Message from @Pygmalion
Discord ID: 650080728448761908
In the end it is what is intended.
Even songs like for example funkerlied were more soldier wehrmacht songs than propaganda pieces
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half finished.
@Goddess Tyche even if it was a purely nazi song, as long as it sounds nice, it doesn't matter.
I love clashing of swords, despite it being jihadi propaganda, and a lot of ideological nazi posters and paintings are really nice.
It's weak, to hide from good art just because it's linked to a political message you don't agree with.
Testing my shading skills
@hypoem87retardius very nice
Pretty shady tbh
Looks like a Jojo villain <:pepelaugh:544857300179877898>
Keep working on the Jojo skills
preparing for a new RP, one of the player characters
👌
I also sat down to sketch some stuff up before bed, so here's a sketch for another character
Awww, he seems nice.
He is, very
@Kessler thanks!
Mostly starving, but occasionaly freelance.
I'm thinking about going into teaching to bring some stability into my life.
yeah im gonna be a freelancer too so i expect quite a bit of starving
if ur good with social media, and u make comics and stuff
people love that sht
patreons of comic creators are exploding right now, imma try to get in on that when i get better
but yeah that drawing is sick
https://twitter.com/blazing_frames/status/1200545037592887297
hope it makes someone laugh.
Wip
@Bobby thank you for your art, Bobby you absolute madlad
In 1873 there was a proposal in the Alabama Legislature to sell the land west of the Tombigbee River to Mississippi, including the city of Mobile, in order to finance the purchase of the Florida Panhandle west of the Appalacaocla River. I made a map of it because why the heck not.
Robbing Peter to bail out Paul.
No way Florida was going to give up Pensacola. Though having a major port like Mobile might've helped Mississippi avoid becoming a bottom-tier state.
There were many proposals for the Panhandle to join Alabama, and apparently some in the Floridian government were actually willing to sell it for the right price.
But there were also a lot of politicians in the Floridian government who resisted, which is why it never happened despise the wishes of the local population.
Most of the discussion of the Panhandle joining Alabama was dropped after the Pensacola & Atlantic railroad was built in the 1880s, mostly because the railroad caused the Panhandle to become less of a backwater.
Yeah. I was assuming Pensacola was already a port and/or Navy base at the time. Clearly it wasn't.
Pensacola only became a major port after the railroad was built. Along with Panama City and Port St. Joe. They mostly exported logging products.