By the way, as your history shows all too well, the Serbs were (and are) a deeply unlikable people.
Are you talking about the foreign policies of their government, or about their entire population?
By the way, as your history shows all too well, the Serbs were (and are) a deeply unlikable people.
Now that would be a good subject for a PhD thesis . . ..Are you talking about the foreign policies of their government, or about their entire population?
I suspect it might be a bit like the saying concerning the Saudi Arabians. "They get less likeable the closer they are to Saudi Arabia." Before you ask, that was in an unofficial State Department briefing issued to American women who were considering marrying Saudi men.Never had trouble with groups of Serbs, but I always avoid groups of Albanians, it's like they dial their ''clannish asshole'' setting to 110% the moment they leave their country.
Most if the meso culturesprsticed sacrifice. The Aztecs just cranked it way way up. So maybe they were outsiders and then converted and became zealots. After all fresh converts are often the most fantical.There are actually competing theories as to the origins of the Aztecs, although there are some similarities in the cultures of the Southwest and Aztec culture there are also massive differences. For example, in the various Southwest cultures human sacrifice was not really a thing, instead they used, of all things, parrots as 'proxies' for humans and would sacrifice them (yes, there are parrots native to the Southwest US). The ball game also existed (we have ball courts throughout the Southwest, including the best preserved ones period in Snaketown) but again, unlike the Aztecs the losing team didn't get sacrificed but rather they paid a forfeit in goods to the winning team (apparently, there are no records so this is based on interpretation of artwork and tribal traditions). Southwestern ball courts at least lack the associated mass graves of further south in Mesoamerica.
"The gods dont bleed" the road to eodorado. Still even among other sacrificing cultures. With the same conception ofthe God's. The Aztecswete considered extreme. I was just theorizing why they were so extreme.I think it's important to understand Mesoamerican Amerindians had their own conception of how the universe operated,the nature and purpose of the gods, and human beings relationship with them. As I understand it, human existence and the gods were seen as far more tenuous than they are in say traditional western theology.
The gods themselves were not everlasting, they needed support and sustenance.
Sure there's all kinds of reasons they became so fucked up. It's all just conjecture as we really don't know and likley never will.Alternatively it could have been an act of extravagance brought on by success and wealth.
How exactly was trosky nicerthen Stalin? You don't think he would went ascrazy wjth power ad Joe?Nicer than Stalin. Though Trotsky was too, and look what it got him. Some fine gentleman went to axe him a question...
Well, I think you are forgetting the Whites were a diverse movement, so anger at the murder of the Romanovs probably was all they had in common. Even the ardent democrats probably weren't pleased by it, given that it was pointless brutality. And I find it amusing that you absolve the Tsarist regime of its role in starting this mess in the first place. To me it just seems like your own bias is leaking through, though everyone is biased about something. All I see is a corrupt and ineffectual regime, replaced by another. And then that is replaced by a much crueler and inhuman regime.
Remember who is talking, she is going to give a biased account on this matter, though just about anyone is going to give an account that is biased in one way or another. You should read for yourself instead of taking what anyone says on the internet as truth. Do as Brian says.
There were some pretty wild animals round pretty recently. The giant sloth was around a few thousand years ago still. There's also theories that pockets of neaderthals couldve been alive as recently as the middle ages. Both of those things aepretty crytid like. I agree with your overall point though.(Oh also mountain Goriallas we're a myth and thus a crytid until like 1900ish.The idea, presented largely in Ancient Aliens conspiracies and cyptids/"x entinct animal is totally not extinct" that ancient cultures both had no imagination and never stylized anything.
There's also theories that pockets of neaderthals couldve been alive as recently as the middle ages.
Neanderthals weren't really another species, they were just a race of man with a very distinct bone structure that eventually bred out of the population. If you have European ancestry, you have neanderthal ancestry.Dr Duane Gish was fond of pointing out that if you took a Neanderthal man, gave him a shave and a haircut, and dressed him in modern clothing, he could blend into a crowd without any problem.
Hardly counts as "cryptid" if they can hide in plain sight.
Neanderthals weren't really another species, they were just a race of man with a very distinct bone structure that eventually bred out of the population. If you have European ancestry, you have neanderthal ancestry.
Shorter, but broader than Cromagnons. Stronger in some ways, not in others. Ordinary humans are hybrids of Neanderthals and Cromagnons, we're bigger and stronger than both.Say, were they really taller and physically more powerful than ordinary humans?
I mean, "species" is neither as strictly defined nor as much of a biological separation (necessarily) as it's generally perceived. But as far as it's applied, AFAIK the prevailing scientific opinion is that they were a separate species from us. Or less commonly, a separate subspecies, at least.Neanderthals weren't really another species, they were just a race of man with a very distinct bone structure that eventually bred out of the population. If you have European ancestry, you have neanderthal ancestry.
The way I understood it is that to be an entirely different species sustainable interbreeding had to be impossible.I mean, "species" is neither as strictly defined nor as much of a biological separation (necessarily) as it's generally perceived. But as far as it's applied, AFAIK the prevailing scientific opinion is that they were a separate species from us. Or a separate subspecies, at least.
Well, like I said, "species" in general is arguably more of a term of labeling convenience than of hard delineation. As I understand it, if two organisms are within the same genus, the whole thing can get quite murky and subject to personal interpretation, especially so for organisms we can't study directly anymore.The way I understood it is that to be an entirely different species sustainable interbreeding had to be impossible.