How's this?
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Yeah...no.... Well, that's a start. Let's have a beer and try it again.
How's this?
Guests can not see images in the messages. Please register in the forum.
Yeah...no.... Well, that's a start. Let's have a beer and try it again.
a beer.......?
so the definition of a criminal is someone who breaks the law and you want me to believe that somehow more laws make less criminals?
"I was told there would be no maff".......Brewskies?....pass one over, but are twist offs...don't need the key....
Geezer Squad....Charter Member #1
Evoking the 50 year old rule...
First 50 years...worried about the small stuff...second 50 years....Not so much
Member Wahoo Killer knives club....#27
Now the Egyptians had beer!
No problem with that concept.
I am just having to reset my historical clock and adjust the timeline by 2000 years to adjust for the new discoveries they are making. I was taught and have been teaching the development of iron in 1200bc for my whole life. Tut predates that by nearly 200 years, but what's 200 years when looking back 3 1/2 millennia?
And I have no problem with the use of meteorite iron in fabricating a knife, altogether believable.
But when you look at that blade, fully polished, beautifully designed.
The guy that made that thing knew what he was doing and had done it before.
Last edited by kyratshooter; 06-04-2016 at 02:35 AM.
If you didn't bring jerky what did I just eat?
But well, one thing I always thought could be said about folks from way back...is that they had lots of time. Did things by hand. Direct interaction. So surely they fiddled around a lot and said "hhmmm...what about this..." a lot. Many people probably had a lot of reasoning ability that was 'every day' to them.
The pessimist complains about the wind;
The optimist expects it to change;
The realist adjusts the sails.
- William Arthur Ward
Who told you that crap?
Lots of time???
Their life span was about 30 years!
They did things by hand because all they had were hand tools!
80%-90% of the population were slaves and not exactly paid to reason things out.
The other 10%- 20% were not real worried about improving things because the slaves were doing the heavy lifting!
They viewed people like we view Harbor Freight power tools; buy them cheap, use them up and throw them away.
Most craftsmen, like the man that made Tut's dagger, were special workers kept by patrons just to make the good stuff like this for the royals. If Tut had not liked the dagger it would probably have been used to cut the slave that made it from ear to ear.
Last edited by kyratshooter; 06-07-2016 at 03:10 PM.
If you didn't bring jerky what did I just eat?
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