longtimeforumlurker
LongTimeForumLurker
longtimeforumlurker

I remember them the first time around.

Not even my girlfriend calls me babe, so I doubt it.

I think I read somewhere that Yamamoto did read this when he was in the US and that it did likely influence his strategy from the Mahanan ideal that the rest of the Japanese Navy favoured.

I don't care how used you are to the zombie apocalypse by now: that is still stupidly close to stand to the fence.

Just when I finally stopped seeing Jerome Flynn as Bronn and started seeing him as Inspector Drake...

So...

is it? Poo. Google image search has let me down.

He's thinking "Shiiiiiit... I gonna be in one of her songs, aren't I?"

That would be the "Sexy Dance" from What We Do In The Shadows.

That was pretty cool; I'd watch that.

Why?

that works except for the two metres of rain that falls on each square centimetre of Northern Australia each year. If that doesn't provide breeding ponds for them, it will likely damage the fences.

Anyone else see a potential family resemblence here?

I think for the most part, they are just selling stuff that catches the eye and is more likely to make a sale.

There are some really terrible stories out there about the horrors this man committed.

Are these all trenches and dug-outs or visible trails upon the ground kinda like Nazca lines? That would be a lot of digging and there are some fairly odd shapes on there.

It always boggles my mind when you see a mine like that that has gone off and you read that it killed ten thousand men.

The line "My grandpa saved all his daily codebooks" is sus as hell because that is a major breach of operational security as well as being a great big lump of paper he would have to carry around on the move. In addition, each military unit (at the brigade level?) would probably have internal coding and without knowing

One day, if I ever get my hands on a stupid amount of disposable income, I'd carve an encrypted message across a mountain face in twenty foot high letters. It will stand as a challenge across the ages to cryptographers, mathematicians and computer specialists.