Latest Updates: Arpegi v5.0.1 - Updated: 02/06/2024 (More patching is more patching.)
"We've known the badman, we've seen the badman, some of us have had him a trigger squeeze from lives saved. But a man in a suit said leave him to live, the man in the suit said we weren't in danger, my oppo the new dad, my oppo the new husband, the young mam with bairn in pram, granny of to the bingo, we've seen the lives lost, the blood on the road on the wall on our kit on our hands, we've cried for them. We've picked the broken bodies off the road, off the wall and off our kit. But the man in the suit said the bad man has human rights to carry out inhuman acts. If you click from safe to rounds the suffering of innocents stops for a while at least, but the man in the suit will send you to jail, because the bad man must be assured he has human rights to carry out inhuman acts. And besides, the man in the suit doesn't see the blood, smell the burning, and you signed over your human rights to the man in the suit and anyway paper doesn't bleed."
I tried signing, but it says that I must be a citizen of U.K or at least live in the U.K.Do you want me to sign anyway, msg?
I think Pow's the only other guy from the UK.
The problem is that the Taliban and company are Franc Tireurs or Partisans not soldiers, they do not wear uniforms or distinct insignias, they dress just like the general population, those rules need not apply to them.
That's debatable, it really depends on what definition of "soldier" you are using. One definition is " An active, loyal, or militant follower of an organization" which totally applies to the followers of the Taliban, causing them to be classed as soldiers.So its a debatable point, plus you have to take into consideration cross-cultural definitions, what we consider to be something can easily be different depending on culture and sociological factors within that society.
If that'd be true, I could make Arpegi my army and you'd be official soldiers fighting for sponsors.
Quote from: The Pow on October 15, 2012, 06:55:19 PMThat's debatable, it really depends on what definition of "soldier" you are using. One definition is " An active, loyal, or militant follower of an organization" which totally applies to the followers of the Taliban, causing them to be classed as soldiers.So its a debatable point, plus you have to take into consideration cross-cultural definitions, what we consider to be something can easily be different depending on culture and sociological factors within that society.If that'd be true, I could make Arpegi my army and you'd be official soldiers fighting for sponsors.
EAGLE!
Oh yeah, I meant to ask this before. Who is your avatar?