15 days ago3 points(+0/-0/+3Score on mirror)1 child
The narrator is AI but the history of the battle is real.
I've been using text to speech software long before normie AI came out. It used to sound like Stephen Hawking the retard paraplegic everyone pretended was a genius.
Too bad you cant get an option to change the narrator voice. We could use the Hitler AI voice model.
You can get AI to analyze a person's voice and then make it narrate whatever you want with that voice.
You can also do so with videos, where you'd have a person presenting something like a news reporter.
I know this is being done but I've never done it myself, so I don't have any further details. But you can look it up, I'm sure you'll find how.
AI is allowing whites to make counter-propaganda it would have previously taken a small (((hollywood))) studio to produce faster than jews can shut it down. As annoying as some of the slop is, it will be a net benefit in the fight against the (((empire of lies))) the jews have built for themselves.
The youtube comments are small white pills. People in England know what's happening.
I can hope that the modern Englishman's behavior mirrors the tactics of King Richard's army. Patience while being attacked, enduring, building fury. Hopefully, we'll see a similar devastating counter-attack campaign from them in our lifetime.
Although after the initial campaign, I hope they don't stop this time, and finally stamp out the root cause of the invasion.
Saladin's army was not disciplined. The men were not trained to fight as a unit and to maintain ranks. King Richard had men who could work together and maintain ranks. Simple as that.
If you can't maintain discipline, your men will charge too early or too late, or won't charge at all, or will break ranks at the slightest resistance.
Medieval fighting was not that far distant from ancient fighting, and Alexander the Great was able to destroy the "civilized world" because his men were disciplined. That's all it was.
That's why modern armies march around in circles and train men to follow orders no matter what. The drill sergeants were telling themselves and their recruits that learning this one simple thing will keep them alive in a battle. When people stop following orders that's when everything falls apart, and it doesn't matter what advantages you had, it's all gone.