@libobral@smonter42 You need to get your information from somewhere other than Reddit.
If I had a nickel for every European who explained how i live every day isn’t really how I live, . . . .
Now tell us how we don’t have bakeries in America.
@DeProugenerate@nabulionee2@campinthewoods7 Are you arguing that it was fully professional on day one? That it didn’t take time to create a basic level of competence on the part of that army?
@ThePiedmontMan@nabulionee2 To the extent they were used they often led to disastrous results.
But assuming that you are not the juvenile that your language to a complete stranger would indicate—what holdover tactics do you see successfully still used?
@nabulionee2@campinthewoods7 Out of general curiosity, was it ever used during the US Civil War? It’s a very specific point, but I think the absence (or limited use) is a starting off point with respect to the tactical situation in general.
Incidentally, I think our different opinins may be definitional.
@ThePiedmontMan@campinthewoods7@nabulionee2 Have you considered consolidating your many drunken tirades into a single tweet as opposed to 4-5 single sentence rants?
Just for neatness sake.
@nabulionee2@campinthewoods7 Napoleon era tactics were applied, but the general consensus is that they were detrimental in the era of modern (1860s) weapons and mechanical capacity. Similar to how 19th century tactics were tragically used during WWI.