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Getting a feel for things
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TGW-1251

Chapter: Ride for Life
Characters: brandt, Dagger, ellen, gopi, mala, mavia, Miral, mist, Nat, Teresa
Location: base, town
└ Tags: "Expectations", basic sucks - no really

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Discussion (36) ¬

  1. Scarsdale
    May 15, 2024, 21:12 | # | Reply

    Heh, whether by choice or circumstances, once you retire it’s
    painful to come back out. I’m sure they have enough to deal
    with just surviving.

    It seems they are all talking to the recruits, feeling out how
    they are doing and how they feel about training and such.
    Plus it’s letting all of them know that the PTB are watching
    out for them.

    • markm
      May 16, 2024, 01:20 | # | Reply

      If training is not intense and dangerous,
      combat will be much more dangerous than it has to be.
      I would not be comfortable reasoning from that to
      “Lives lost in training save lives in action,”
      but Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan certainly did.
      OTOH, we kicked their rears eventually.

      • Petercat
        May 16, 2024, 22:54 | # | Reply

        When I was (much) younger, I had a WWII vet tell me,
        “We called them Nazi bastards,
        but we’d never call them no-good Nazi bastards!”

  2. President Elect Toxic Deplorable Racist SAH Neanderthal B Woodman Domestic Violent Extremist SuperStraight
    May 15, 2024, 22:29 | # | Reply

    Every military knows this, that training can be just
    as deadly as war. They signed their name to the check,
    “Up to and including….”, as did we all.
    Those that died in training just had theirs cashed
    before everyone else’s.
    Rest In Peace, Brothers-In-Arms, you are never forgotten.

    • rob stanley
      May 16, 2024, 09:40 | # | Reply

      “As did we All!” .. Salute!

  3. Chryzopraz
    May 16, 2024, 03:22 | # | Reply

    Warclaw is _not_ a Polish name, weather you like it or not… 😉

    • Petercat
      May 16, 2024, 08:25 | # | Reply

      https://www.behindthename.com/name/wacl16aw
      No one but the cadre could pronounce his last name,
      and “War Claw” just sounded cool for an Imperial Marine,
      even a larval one.

      • rob stanley
        May 16, 2024, 09:39 | # | Reply

        way back when,. (Elis Island)
        Schnechel became Stanley..

        • Bill Mullins
          May 16, 2024, 13:08 | # | Reply

          Then there all the “Fergusons”. Supposedly when asked their name
          some Germans replied, “Ich Vergessen”. (“V” in German is pronounced
          like “F” in English) So the worker at Ellis Island logged “Ferguson”
          for their last name.

          • Tub-T
            May 16, 2024, 18:32 | # | Reply

            This is a common story. Heck, even in my family, the claim was that my great-grandfather,
            who was 3/4 Danish and 1/4 French but who had the last name “LaBlanche,” hated the French
            and changed the name to a slightly less French “Blanche” when he came through Ellis Island.
            A great story (and probably evidence of a Huguenot ancestor), but it wasn’t true. I have
            relatives still in Denmark with the name last name Blanche. And researchers say that probably
            very little of it really happened. Why? Because Immigration worked from a manifest from the
            ship. Those names were from identification cards and passports from the home country, and
            were carefully typed or printed in such a way that the names were clearly legible and the
            same name the immigrants boarded the ship with, and applied for admission with. Did names
            change after admission to the US? Almost certainly. Even today, there are areas that are
            less than strenuous with their ID work. And for at least 50 years, maybe 75, names did a lot
            of changing. I’ve heard Eisenhower was spelled something like 13 different ways in Ike’s
            background. And any genetic researcher will tell you that it’s not unusual to find people who
            “disappeared,” especially from populous areas on the eastern half of the country, only to show
            up somewhere else with an entirely different name.
            But it turns out Ellis Island is not the culprit, here.

            • Tub-T
              May 16, 2024, 18:34 | # | Reply

              Sorry about the long lines. I got distracted in the middle
              of that and when I came back to it, I forgot about it. If I
              could edit it, I would.

              • rob stanley
                May 17, 2024, 10:41 | # | Reply

                IF you want,.. rewrite how you want..
                and i’ll delete this when you say..?

          • Chryzopraz
            May 16, 2024, 21:00 | # | Reply

            Ferguson is a Scottish name and it literally means Son of Fergus.

          • President Elect Toxic Deplorable Racist SAH Neanderthal B Woodman Domestic Violent Extremist SuperStraight
            May 17, 2024, 06:54 | # | Reply

            IIRC, “Ich Vergessen” is “I forget” or “I forgot”
            or “I forgotten”. Something like that.

      • Chryzopraz
        May 16, 2024, 20:50 | # | Reply

        Haha, I remember when I was in the US,
        literally nobody could say correctly my name.
        People even had problems with writing my
        name having my passport.
        A university ID card had to be replaced,
        because they misspelled my name 🙂
        Anyway, try it for yourself: Krzysztof

        • Petercat
          May 16, 2024, 22:51 | # | Reply

          Kerzies-toff?

        • Bill Mullins
          May 17, 2024, 07:24 | # | Reply

          If I called you “Christoph” would that be in the ballpark?

          • Chryzopraz
            May 18, 2024, 03:08 | # | Reply

            Of course. I encouraged people to use English version of the name.
            For some reason most people insisted on using original name with
            hilarious results.

        • rob stanley
          May 17, 2024, 10:25 | # | Reply

          sis tof

          • Scarsdale
            May 17, 2024, 14:04 | # | Reply

            Who has a sister named “Tof”? 😛

            • rob stanley
              May 17, 2024, 17:56 | # | Reply

              Krzysztof = sis tof. when said..
              kinda like when we were taught quick nippon.
              ‘thank you’ = Domo Arigatou. or said,
              “do more harry gator” ,, all one work an quick.
              same with, ‘you’re welcome’ = doitashimashite
              said “don’t touch the mustache’ ..

              • Chryzopraz
                May 18, 2024, 03:10 | # | Reply

                Lol, you forgot “K” at the beginning.
                For some reason for English speaking
                people connection of “K” and hard
                “sh” is unpronounceable.

                • rob stanley
                  May 18, 2024, 09:30 | # | Reply

                  it’s how we say it , when speaking ruski..
                  tho, we might add a hint of an ‘r’ to one
                  when talking of two of the same name…

    • rob stanley
      May 16, 2024, 09:46 | # | Reply

      NO,, no it’s not..
      it is a American bastardization of
      Wrocislaw.

      • Sam
        May 16, 2024, 14:21 | # | Reply

        Or any number of other Polish names that got “Americanized”.

        • Scarsdale
          May 16, 2024, 20:54 | # | Reply

          There are a huge number of “Americanized” words in our language,
          yeah is from “YA” which is german for “yes” and so on. The memory
          card fell out of my head, I used to have a loooong list…
          Now I get the swirly-do and the “Please wait” then “drive not found”
          message…

          • TubT
            May 17, 2024, 07:25 | # | Reply

            Fully 1/6 of English is anglicized French, which we got, of course,
            from the Norman invasion in 1066. After that, most of the nobility
            spoke French, while the peasants spoke whatever form of Anglo-
            Saxon was current in that time and place. That’s why the animal
            standing in the field is a cow, but on the table is beef (boeuf).
            In the flock, it’s sheep, but on the plate it’s mutton (mouton).
            And in the yard, it’s a pig, but on the table, it’s pork (porc).
            In fact, one of the beauties of English is its ability to absorb
            other languages, and why we have a vocabulary something like 5
            times as large as many others, including French.

            • Scarsdale
              May 17, 2024, 13:49 | # | Reply

              Sad thing is, we also have more redundant words than most,
              “tear” means both rip and eye-water, or same sounding words
              just spelt different, like “bear” and “bare”. German is about
              the only one I know of that’s worse to learn than American.

        • Petercat
          May 16, 2024, 23:05 | # | Reply

          Except that Warclaw is from the Kingdom of Poland.
          He enlisted there and was transported to Jerico for training.
          No Americanization of his name! He’ll probably serve in Poland,
          as they have, y’know, barbarians on their border. For now.
          Heh. Poland might be about to re-activate their Winged Hussars.

        • rob stanley
          May 17, 2024, 10:29 | # | Reply

          mine is Prussian.. they did it to everybody.
          .. but i know what you mean. ..

  4. Chryzopraz
    May 16, 2024, 21:05 | # | Reply

    You guys reminded me this gem:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfKZclMWS1U

    • Bill Mullins
      May 17, 2024, 07:27 | # | Reply

      What do Pols have against vowels?

    • rob stanley
      May 17, 2024, 10:57 | # | Reply

      my favorite: https://youtu.be/fbI1eJ_zAB8

  5. Scarsdale
    May 17, 2024, 14:01 | # | Reply

    Finally all parts are here, first I had to order an adapter mount to screw
    both old and new drives in, then what I thought was the data cable was
    just a different power line, so I had to order a new IDE cable, that came
    in today’s mail. Things changed so much in the last 20 years….
    6Gb/s?!? Wth? And I thought 256mb/s was fast… Plus at 1/4 the size.

    • Scarsdale
      May 17, 2024, 14:18 | # | Reply

      No more ugly ribbons to gently fold up and taped up to keep the air
      flow going… Anyway, I’m tearing down the tower (for the 3rd time)
      to install the cable and start the transfer, wish me luck, it’s been ages…

      • rob stanley
        May 17, 2024, 17:17 | # | Reply

        luck

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