Wrath is one of those words who's meaning has been watered down over the years. It's not just anger, or even being unreasonably angry....wrath is when you literally see red and will go to any length, do any thing...where only the utter destruction of what got you like this will do. Wrath is utterly all consuming. Anger can be tempered and will fade with time, Wrath keeps going and consumes everything in it's path til it's sated or stopped.
If it's bad enough, the person can suffer dissociation, where their mind splits. Part of it will be totally focused on destroying the target like a machine, even if it kills themselves, and the other is usually their conscious mind trying to regain control and may not even be upset. This condition is what the original "berserkers" were. They weren't merely "angry", like some popular comic book characters. They would be released onto the battlefield to wreak havoc on enemy formations, then the main battle force would sweep through, killing everyone, including any surviving berserkers. How do I know about this? I'm not a psychology student, I'm a veteran.
I've only seen one wrathful person in my life. You'd think it would have been a veteran, but I've found those who have seen combat are usually the calm ones. It was my aunt. A veterinary student with zero fighting experience. She found out her husband was sexually assaulting and beating their adopted daughter. She left her daughter with us, calmly went home, and beat her husband to death with a hammer. Then she shot him three times with a shotgun, to make sure he was dead. She remembers none of this. Total blackout. She came to sitting in her car in the driveway. - That's the closest thing to the ancient records of berserkers I've heard of, outside of combat. The only thing that mattered was "My daughter is in danger", and the only way to ensure it never happened again was to permanently remove the threat from existence. - No offense to R Allen and their experience, but when I someday adopt a child... I hope I love them that much. I would consider myself a failure as a parent if I didn't.
That the alien knows of Rule 34 and doesn't realize it's partly a joke/ partly an observation rather than an actual 'rule' or 'law'. Already getting a good laugh outta this one
The fact that it rolls through our heads at all, even as a joke, is disturbing. But, throw in furries, masochism, bestiality, and whatnot, and you realize that it may not be as much of a joke as we tell ourselves.
"Captain the planet total population seems to consist hostile bi-pedal females." "Alright cancel the first contact party and prepare for shore leave." "XO hold my beer."
The first story, this Xeno was the smartest one ever, they looked at humanity and just went "nope." And I thought stupidity was only a human thing, tell a human not to do something but they do it anyway. Apparently, you can't have great intelligence without great stupidity in any civilization.
I would only say that the xeno did not look to see how we can befriend so deeply as to make bonds stronger than family. How loyal we can be. How quickly we take a friendly hand and hold that memory so dear that we would sell our lives for it. We are where the falling angel (descent to darkness) meets the rising ape (becoming better than instinct). I have only responded to you, have never heard your voice, but I would call you friend.
In many civilisations there is great intelligence, individuals who can embrace a subject and get to know most of it's secrets, unfortunately there are also often leaders who ignore the received wisdom because 'they know best' and think their 'greater good' can exist without the basic fundamental truths shown to them by their 'political inferiors'. and so ... War, destruction and finally oblivion.
“What doesn’t kill you, Makes you stronger”; this quote IS BUILT into our DNA and if you want to kill us, you better kill us all, because if not...we’ll be stronger then ever!
@@AgroSquerril kirk is the reason im banned from space travel to quote my friends Friends: " Your banned from 10 years of space travel" Me: "why?" Friends "becuase you will kirk your self across the kirking universe and we dont need diplomatic issues" Me: "......... Okay fair"
@@SSGTWinters But... How are we supposed to produce an dizzying variety of interesting hybrid variations of humans if we can't copulate with a member of every new species we encounter? Do your friends not want to broaden the genepool of humanity and strengthen the species by incorporating all the best and strongest genes of every alien species put there (and simultaneously introduce some human genes into their genepools making them more psychologically and physically more compatible with us and more likely to identify and from strong ties with us)? Sounds like you need new friends... Want to join me on my on my next round trip through all the capital worlds of all known sentient species of the galaxy (even a few without FTL capability but lets keep that just between us so we don't get into trouble 😉)?
Wrath and spite are probably two of the most dangerous and damaging aspects of human emotion. Balance is no longer a goal and the "afterwards" is not even considered.
Also i think that the most terrifying part of humanity is that negative emotions are actually the strongest emotions we have, physically speaking, and have the most power over us. Feelings like wrath, anger, grief and sadness cause the strongest physical reactions, sometimes to the point of us feeling physical pain. Human grudge can feel like an all consuming flame that you just can't put out, and even after years, it still sparks deep in ones soul and will flare up again from time to time. Anger can literally blind us and make us move on pure instinct in the heat of the moment. Our sadness can feel like our heart was literally about to stop. Our positive feelings like love, happiness and compassion are strong, but not as strong as our negative emotions, and even the positive emotions can cause stronger negative emotions if something is done to the things that caused the positive emotions. Like there is nothing that causes wrath quite as deep as someone harming a person dear to us, and thanks to compassion, we don't even have to know a person for feeling wrath for something done to a person, especially if that person is a child.
story 1: Alien1: Quarantine humans Please Alien 2: naaaah Alien 1: Fuck this shit I'm out Story 2: Humans taught us to be pissed AND IT'S EVERYONES PROBLEM NOW!!!
That's pretty much the jist of it.Kinda want to know why every alien thinks diplomacy is impossible jsut cause we're super-powerful predators.I mean just on Earth there's plenty of videos of tigers lions & jaguars being tamed & friendly with their handlers.Also why not jsut use criminals as slave labour?They serve their time & you get the ore,it's pragmatic.
@@BrunoMaricFromZagreb as much as I agree with the concept of work therapy that's all that it should be Slave labour ,to me at least, implies you strip the people of all UN guaranteed rights and work them to death
@@PeoplecallmeLucifer Yeah I understand not wanting to do it out of moral consistency,it's not as if we all collectively went "actually rape is totally ok against this one group cuz they white supremacist" but you must also consider that some are just so evil there's no redemption for them (as tvTropes calls it-the moral event horizon) so why not squeeze out all the utility you can out of them?Atleast donate their (live or dead) body to science
@@BrunoMaricFromZagreb yeah some people are past redemption .... still basic human rights are basic human rights. It doesn't depend on who the human is
We can teach many things. This is applicable to both stories. For the first let us teach of our pack bonding ability, that which we call friendship, see how we can extend our feelings of family to that not of our bloodline or even species. We can also teach justice, recompense, fury, wrath, hatred. Some of us take lessons of right and wrong from old stories and religion, some of us feel and know right and wrong without them. There are many things we all know, no matter where we come from. How to give up your life for a friend, how to feel the pain of another, how to react to injustice so abhorrent that any who would call themselves civilized would recoil in disgust. We can teach love. We can teach compassion. If that fails then we will teach annihilation, we will teach total war, we will teach wrath.
And the only reason we're so good at teaching such a wide breadth of things is because we lack them naturally but were still advantageous enough that the ones that stumbled across them were more viable.
Alien Scientist, [Humans teach her that murderous exploitative labor is wrong]... "God... now I have to face Space UN after learning all of this..." . Human Soldiers, "Space UN... hold on... let me get my 'good guns' for this."
"Uh huh... you say they're exploiting their colonies, but nobody can do anything because they have the strongest space navy?" "...Yeah. Hopeless, I kn-" "Tell me, do you know how many of our countries celebrat a day where we kicked one particular country's ass for this EXACT reason? Honey, hold my Smith N' Wesson." Yankee Doodle INTENSIFIES
Wrath is a funny thing for humans. But honestly? The funniest thing for me is that mankind literally wrote songs about war crimes in like the happiest tunes you could imagine. We are one fucked up species.
@@DepressedCrow Listen to anything that came out of the Balkan throughout the Balkan war. Personal favorites are "Bosanska Artiljerija", "Tata" and "Ne Volim Te Alija". These songs are so hyper happy until you check out the lyrics.
Well the improvised tool use is probably going to be universal to any species capable of spaceflight and persistance hunting probably won't mean much in a battle betwen technological species. I can see instinctual ballistics being horrifying to any species without it though.
@@Malroth00Returns the degree of improvisatiin might be different. Persistance hunting is about the stamina and determination of the species. A species that can stay determined for longer and can act without needing much rest is something of note.
@@Chrisspru We humans have currently evolved the minimum amount of improvisation to just barely make it to space. Any species with less than we have would never make it to the level where we would be able to contact them and any with more than us would be like unfathomable gods.
@@Malroth00Returns its not a binary. Its how often and willingly we improvise regardless of risk. A less improvising heavy species will simply take longer. A too improvisational species might die too often.
That satisfaction is akin to how the citizens of the Thirteen Colonies felt when they handed the British their asses... " "Backwards Peasants" are we, you rotten, inbred, highbrow little sh!ts?!" Fight the power, maaaan!
Yes satisfaction is usually what happend when you pay evil unto evil Makes you think the Head of Manufacturing could've just used criminals.They serve their time,there's no way of escape or rebellion,& ya get your ore.It's pragmatic... But _NOOOOOO_ you just HAVE to be *eeeviiil* Reminds me of how the Death Star can produce 3x the Sun's energy,but instead of using it to power farms hospitals reastourants or FTL travel they just explode planets...
Emotions despite getting in the way sometimes are essential, as someone who lacks emotion due to autism I can say that while emotions are often illogical and out right get in our way they keep us in check. Things like empathy and sympathy are the emotions which abolished slavery while sadness and concern lead us to outright ban certain weapons such as plastic mines and nerve gas that were considered to be cruel or inhumane. When handled correctly emotions can be channeled to achieve great things without losing control over ones self, and while I myself may not have emotions for the most part it is for that very reason that this is so obvious to me because life is so very boring without emotions causing me to seek out and understand the emotions of others.
I don't think someone that completely lacks all emotions would be able to make that observation, though having less or weaker emotions might. Hi, I have autism too, though I have inversion of your numbness as a mere fraction of the effects...
The more negative emotions are probably best compared to a sort of mental immune system. They are what tells us when something is so undeniably, indisputably WRONG that it is worth taking the effort to oppose it if not destroy it outright. Without them, no serious resistance to atrocities is plausible. Granted, if this particular immune system is allowed to slip its leash that can result in yet more atrocities, but nothing in creation is without its risks.
The trick is to learn the emotions. Just as everyone else does. Empathy must always be taught to people, and children. If it is not taught, we become sociopaths and psychopaths and uncaring towards the species at large. Most emotions outside of the base few are "inherent" to people. We instinctively feel happiness and satisfaction. Anger and sadness. These are things we learn for personal reasons. The things that trigger chemical releases in our brain. What needs to be taught is the linking of these emotions to others. The ability to see the world as someone else does. To feel the way someone else does. That has to be taught. Not many are very good at it, but we are delightfully good at approximating it to a convincing degree. It is impossible to feel the same as someone else. But, it is possible to imagine yourself in that situation and how you would feel about it. So, inevitably, our world is full of useless platitudes. Fake "feel good". Fake "empathy". People who pretend to care for the social value of caring. People who will say something matters yet do nothing to fix the situation. The useless platitudes. The signaling to others that "we care" despite not actually caring. It is why our "emotional reservoirs" run dry. Why we cease to care about issues that persist long enough and yet do not affect us personally. We may care a child was murdered or missing for a while and feel righteous anger toward it... But, given a few months and given we didn't know the child at all, our reservoirs run dry and we cease to care. Fake platitudes. Fake empathy. So, the trick is to learn the emotions. To learn to put yourself in the shoes of others. Because what we would do if placed in those situations becomes our moral ground. But, there's one emotion we all instinctively understand. It is a uniquely PERSONAL emotion. That is, of course, wrath. We can recognize it when we see it others. It triggers every primal urge in our bodies to run when we see it. Better to die tired than to experience wrath in its full fury from an attacker. We know it instinctively when we see it, because we know what it will mean if we undergo it. Sanity leaves and is replaced with only the will to destroy. A will that transcends any emotion or even physical state. Preservation of self goes out the window alongside reason. No matter how inept at emotions any person is... we all know and we all possess wrath. Every other emotion needs to be taught and needs to be linked to others. We need to be taught empathy. We need to be taught more complex emotions like "love" and "bonding". We don't possess them inherently. Inevitably, it is those that realize they don't have these emotions and work on studying them, that end up actually feeling them. Feeling them far more strongly than everyone else, in fact.
Something I've realised as a person with high functioning autism is that I actually do have extremely strong emotions, but I keep them buried deeply because in the past, emotions have only led to pain. There's a reason why the old Sci-Fi fantasy show Star Trek had the supposedly emotionless "Vulcans" and a reason why later on that was changed to Vulcans being trained to control their emotions. It's because Vulcans are a sci-fi representation of the autistic people in Human society.
Explore to find aliens and resources Expand relations and products (good and bad) Exploit resources while minimizing self and friendly harm Exterminate the areas stopping the first three goals
@@zeehero7280 That is part of the "bad" in the Second Goal. "Submit to us as so much life of our home world did or face the same fate." If they come out like wolves or small cats it leans towards the good side the majority of the time. We only have to look at Racism, and extinct species to see how the bad side goes.
@@truekurayami Yep nothing more irrational and dumb than racism. especially among our own species. only one race right now on earth and its the human race.
About Captain Kirk... he *VERY* rarely actually slept with the alien chicks. He'd notice they found him interesting so he'd use seduction to manipulate them into going along with his objectives but his first and only love was the Enterprise. And despite being considered a "cowboy" type due to his tendency to bend the rules or outright defy orders if necessary, he was mostly "by the book" for most of his career. He just happened to be Captain in an era where he had broad discretion on how he interpreted regulations; much like how old-school Age of Sail ship's captains acted. When TNG came to be, Picard was more of the micromanaged diplomat who could kick ass when necessary and had far less slack in his rope to play with.
Wrath, a state of mind that shunts unnecessary mental processes to complete a task, usually violence. Often confused with rage, which is a state if mind that focuses everything down to a single point, also known as "seeing red". An example would be the sacrifice of speech, physical and mental sensation, taste and/or smell, to amplify vision, hearing, and physical acuity. To give further example of the amplification: vision, which normally has a small focal point and the rest peripheral vision, will have the focal point expanded to half of ones vision and their peripheral vision to be able to identify simple objects rather than just movement
Yup. Rage is the hot-blooded berserk frenzy to kill everything near you. Wrath is the cold, laser-focused decision that you will dedicate your entire being to utterly *ENDING* that which has invoked it. Those gripped by Wrath rarely raise their voices and will otherwise appear utterly calm, almost tranquil save for the fury seen in their eyes and perhaps minor alterations in vocal inflections. Or, to put it another way: rage is like the Reavers in Firefly, wrath is The Terminator.
Annoyance, anger, hate, rage, WRATH. Wrath is the end station of all aggressive emotions, the point of no return. I have only experienced the first 4, there is no coming back from wrath. No sanity left...
I read a story, a person recounting when it was in high school, of a school bully, its toadys, and its target. Months of torment, the target first crying, weeping, then stopping. Just standing there, taking in all the insults, the hits, the constant torment. That ended one day in the school's weight room. The target took up a weight in each hand--and pounded the head bully's face. Over and over until others pulled him away, some getting their own jaws broken in the process. Finally, the weight of their bodies pulled and kept him down. The bully used to be handsome. Afterwards, it took years of facial reconstruction to get it to the point it could again chew and swallow food.
Wraph is not a feeling of excessive or unjustified anger, or violence defended by rightiousness, it is recognition of the fact that the exploiter class needs to be destroyed.
There may actually be some truth to the idea that Earth's Gravity is within the upper limits of achievable chemical rocket space flight. This fact alone could make humans be one of the strongest and most endurable intelligent races in the Universe. Our cultural tendency toward team work, strategy, and combat could at least in theory be our greatest strength amongst the stars. Earth could be seen as a death world, with gravity levels far to high for other sapient species to even move on. I absolutely love these stories.
I can only imagine the look on Siliath's face as she asked that question. A look of such cold fury the likes of which she had never knew was stirring just below the surface. A madness leashed under ignorance and beaten down by indoctrination now set loose. Do you know 'Wrath'?
The expert in the first story made an excellent argument to quarantine humanity...But apparently it was reverse psychology to the Council. Well, their mistake would be the Galaxy's problem sooner or later
Human ambassador “wait, you said your people are used as SLAVE LABOR for the people who sent you here to learn from us!?” Alien “while we don’t have a choice, they do supply small salary for-“ Human “SLAVE LABOR!” Alien “it’s not that big a deal, it’s just how things have always been.” Human “and it’s your superiors who sent you here who told you that’s how you should think of it?” Alien “well, yes. But it’s normal.” Human “I see…have a seat. *We have plenty to talk about.* “
:passionate donations: As Bobthedrag & dataMag stumbled through the corridor, alarms blared above & around them. Many a time they would lock eyes both with a similar look. We have to donate to agro squirel. It was imperative, none before them had succeeded before them , would anyone ever they thought? The corridor seem to stretch on for eons .........(story trails off)
I can understand the opinion of the first story. There's even some justification for it. But it totally ignores our efforts to better ourselves. Unfortunately, we have a long ways to go. A slave revolt rarely ends well for the masters in the long run.
Humans: We fight hard and f*ck harder! We are a warrior poet race that will fight you one minute and attempt to get in your pants the next. Xeno Researcher: Yup that's a quarantine. Xeno Council: Now, hold on we are (looks "respectfully")... uh (looks at muscles)... intrigued. Xeno Researcher: We're f*cked. Xeno Council: Yes we are 😏, but so are our enemies. 😈
Human shows an Alien a video: "Do you see that monkey that's sneaking up on that sleeping predator? It's about to whack it with a stick or pull on its tail, theb run away into the trees." Alien: "What?! Why?!!" Human: "Meh, just becuz" (shrug) Alien: Why are you showing me this? (Building forboding terror) Human: We evolved from it. (Evil smile)
@@loganshaw4527 it would be a funnier joke if earth was a death world. (to humans, earth is not a death world. If your a mouse it is, but not to humans.)
@@abrr2000 say that after you see a fire tornado, lightning during a blizzard, a super cell raining snakes, -50°C/-60°F, more then 10 foot of snow. Or a tornado bigger the a mile wide up to 5 miles wide.
@@loganshaw4527 Your confusing danger in extremis, with being a death world. A death world outside of internet stories, is one that wants to kill you ALL THE TIME. The planet from Lightyear is a low level death world. You CANNOT go outside without specialist protective equiptment, like a lazer sword, guns and full body armour. On a death world, keeping the danger at bay is a job so important, that if it's not done, people WILL die. And compated to the death worlds from 40K, the world from Lightyear is weak sauce. Meanwhile on earth the most dangerous thing I'm likely to face my entire life is other humans. Sure, Eath being a death world from an alien perspective is an interesting idea. But to humans, Earth is the cradle of humanity. The most dangerous things we face are desease and humans. (and not in that order)
@@abrr2000 but that is the thing it is not 100 percent safe every where either, by where you are at in longitude and latitude. if there is something dangerous nearby like a animal that can and will kill you, being up north in winter and outside, being trapped out side of your home. In a unknown area like the mid of nowhere. You would not want to be anywhere near a volcano or on thin ice or in fast moving water or lost at sea, outside during a lightning storm near a tree in high wind even crossing a busy road without looking be in a desert, lost in the mountains, be anywhere near a Dimond back snake, near a mountain lion. I have experience most of where I said earlier expect the snakes and the fire tornado and the biggest tornado but only had to deal with 4 foot of snow. There are things on earth that can and will kill you if unlucky.
One of the fundamental errors made when discussing human evolution is focusing on "intelligence." The fact is, there are numerous intelligent species on earth. What sets humans apart is that as a species, starting around 2 million years ago, we started relying on tradition, learning, imagination, communication and creativity to survive. These are all sharper tools when directed by intelligence, but intelligence without them is merely smart. We lacked physiological adaptations to survive easily as a scavenger of kills, so we adapted tools even chimps use to accomplishing things like marrow extraction. The foods available to our savanna-dwelling ancestors were difficult to digest. Fire and fermentation made them easier. By the time we were mostly finished becoming human, the species had walked, and possibly paddled, from the Cape of Good Hope to Cape Horn.
Ah yes, the expert says Leave them alone! So of course, the Council says, yes, we can use them as cannon fodder! This will not end well for the Council. The council hires them as Mercs Sigh the poor council worlds
By this story, humans do come off like orcs. Breeding with anything they can, warlike, crazy, LOL. But in the second story, humans apparently are able to teach not just wrath, but a sense of justice and fairness that leads to the returned scientists starting what could be a social revolution.
I can't really argue that humanity will try to screw anything at least once. Per generation. And there will always be someone that thinks "You're just doing it wrong! watch this!"
I mean, if you log onto the internet unprepared you get what you deserve. It’s why I don’t understand the code start political need to try and sanitise an entire ecosystem. Create moderated spaces and let the animals deal with themselves (beyond basic legal consequences for actionable behaviour) As to the second story. Less a teaching, more the removal of a limited perspective, fanned hard to get though but after one it gets a lot easier. Soon after you have a very dangerous and very motivated set of skilled individuals walking around the infrastructure that binds them.
"Fighting age 13".. Eh, possible but more like 15. "maturity a few years later" legally yes... Biologically Fults? More like age 25-28, a decade plus from 13
Hey, crazy has its uses. Most of us know how to keep a lid on it. Methinks the first commenter is overstating his case LOL Besides, in story 2 it shows we're good at waking up the outrage in other species because that wrath is based on compassion for those being unfairly harmed.
Greetings, mentlegent! For the rhythm that is algo Story 1: Rule 34! AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA And yeah, they made the same mistake the Romans did with their barbarian mercenary troops, but on a much larger scale. Story 2: Siliath and friends went native
Something my dad used to say when I was growing up , he had a habit of purposefully transposing letters on words , like Hucking Fell. Gentle Men became Mentle Gen became Mentle Gents (Mad Lads) and when i was thinking of an intro it stuck out in my mind , so i used it
Wrath is one of those words who's meaning has been watered down over the years. It's not just anger, or even being unreasonably angry....wrath is when you literally see red and will go to any length, do any thing...where only the utter destruction of what got you like this will do. Wrath is utterly all consuming. Anger can be tempered and will fade with time, Wrath keeps going and consumes everything in it's path til it's sated or stopped.
If it's bad enough, the person can suffer dissociation, where their mind splits. Part of it will be totally focused on destroying the target like a machine, even if it kills themselves, and the other is usually their conscious mind trying to regain control and may not even be upset. This condition is what the original "berserkers" were. They weren't merely "angry", like some popular comic book characters. They would be released onto the battlefield to wreak havoc on enemy formations, then the main battle force would sweep through, killing everyone, including any surviving berserkers.
How do I know about this? I'm not a psychology student, I'm a veteran.
Eloquently said. My complements.
I take offence to this.
@@wrath2501 You should take pride in that
I've only seen one wrathful person in my life.
You'd think it would have been a veteran, but I've found those who have seen combat are usually the calm ones.
It was my aunt. A veterinary student with zero fighting experience. She found out her husband was sexually assaulting and beating their adopted daughter. She left her daughter with us, calmly went home, and beat her husband to death with a hammer. Then she shot him three times with a shotgun, to make sure he was dead.
She remembers none of this. Total blackout. She came to sitting in her car in the driveway.
-
That's the closest thing to the ancient records of berserkers I've heard of, outside of combat.
The only thing that mattered was "My daughter is in danger", and the only way to ensure it never happened again was to permanently remove the threat from existence.
-
No offense to R Allen and their experience, but when I someday adopt a child... I hope I love them that much.
I would consider myself a failure as a parent if I didn't.
That the alien knows of Rule 34 and doesn't realize it's partly a joke/ partly an observation rather than an actual 'rule' or 'law'. Already getting a good laugh outta this one
:)
The fact that it rolls through our heads at all, even as a joke, is disturbing. But, throw in furries, masochism, bestiality, and whatnot, and you realize that it may not be as much of a joke as we tell ourselves.
Wait, some people think it's a joke?
@@lightenergy17 It's a joke about base level civilization, a rule to primal urges/instincts.
There should really be a handbook for dealing with us & our informal ways of diplomacy.
"Captain the planet total population seems to consist hostile bi-pedal females."
"Alright cancel the first contact party and prepare for shore leave."
"XO hold my beer."
The Asari from ME comes to mind.
The first story, this Xeno was the smartest one ever, they looked at humanity and just went "nope." And I thought stupidity was only a human thing, tell a human not to do something but they do it anyway. Apparently, you can't have great intelligence without great stupidity in any civilization.
I would only say that the xeno did not look to see how we can befriend so deeply as to make bonds stronger than family. How loyal we can be. How quickly we take a friendly hand and hold that memory so dear that we would sell our lives for it. We are where the falling angel (descent to darkness) meets the rising ape (becoming better than instinct). I have only responded to you, have never heard your voice, but I would call you friend.
@@amorphoussolid8512 one of terry pratchets best quotes imo.
Education does not equate intelligence let alone wisdom.
In many civilisations there is great intelligence, individuals who can embrace a subject and get to know most of it's secrets, unfortunately there are also often leaders who ignore the received wisdom because 'they know best' and think their 'greater good' can exist without the basic fundamental truths shown to them by their 'political inferiors'.
and so ... War, destruction and finally oblivion.
“What doesn’t kill you, Makes you stronger”; this quote IS BUILT into our DNA and if you want to kill us, you better kill us all, because if not...we’ll be stronger then ever!
When i play Mass Effect or the like i often will have a character who just attempts to make captain Kirk proud.
Captain Kirk , first intergalactic plumber
@@AgroSquerril gonna make dem aliens clean your pipe?! Twist and turn all day n night?!
@@AgroSquerril kirk is the reason im banned from space travel to quote my friends
Friends: " Your banned from 10 years of space travel"
Me: "why?"
Friends "becuase you will kirk your self across the kirking universe and we dont need diplomatic issues"
Me: "......... Okay fair"
@@SSGTWinters
But... How are we supposed to produce an dizzying variety of interesting hybrid variations of humans if we can't copulate with a member of every new species we encounter?
Do your friends not want to broaden the genepool of humanity and strengthen the species by incorporating all the best and strongest genes of every alien species put there (and simultaneously introduce some human genes into their genepools making them more psychologically and physically more compatible with us and more likely to identify and from strong ties with us)?
Sounds like you need new friends...
Want to join me on my on my next round trip through all the capital worlds of all known sentient species of the galaxy (even a few without FTL capability but lets keep that just between us so we don't get into trouble 😉)?
@@Warutteri I'm in captain
Well, glue isn't the strongest binding substance in the world, and we use that regularly.
Humans in general use what ever is good enough for the job at the lowest resource usage
"They will fight and screw their way to the top." Well, they will try to do their damndest to do the second until you force them to do the first.
Wrath and spite are probably two of the most dangerous and damaging aspects of human emotion. Balance is no longer a goal and the "afterwards" is not even considered.
There is no "afterwards" only primal rage and absolute destructiom
Also i think that the most terrifying part of humanity is that negative emotions are actually the strongest emotions we have, physically speaking, and have the most power over us. Feelings like wrath, anger, grief and sadness cause the strongest physical reactions, sometimes to the point of us feeling physical pain. Human grudge can feel like an all consuming flame that you just can't put out, and even after years, it still sparks deep in ones soul and will flare up again from time to time. Anger can literally blind us and make us move on pure instinct in the heat of the moment. Our sadness can feel like our heart was literally about to stop. Our positive feelings like love, happiness and compassion are strong, but not as strong as our negative emotions, and even the positive emotions can cause stronger negative emotions if something is done to the things that caused the positive emotions. Like there is nothing that causes wrath quite as deep as someone harming a person dear to us, and thanks to compassion, we don't even have to know a person for feeling wrath for something done to a person, especially if that person is a child.
I LITERALLY quit smoking because of dpite
I would have loved to be an extra-terrestrial gnat on the wall when the xeno researchers found the Human's entry on "Tentacle-p**n".
No thanks. One image was enough for me. There are some things man will beg not to know....
@@mstrfool I would love to be a tentacle monster myself and all i can say is that you need to be more horni.
@@xxXXRAPXXxx weird, my GF was just saying the same thing...
@@mstrfool Great, horni minds think alike.
@@xxXXRAPXXxx Non-horni will give you the bonk.
story 1:
Alien1: Quarantine humans Please
Alien 2: naaaah
Alien 1: Fuck this shit I'm out
Story 2:
Humans taught us to be pissed AND IT'S EVERYONES PROBLEM NOW!!!
"Humans taught us wrath, and that is your problem"
That's pretty much the jist of it.Kinda want to know why every alien thinks diplomacy is impossible jsut cause we're super-powerful predators.I mean just on Earth there's plenty of videos of tigers lions & jaguars being tamed & friendly with their handlers.Also why not jsut use criminals as slave labour?They serve their time & you get the ore,it's pragmatic.
@@BrunoMaricFromZagreb as much as I agree with the concept of work therapy that's all that it should be
Slave labour ,to me at least, implies you strip the people of all UN guaranteed rights and work them to death
@@PeoplecallmeLucifer Yeah I understand not wanting to do it out of moral consistency,it's not as if we all collectively went "actually rape is totally ok against this one group cuz they white supremacist" but you must also consider that some are just so evil there's no redemption for them (as tvTropes calls it-the moral event horizon) so why not squeeze out all the utility you can out of them?Atleast donate their (live or dead) body to science
@@BrunoMaricFromZagreb yeah some people are past redemption .... still basic human rights are basic human rights. It doesn't depend on who the human is
We can teach many things. This is applicable to both stories. For the first let us teach of our pack bonding ability, that which we call friendship, see how we can extend our feelings of family to that not of our bloodline or even species. We can also teach justice, recompense, fury, wrath, hatred. Some of us take lessons of right and wrong from old stories and religion, some of us feel and know right and wrong without them. There are many things we all know, no matter where we come from. How to give up your life for a friend, how to feel the pain of another, how to react to injustice so abhorrent that any who would call themselves civilized would recoil in disgust. We can teach love. We can teach compassion. If that fails then we will teach annihilation, we will teach total war, we will teach wrath.
“ We can show how to give Compassion to a flower, or we can show how to give Wrath to a flower”
@@t.j.7347 time to go PURGING WITH MY KIN! Scions of Sigismund, you know your duty!
And the only reason we're so good at teaching such a wide breadth of things is because we lack them naturally but were still advantageous enough that the ones that stumbled across them were more viable.
Alien Scientist, [Humans teach her that murderous exploitative labor is wrong]... "God... now I have to face Space UN after learning all of this..."
.
Human Soldiers, "Space UN... hold on... let me get my 'good guns' for this."
"Uh huh... you say they're exploiting their colonies, but nobody can do anything because they have the strongest space navy?"
"...Yeah. Hopeless, I kn-"
"Tell me, do you know how many of our countries celebrat a day where we kicked one particular country's ass for this EXACT reason? Honey, hold my Smith N' Wesson."
Yankee Doodle INTENSIFIES
@@levantdiggerus3473I was gonna say something funny about the Prussians vs Napoleon at Waterloo but I cant word it right.
A damn shame he didn't mention the war we had over a bucket in the first story.
Responding to theft is a perfectly reasonable reason for a war.
Ah. The potatoe war.
Yeah and also the pig war
The pastry war, damn french
Wrath is a funny thing for humans.
But honestly? The funniest thing for me is that mankind literally wrote songs about war crimes in like the happiest tunes you could imagine.
We are one fucked up species.
Ox carts rolling down the road
Peasants with a heavy load
They're all VC when the bombs explode
🎶 Napalm sticks to kids 🎶
@@DepressedCrow Listen to anything that came out of the Balkan throughout the Balkan war.
Personal favorites are "Bosanska Artiljerija", "Tata" and "Ne Volim Te Alija". These songs are so hyper happy until you check out the lyrics.
4th of july
In the first story the points of persistance hunting, instinctual ballistics understanding and improvised tool use where left out.
Well the improvised tool use is probably going to be universal to any species capable of spaceflight and persistance hunting probably won't mean much in a battle betwen technological species. I can see instinctual ballistics being horrifying to any species without it though.
@@Malroth00Returns the degree of improvisatiin might be different.
Persistance hunting is about the stamina and determination of the species.
A species that can stay determined for longer and can act without needing much rest is something of note.
@@Chrisspru We humans have currently evolved the minimum amount of improvisation to just barely make it to space. Any species with less than we have would never make it to the level where we would be able to contact them and any with more than us would be like unfathomable gods.
@@Malroth00Returns its not a binary.
Its how often and willingly we improvise regardless of risk.
A less improvising heavy species will simply take longer.
A too improvisational species might die too often.
Both very well written and Agro doest his usual bang up job of narrating. The second one have me an oddly solid sense of ... satisfaction.
glad you enjoyed
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed it. (I did the first one)
That satisfaction is akin to how the citizens of the Thirteen Colonies felt when they handed the British their asses...
" "Backwards Peasants" are we, you rotten, inbred, highbrow little sh!ts?!"
Fight the power, maaaan!
Yes satisfaction is usually what happend when you pay evil unto evil
Makes you think the Head of Manufacturing could've just used criminals.They serve their time,there's no way of escape or rebellion,& ya get your ore.It's pragmatic...
But _NOOOOOO_ you just HAVE to be *eeeviiil*
Reminds me of how the Death Star can produce 3x the Sun's energy,but instead of using it to power farms hospitals reastourants or FTL travel they just explode planets...
Emotions despite getting in the way sometimes are essential, as someone who lacks emotion due to autism I can say that while emotions are often illogical and out right get in our way they keep us in check. Things like empathy and sympathy are the emotions which abolished slavery while sadness and concern lead us to outright ban certain weapons such as plastic mines and nerve gas that were considered to be cruel or inhumane. When handled correctly emotions can be channeled to achieve great things without losing control over ones self, and while I myself may not have emotions for the most part it is for that very reason that this is so obvious to me because life is so very boring without emotions causing me to seek out and understand the emotions of others.
I don't think someone that completely lacks all emotions would be able to make that observation, though having less or weaker emotions might.
Hi, I have autism too, though I have inversion of your numbness as a mere fraction of the effects...
The more negative emotions are probably best compared to a sort of mental immune system. They are what tells us when something is so undeniably, indisputably WRONG that it is worth taking the effort to oppose it if not destroy it outright. Without them, no serious resistance to atrocities is plausible. Granted, if this particular immune system is allowed to slip its leash that can result in yet more atrocities, but nothing in creation is without its risks.
The trick is to learn the emotions. Just as everyone else does. Empathy must always be taught to people, and children. If it is not taught, we become sociopaths and psychopaths and uncaring towards the species at large.
Most emotions outside of the base few are "inherent" to people. We instinctively feel happiness and satisfaction. Anger and sadness. These are things we learn for personal reasons. The things that trigger chemical releases in our brain.
What needs to be taught is the linking of these emotions to others. The ability to see the world as someone else does. To feel the way someone else does. That has to be taught. Not many are very good at it, but we are delightfully good at approximating it to a convincing degree.
It is impossible to feel the same as someone else. But, it is possible to imagine yourself in that situation and how you would feel about it.
So, inevitably, our world is full of useless platitudes. Fake "feel good". Fake "empathy". People who pretend to care for the social value of caring. People who will say something matters yet do nothing to fix the situation. The useless platitudes. The signaling to others that "we care" despite not actually caring.
It is why our "emotional reservoirs" run dry. Why we cease to care about issues that persist long enough and yet do not affect us personally. We may care a child was murdered or missing for a while and feel righteous anger toward it... But, given a few months and given we didn't know the child at all, our reservoirs run dry and we cease to care.
Fake platitudes. Fake empathy.
So, the trick is to learn the emotions. To learn to put yourself in the shoes of others. Because what we would do if placed in those situations becomes our moral ground.
But, there's one emotion we all instinctively understand. It is a uniquely PERSONAL emotion. That is, of course, wrath. We can recognize it when we see it others. It triggers every primal urge in our bodies to run when we see it. Better to die tired than to experience wrath in its full fury from an attacker. We know it instinctively when we see it, because we know what it will mean if we undergo it. Sanity leaves and is replaced with only the will to destroy. A will that transcends any emotion or even physical state. Preservation of self goes out the window alongside reason. No matter how inept at emotions any person is... we all know and we all possess wrath.
Every other emotion needs to be taught and needs to be linked to others. We need to be taught empathy. We need to be taught more complex emotions like "love" and "bonding". We don't possess them inherently.
Inevitably, it is those that realize they don't have these emotions and work on studying them, that end up actually feeling them. Feeling them far more strongly than everyone else, in fact.
Something I've realised as a person with high functioning autism is that I actually do have extremely strong emotions, but I keep them buried deeply because in the past, emotions have only led to pain.
There's a reason why the old Sci-Fi fantasy show Star Trek had the supposedly emotionless "Vulcans" and a reason why later on that was changed to Vulcans being trained to control their emotions. It's because Vulcans are a sci-fi representation of the autistic people in Human society.
@@melkiorwiseman5234 you did not want to trigger a Vulcan. If you see a Vulcan displaying wrath "run"
“They are the most blood thirsty species!”
*laughs in orca*
There is a horror movie of what happens if you cause a orca to experience wrath. Sharks and white whales got nothing on orca.
Explore to find aliens and resources
Expand relations and products (good and bad)
Exploit resources while minimizing self and friendly harm
Exterminate the areas stopping the first three goals
or just play as fanatic purifiers and purge the abominable misbegotten reprehensible foul xenos!
@@zeehero7280 That is part of the "bad" in the Second Goal. "Submit to us as so much life of our home world did or face the same fate." If they come out like wolves or small cats it leans towards the good side the majority of the time. We only have to look at Racism, and extinct species to see how the bad side goes.
@@truekurayami Yep nothing more irrational and dumb than racism. especially among our own species. only one race right now on earth and its the human race.
About Captain Kirk... he *VERY* rarely actually slept with the alien chicks. He'd notice they found him interesting so he'd use seduction to manipulate them into going along with his objectives but his first and only love was the Enterprise. And despite being considered a "cowboy" type due to his tendency to bend the rules or outright defy orders if necessary, he was mostly "by the book" for most of his career. He just happened to be Captain in an era where he had broad discretion on how he interpreted regulations; much like how old-school Age of Sail ship's captains acted. When TNG came to be, Picard was more of the micromanaged diplomat who could kick ass when necessary and had far less slack in his rope to play with.
🥲🥲 90 minutes of applause for this man
Ah yes human perversion, definitely want to steer clear of that lol
makes sense that a form of empathetic capacity would allow for learning new emotions
Wrath is a powerful motivator. An emotion that can topple empires.
Or slay gods, demons, dragons, even aliens.
Death by powerpoint was supposed to be less literal.
Wrath, a state of mind that shunts unnecessary mental processes to complete a task, usually violence. Often confused with rage, which is a state if mind that focuses everything down to a single point, also known as "seeing red". An example would be the sacrifice of speech, physical and mental sensation, taste and/or smell, to amplify vision, hearing, and physical acuity. To give further example of the amplification: vision, which normally has a small focal point and the rest peripheral vision, will have the focal point expanded to half of ones vision and their peripheral vision to be able to identify simple objects rather than just movement
Yup. Rage is the hot-blooded berserk frenzy to kill everything near you. Wrath is the cold, laser-focused decision that you will dedicate your entire being to utterly *ENDING* that which has invoked it. Those gripped by Wrath rarely raise their voices and will otherwise appear utterly calm, almost tranquil save for the fury seen in their eyes and perhaps minor alterations in vocal inflections.
Or, to put it another way: rage is like the Reavers in Firefly, wrath is The Terminator.
@@RaderizDorret i wish i could give this more likes, so take these instead
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Wrath is when you keep your target alive so you can hurt them more.
Orcas and dolphins are often called The humans of the sea.
Well will you look at that. We can infect others with our emotions. Gives mob mentality a whole new meaning
Siliath taught the head of manufacturing *fear.* Hopefully Siliath has also taught the manufacturing head's peers regret.
Annoyance, anger, hate, rage, WRATH. Wrath is the end station of all aggressive emotions, the point of no return. I have only experienced the first 4, there is no coming back from wrath. No sanity left...
I read a story, a person recounting when it was in high school, of a school bully, its toadys, and its target. Months of torment, the target first crying, weeping, then stopping. Just standing there, taking in all the insults, the hits, the constant torment.
That ended one day in the school's weight room. The target took up a weight in each hand--and pounded the head bully's face. Over and over until others pulled him away, some getting their own jaws broken in the process.
Finally, the weight of their bodies pulled and kept him down.
The bully used to be handsome.
Afterwards, it took years of facial reconstruction to get it to the point it could again chew and swallow food.
"they weren't the strongest, but they were all bards"
Wraph is not a feeling of excessive or unjustified anger, or violence defended by rightiousness, it is recognition of the fact that the exploiter class needs to be destroyed.
The first one reminds me of a short story I read years ago called "Danger - Human! Do Not Touch!"
Though shall not abuse humans, abuse includes death by anything other than natural means.
There may actually be some truth to the idea that Earth's Gravity is within the upper limits of achievable chemical rocket space flight. This fact alone could make humans be one of the strongest and most endurable intelligent races in the Universe. Our cultural tendency toward team work, strategy, and combat could at least in theory be our greatest strength amongst the stars.
Earth could be seen as a death world, with gravity levels far to high for other sapient species to even move on.
I absolutely love these stories.
*sobing on tears* ive gone so far.... but in the end ... it doesn't even matter even more
the second one gave me goosebumps at the end
:)
@@AgroSquerril no picture of doom slayer to show what wrath looks like?
Humans: We'll screw you into extinction.
called the Kirk protocol
The first story sounds like they accesed the wrong information and got something we would try and hide...
Beautiful narration as usual, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed and it was a pleasure
The second story was very well written, and the surprise ending was very fitting. I do like when the bad guys lose and are brought to justice.
For quite a long time I thought you were saying "an ancient wives story", HFY, got it now. 😂
I can only imagine the look on Siliath's face as she asked that question. A look of such cold fury the likes of which she had never knew was stirring just below the surface. A madness leashed under ignorance and beaten down by indoctrination now set loose.
Do you know 'Wrath'?
Oh that second one was really good!
Thanks for the narration!
For the algorithm!
glad you enjoyed and For the algorithm
2:35
Xeno: I am sure you are wondering why I made such an extreme recommendation..
Humans: No need to explain. We understand.
There is a reason for Wrath being one of the Seven Deadly Sins
true
The probing thing and the copulation thing ... very funny!!!
:)
For the Author(s), for the narrator Agro Squirrel, for the algorithm !!!
The expert in the first story made an excellent argument to quarantine humanity...But apparently it was reverse psychology to the Council. Well, their mistake would be the Galaxy's problem sooner or later
Thank you for the reading
Human ambassador “wait, you said your people are used as SLAVE LABOR for the people who sent you here to learn from us!?”
Alien “while we don’t have a choice, they do supply small salary for-“
Human “SLAVE LABOR!”
Alien “it’s not that big a deal, it’s just how things have always been.”
Human “and it’s your superiors who sent you here who told you that’s how you should think of it?”
Alien “well, yes. But it’s normal.”
Human “I see…have a seat. *We have plenty to talk about.* “
I still every time hear "HFY story" as "Ancient Wives Story."
I don't know why.
:passionate donations:
As Bobthedrag & dataMag stumbled through the corridor, alarms blared above & around them. Many a time they would lock eyes both with a similar look. We have to donate to agro squirel. It was imperative, none before them had succeeded before them , would anyone ever they thought? The corridor seem to stretch on for eons .........(story trails off)
I can understand the opinion of the first story. There's even some justification for it. But it totally ignores our efforts to better ourselves. Unfortunately, we have a long ways to go.
A slave revolt rarely ends well for the masters in the long run.
Humans: We fight hard and f*ck harder! We are a warrior poet race that will fight you one minute and attempt to get in your pants the next.
Xeno Researcher: Yup that's a quarantine.
Xeno Council: Now, hold on we are (looks "respectfully")... uh (looks at muscles)... intrigued.
Xeno Researcher: We're f*cked.
Xeno Council: Yes we are 😏, but so are our enemies. 😈
Recognized her self in costume 🤣🤣
Ugh it almost 1:50 AM and your hitting me with this!? I need sleep. :(
Sleeeeeep
@@AgroSquerril I did and it was good.
Human shows an Alien a video: "Do you see that monkey that's sneaking up on that sleeping predator? It's about to whack it with a stick or pull on its tail, theb run away into the trees."
Alien: "What?! Why?!!"
Human: "Meh, just becuz" (shrug)
Alien: Why are you showing me this? (Building forboding terror)
Human: We evolved from it. (Evil smile)
That last one was chilling.
I laughed when the alien called earth "dirt" To the writer of that story, I give you, two sideways fingers pointed upwards.
There is a run joke of deathworlders having planets named after dirt.
@@loganshaw4527 it would be a funnier joke if earth was a death world. (to humans, earth is not a death world. If your a mouse it is, but not to humans.)
@@abrr2000 say that after you see a fire tornado, lightning during a blizzard, a super cell raining snakes, -50°C/-60°F, more then 10 foot of snow. Or a tornado bigger the a mile wide up to 5 miles wide.
@@loganshaw4527 Your confusing danger in extremis, with being a death world. A death world outside of internet stories, is one that wants to kill you ALL THE TIME. The planet from Lightyear is a low level death world. You CANNOT go outside without specialist protective equiptment, like a lazer sword, guns and full body armour. On a death world, keeping the danger at bay is a job so important, that if it's not done, people WILL die. And compated to the death worlds from 40K, the world from Lightyear is weak sauce.
Meanwhile on earth the most dangerous thing I'm likely to face my entire life is other humans.
Sure, Eath being a death world from an alien perspective is an interesting idea. But to humans, Earth is the cradle of humanity. The most dangerous things we face are desease and humans. (and not in that order)
@@abrr2000 but that is the thing it is not 100 percent safe every where either, by where you are at in longitude and latitude. if there is something dangerous nearby like a animal that can and will kill you, being up north in winter and outside, being trapped out side of your home. In a unknown area like the mid of nowhere. You would not want to be anywhere near a volcano or on thin ice or in fast moving water or lost at sea, outside during a lightning storm near a tree in high wind even crossing a busy road without looking be in a desert, lost in the mountains, be anywhere near a Dimond back snake, near a mountain lion. I have experience most of where I said earlier expect the snakes and the fire tornado and the biggest tornado but only had to deal with 4 foot of snow. There are things on earth that can and will kill you if unlucky.
Keep us peaceful, keep us silly. Everyone will be fine.
Make us fight, make us rage, & no one will be safe.
Damn right it is every mans dream to Captain Kirk his way across the universe. Boldly going to boink where no man has boinked before.
One of the fundamental errors made when discussing human evolution is focusing on "intelligence." The fact is, there are numerous intelligent species on earth. What sets humans apart is that as a species, starting around 2 million years ago, we started relying on tradition, learning, imagination, communication and creativity to survive. These are all sharper tools when directed by intelligence, but intelligence without them is merely smart. We lacked physiological adaptations to survive easily as a scavenger of kills, so we adapted tools even chimps use to accomplishing things like marrow extraction. The foods available to our savanna-dwelling ancestors were difficult to digest. Fire and fermentation made them easier. By the time we were mostly finished becoming human, the species had walked, and possibly paddled, from the Cape of Good Hope to Cape Horn.
Ah yes, the expert says
Leave them alone!
So of course, the Council says, yes, we can use them as cannon fodder!
This will not end well for the Council.
The council hires them as Mercs
Sigh the poor council worlds
The second story= good to see humans teach aliens the value and use of Wrath.
For the Squirril
For the algorithm
By this story, humans do come off like orcs. Breeding with anything they can, warlike, crazy, LOL. But in the second story, humans apparently are able to teach not just wrath, but a sense of justice and fairness that leads to the returned scientists starting what could be a social revolution.
Kind of a dark bedtime story tonight...
They happen , spread the Themes around
May the gods have mercy on those that incur Wrath.
I can't really argue that humanity will try to screw anything at least once. Per generation. And there will always be someone that thinks "You're just doing it wrong! watch this!"
I mean, if you log onto the internet unprepared you get what you deserve. It’s why I don’t understand the code start political need to try and sanitise an entire ecosystem. Create moderated spaces and let the animals deal with themselves (beyond basic legal consequences for actionable behaviour)
As to the second story. Less a teaching, more the removal of a limited perspective, fanned hard to get though but after one it gets a lot easier. Soon after you have a very dangerous and very motivated set of skilled individuals walking around the infrastructure that binds them.
wonder how the student was graded on her presentation in the last story?
"Fighting age 13".. Eh, possible but more like 15.
"maturity a few years later" legally yes... Biologically Fults? More like age 25-28, a decade plus from 13
Its more like combat effective at 13. My grandfather for example was 13 when he first killed a German soldier in Holland while in the resistance.
Exactly, especially with a gun or a rifle.
Hey, crazy has its uses. Most of us know how to keep a lid on it. Methinks the first commenter is overstating his case LOL
Besides, in story 2 it shows we're good at waking up the outrage in other species because that wrath is based on compassion for those being unfairly harmed.
Story 2 had a twist.
Insomnia for the algorithm
For the algorithmic algorithms algorithm
keeper going
kept going
Greetings, mentlegent!
For the rhythm that is algo
Story 1: Rule 34! AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA And yeah, they made the same mistake the Romans did with their barbarian mercenary troops, but on a much larger scale.
Story 2: Siliath and friends went native
Their fault for searching that, only the crazy or mad search the r34
Bless the Squerril
For the algorithm
For the algorithm and the narrator.
For the algorithm
Snurly doo. Wee hong!
For the Agro-rithm.
Ah its always nice to teach others new things is it not? :)
Do you know the algorithm?
not personally , but a friend of a friend does i think
Okay, I just gotta know: what is a mentlegent? Is that some kind of Australianism?
I too would like to know.
@Kenric Young really, i always seen it as a very dumb way to say gentlemen, while still sounding sophisticated
Something my dad used to say when I was growing up , he had a habit of purposefully transposing letters on words , like Hucking Fell. Gentle Men became Mentle Gen became Mentle Gents (Mad Lads) and when i was thinking of an intro it stuck out in my mind , so i used it
@@AgroSquerril wow, didn't expect it to be wholesome
@@walnut6684 lol just something from youth bleeding through into adulthood
Do we get to watch it again? I only caught the end of it....
yup , it becomes a normal video at the end of the premiere
To please the algorithm
For the algorithm
ahhhhhhhhh so awesome!!!!!!!
glad you enjoyed
For the beeb boop
for the beep da boop
Algorithm enhancement for WRATH!!!
For the algorithm
First story was meh second one was pretty good
For the algorithm
For the Algorithm
For the algorithm!
neat
:)
GRIFFITHHHH 💀😈😡
Dragon bob
Hi Bob.
For the algorithm.
For the algorithm
FtA, FtA(s), FtDV!
For the algorithm
305th, 19 December 2023
F.T.A.
For the algorithm
F.A.S.
For the algorithm