Joe Shearer
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There have been bad posts by some members, some really embarrassing moments, but this one must be among the top three that I've read over the years, eight years.
It is really surprising that this cavalier sneer, not even a comment, just a rank amateur's completely inept assessment of an acknowledged military genius, even sees the light of day. Only an utterly arrogant and self-obsessed personality could come out with this.
Alexander fought four important land battles, set pieces. There is little to distinguish this from the others, other than the lack of movement. It boiled down, on a wet, muddy battlefield, to a slugging match, and it ended with a clear 'Greek' victory. If the idiot view that the Indian - sorry, @Kaptaan , the coterminous Pakistan side - had won, there would have been no 'Greek' army marching down and facing off the numerous tribes that they faced on their march to the sea. They would have been smashed on the battlefield, and rolled over by the elephants and cavalry that Porus had in full measure.
For the 'gullible', who are not swayed by a retrograde need to prove their identity as unconquerable warriors (other than the Bactrian Greeks less than a generation later, the Scythians, their Pahlava allies, the Kushans, the Ephthalites or White Huns, the Turks, the Afghans, the Mongols, the Turks again), the facts are clear. There are accounts all tending to the same conclusion, there are the circumstances, of a supposedly beaten army making settlements on the ground that persisted until the successor empire walked on, marching down the Indus, fighting fierce battles and winning every one, and then facing a death march across the Makran coast, ending up an exhausted band of survivors in Babylon. All this after a defeat at the Hydaspes?
Yeah, right.
It is interesting that the right wing morons (not you; you don't qualify, I would NEVER say that you are as bright as a moron, that would be rude to one of you) on both sides of the border have almost identical views; both based on an inarticulate, incoherent, purple-faced hatred of foreigners, hatred of the humiliation of having been subdued, for the umpteenth time (yes, it happened), and the need to deny anything and everything that the foreigner represents, or, and this is it, what YOU think they represent. In this case, your linguistic heritage.
Your linguistic heritage would have been Brahui, except that some scruffy, beaten-up losers stepped through the passes, pushed out by winners in a sectarian scuffle (yes, that was part of the heritage, too, for coterminous Pakistan: recognise the modern version?), and making their sorry way into the plains down past the hills. The civilisation that coterminous Pakistan loves so dearly was decaying to the point where people built in the earlier cities' well-regulated streets. So much for the civilisation stretching all the way to Turkmenistan. Which, by the way, is another inept, ill-read, ill-informed comment: a river civilisation stretching all the way to Turkmenistan? Really? A few beads, a few seals, a few artifacts, and we suddenly have coterminous Turkestan (the name given to five former Soviet republics now independent and desperately searching for an identity - odd situation, innit?) becoming part of coterminous Pakistan (yes, the name exists).
Oh, absolutely. No civilisation, no cities, no towns, only forest dwellers and small agricultural villages producing a kind of pottery very similar to the last days of the great civilisation that marked the end of civilisation in coterminous Pakistan. These original elites composed the Vedas, did the philosophical bits of the Brahmanas, the Aranyakas and the Upanishads (terms, please note, that roll smoothly off the tongues of the original coterminous elites).
Have you slipped the coca leaves in yet?
Alexander fought every battle at the head of his troops. Known to any half-read student of history. To be half-read is of course a reach for some of us.
At Granicus, he led his troops, personally, at the head of the Bodyguards, at the tip of the wedge. So much for the fighting the battles on the ground; in a cavalry charge, that would truly be a curious situation to be in. But then that comes in the second half of the history lesson, the half that we didn't get to do. He was injured by Rhoisakes, and Spithridates sought to kill him when he was half-stunned, and Alexander (never actually fighting on the ground, one to one, according to our military history genius) was saved by Cleitus the Black, who swung at the extended sword arm and severed it. Quite an exciting day in the life of a never actually fought the battles on the ground.
At Issus, the 'Greeks' were faced by a large Persian army led by the emperor himself barring the way back to Greece (it was still assumed that the Greeks were looking for significant defeats of the Persians and would ultimately return to Greece; nobody suspected that Alexander was looking to overthrown the Achaemenids and take over the empire himself). Alexander led the charge leading the 'hinge' soldiers, the Hypaspists, who formed the 'hinge' between the solid, immovable phalanx and the light infantry and cavalry that formed the mobile element of a Macedonian army, struck the Persian elite infantry, the Cardaces, and broke them, and then got back on horseback and led the Companions in a charge through the disorganised Persian centre towards the emperor, who fled. Fairly good going for one who, according to the local resident coterminous not-a-moron, never fought his battles on the ground one to one, and was always surrounded by his bodyguards. In this battle, he fought both on foot and on horseback.
I really dislike instant experts with tumescent opinions and no reading, no knowledge, no information.
The Marathas were the warrior kind? What are you smoking? They were light cavalry and never fought pitched battles if they could help it, until they were in very large numbers against very small and isolated forces. The Rajputs, the Jats, the Sikhs, much later on; the Marathas sliced up the unwieldy Mughal armies of their times, and salami-sliced their way through the over-expanded empire, until they faced their first major challenge from an effective cavalry force, completely isolated from their supply lines, half-starved and cut off from their bases. And their game was up.
Sublime in his arrogance and ignorance. What an exhibition.
What is in the name? It is to do the narrative, build by the Greeks on how their poster boy, the blonde chap defeated the son of the soil and somehow handed over his land back to him. What a utter load of BS. LOL. You are not getting it do you? Its imperative for the west to keep the narrative and image of Alexdendar "the great" , the undefeated one, alive and kicking. For your gullible lot, it makes sense.
It is really surprising that this cavalier sneer, not even a comment, just a rank amateur's completely inept assessment of an acknowledged military genius, even sees the light of day. Only an utterly arrogant and self-obsessed personality could come out with this.
Alexander fought four important land battles, set pieces. There is little to distinguish this from the others, other than the lack of movement. It boiled down, on a wet, muddy battlefield, to a slugging match, and it ended with a clear 'Greek' victory. If the idiot view that the Indian - sorry, @Kaptaan , the coterminous Pakistan side - had won, there would have been no 'Greek' army marching down and facing off the numerous tribes that they faced on their march to the sea. They would have been smashed on the battlefield, and rolled over by the elephants and cavalry that Porus had in full measure.
For the 'gullible', who are not swayed by a retrograde need to prove their identity as unconquerable warriors (other than the Bactrian Greeks less than a generation later, the Scythians, their Pahlava allies, the Kushans, the Ephthalites or White Huns, the Turks, the Afghans, the Mongols, the Turks again), the facts are clear. There are accounts all tending to the same conclusion, there are the circumstances, of a supposedly beaten army making settlements on the ground that persisted until the successor empire walked on, marching down the Indus, fighting fierce battles and winning every one, and then facing a death march across the Makran coast, ending up an exhausted band of survivors in Babylon. All this after a defeat at the Hydaspes?
Aryan theory of invasion is the thing of past my gullible Indian, invented by the colonials to keep the people confused about the history of this region. Get out of it. If there was anything like Aryans, it was the people of Indus themselves. Nazi Germans were looking for their roots here and they were no mugs. Aryan invasion theory is so fked up and for it to lived out all these years has to be one hell of biggest propaganda in the history. Some random nomads from central Asia will just turn up and challange the biggest empire/civilization of its time stretching all the way to Turkmenistan, with them having no trace of their own civilization/infrastructure in central asia!! Who would believe this BS?? IVC was the humanity first civilization/empire/one governing unit. Rest came off it.
Yeah, right.
It is interesting that the right wing morons (not you; you don't qualify, I would NEVER say that you are as bright as a moron, that would be rude to one of you) on both sides of the border have almost identical views; both based on an inarticulate, incoherent, purple-faced hatred of foreigners, hatred of the humiliation of having been subdued, for the umpteenth time (yes, it happened), and the need to deny anything and everything that the foreigner represents, or, and this is it, what YOU think they represent. In this case, your linguistic heritage.
Your linguistic heritage would have been Brahui, except that some scruffy, beaten-up losers stepped through the passes, pushed out by winners in a sectarian scuffle (yes, that was part of the heritage, too, for coterminous Pakistan: recognise the modern version?), and making their sorry way into the plains down past the hills. The civilisation that coterminous Pakistan loves so dearly was decaying to the point where people built in the earlier cities' well-regulated streets. So much for the civilisation stretching all the way to Turkmenistan. Which, by the way, is another inept, ill-read, ill-informed comment: a river civilisation stretching all the way to Turkmenistan? Really? A few beads, a few seals, a few artifacts, and we suddenly have coterminous Turkestan (the name given to five former Soviet republics now independent and desperately searching for an identity - odd situation, innit?) becoming part of coterminous Pakistan (yes, the name exists).
You lot were civilized by the original people, the elites, you should be proud if it.
Oh, absolutely. No civilisation, no cities, no towns, only forest dwellers and small agricultural villages producing a kind of pottery very similar to the last days of the great civilisation that marked the end of civilisation in coterminous Pakistan. These original elites composed the Vedas, did the philosophical bits of the Brahmanas, the Aranyakas and the Upanishads (terms, please note, that roll smoothly off the tongues of the original coterminous elites).
Right! a midget who actually never fought the battles on the ground one to one , and was always protected by his bodygaurds, getting his favorite horse killed in the battle which he was riding, with his bodyguards no where to be seen. You need to wake up and smell the coffee.
Have you slipped the coca leaves in yet?
Alexander fought every battle at the head of his troops. Known to any half-read student of history. To be half-read is of course a reach for some of us.
At Granicus, he led his troops, personally, at the head of the Bodyguards, at the tip of the wedge. So much for the fighting the battles on the ground; in a cavalry charge, that would truly be a curious situation to be in. But then that comes in the second half of the history lesson, the half that we didn't get to do. He was injured by Rhoisakes, and Spithridates sought to kill him when he was half-stunned, and Alexander (never actually fighting on the ground, one to one, according to our military history genius) was saved by Cleitus the Black, who swung at the extended sword arm and severed it. Quite an exciting day in the life of a never actually fought the battles on the ground.
At Issus, the 'Greeks' were faced by a large Persian army led by the emperor himself barring the way back to Greece (it was still assumed that the Greeks were looking for significant defeats of the Persians and would ultimately return to Greece; nobody suspected that Alexander was looking to overthrown the Achaemenids and take over the empire himself). Alexander led the charge leading the 'hinge' soldiers, the Hypaspists, who formed the 'hinge' between the solid, immovable phalanx and the light infantry and cavalry that formed the mobile element of a Macedonian army, struck the Persian elite infantry, the Cardaces, and broke them, and then got back on horseback and led the Companions in a charge through the disorganised Persian centre towards the emperor, who fled. Fairly good going for one who, according to the local resident coterminous not-a-moron, never fought his battles on the ground one to one, and was always surrounded by his bodyguards. In this battle, he fought both on foot and on horseback.
I really dislike instant experts with tumescent opinions and no reading, no knowledge, no information.
The only major resistance was put by marhattas and they were sorted in Panipat, thousands were killed, pursed even after the defeat, and their heads where chopped off. And marhattas are considered to be the "warrior" kind of gangiyates. You lot are not warrior kind. Focus on what you are good at, being a banya.
The Marathas were the warrior kind? What are you smoking? They were light cavalry and never fought pitched battles if they could help it, until they were in very large numbers against very small and isolated forces. The Rajputs, the Jats, the Sikhs, much later on; the Marathas sliced up the unwieldy Mughal armies of their times, and salami-sliced their way through the over-expanded empire, until they faced their first major challenge from an effective cavalry force, completely isolated from their supply lines, half-starved and cut off from their bases. And their game was up.
I am proud of Porus , the son of soil , kicking the hell out of the tyrant and arrogant of his time.
Sublime in his arrogance and ignorance. What an exhibition.