh
Wish i was a Scythian
@TylerHess That same logic of "logistical effectiveness over quality of life" is actually what mandates the current year (3+) AmeriBurger diet
I mean the ughyurs may have been the original inventors of bifurcated pants
A McDouble is the cheapest nutrition in the history of the earth, balance wise
Doesn't make it good
Chariots were a quaint outdated weapon system that by then were easily countered by javelins and discipline, in fact at Boudicca's last battle they were more of a hindrance than a help.
horse riding led to modern pants development
If anyone is interested in joining the **Identity Evropa Literature Club** server, please DM me. We are planning to get it rolling again here in a few weeks.
Yes!
Details on the server
so every day you wear pants you're actually embracing the horse nomad spirit
What lead to modern sweatpants development?
comfort
Nice
then again it could all just be bullshit.
we don't even really know where the stirrup was invented
and boy howdy was _that_ a big leap forward
<:sad:366743316475281408>
@Salo Saloson @Nemets wasnt the stirrup invented sometime between the Hunnic invasions and the Mongol invasion? I remember hearing stirrups were unknown to Romans and Huns
When I successfully bio-engineer Pteranodons, I'll make sure their skin is teal for peak optics
What's the next book you all will be reading? @CarletonJ
Granted that's an 800 year period
@Reinhard Wolff we are going to start with Generation Identity
For it is short
Nice
It said that it is was created in China @Salo Saloson
I read fiction exclusively.
But it sounds riveting!
>reading
The real project will be starting the debate club and getting our community the tools they need to debate and conquer their opposition
@Trashboat I basically read to you. You best be there boy
😨
well the modern stirrup as we know it is kinda hard to trace, since there is evidence for the "modern" saddle to be in Asia before anywhere else... probably
@Logan
but generally the stirrup first appeared widely in Europe ~700 AD
This stirrup talk makes me wonder why the Ancient Chinese were so prolific in their inventions but somehow along the way they just seem to have like, stopped? Is there any explanation for that or no?
@Trashboat They society was functioning to the degree it needed to.