“Where did the style in military uniforms go?” You see…….there was this thing that happened called world war 1.
The wright brothers: Nah, it's possible, believe us
“And I took that personally” made me smile 💀
The white death shuts down that whole first one
The answer to the first question is WW1. The French got absolutely cooked with their black, red and later blue uniforms.
That New York Times article has got to be the thing thats aged poorly the fastest
Is it weird that I casually dress as a 1800s French military uniform? It's not like a cosplay, I just wear stuff like that all the time.
A compromise between 1800s style and combat armor like the minutemen general outfit from fallout 4 would be great and look cool
The Wright brothers: Alright, bet.
This made me realize even more just how seeing elephants for the first time specifically as war animals must have been terrifying. Imagine seeing an up to ~11 tonne pig dragon that casually makes the ground rumble with giant, flexible, wing-shaped shields for ears and sword fangs sticking out by the sides of its ridiculously robust arm-nose charging at the fastest possible speed for a human, with mounted archers who could each kill you with a single fire as its masters nonetheless.
"thou shall fall in drip!" 🔥🗣️
Loved the voice over for the first meme 😂❤
Felt that "We have more buttons" in my soul
“We have more buttons” made me 🚡🚡🚡🚡🚡🚡🚡🚡
There will always be someone saying the wright brother didn't make the airplane so it's the day i become they, as santos dumon wisely said, with slingshot even shit can fly
Handel once survived a duel because the sword got deflected off one of his buttons. They can save your life lol
The last style in military uniforms we ever saw were German World War II uniforms. Specifically the SS, they literally had a fashion brand make their uniforms.
the Roman dude looks like Danny Gonzalez
To be fair, whoever calculated the flying machines thing probably used that dumb equation from the Berlin wall. There's some dude that decided that he could fully predict the lifespan of something, except every single time it was like "Yeah it's gonna last anywhere from 3 weeks to 457 years" The whole idea of his formula is taking the amount of time it has been around for and solving for something to do with that. Except the longer something exists, the wider that window gets- it moves down from 3 weeks to 3 days, but also moves up from 457 years to 457 million years. The problem with it is that the expected lifespan of something, let's say it's 10 years. His equation basically says "it's gonna fail in the next 2-8 years" or something like that. You come up with a range of time that covers about 90% of the possible answers because that's got a higher chance of being right, of course. It's kind of cheating and doesn't really mean anything.
@raph1212