Post
Topic
Board Speculation (Altcoins)
Re: CryptoKingdom Markets
by
bv68bot
on 07/05/2017, 05:20:21 UTC
One big cloud over M is that  rpietila  (ZECHARIAH) holds over 900,000,000,000 M out of 4,000,000,000,000 total. If a significant portion of the debt is settled in terms of M and the creditors dump M well do the math. This is why the outstanding B1 and E1 debt is a very significant cloud over M even after rpietila's administrative privileges in the game were revoked. The aftermath of this attempted manipulation / pump of M is far from over.


This may have been Risto's plan all along, no retreat possible!


Quote

Burn The Boats

It was the year 1519 and Hernán Cortés, with some 600 Spaniards, 16 or so horses and 11 boats, had landed on a vast inland plateau called, Mexico.

The Span­ish con­quis­ta­dor and his men were about to embark on a con­quest of an empire that hoarded some of the world’s great­est trea­sure.  Gold, sil­ver and pre­cious Aztec jew­els were just some of what this trea­sure had to offer any­one who suc­ceeded in their quest to obtain it.

But, with only 600 men — none of whom had encum­bered them­selves with pro­tec­tive armour – con­quer­ing an empire so exten­sive in its ter­ri­to­ries could only be under­taken by a man with a death wish.

This dar­ing under­tak­ing was made even more insur­mount­able by the fact that for more than 600 years, con­querors with far more resources at their dis­posal who attempted to col­o­nize the Yucatan Penin­sula, never suc­ceeded.  Hernán Cortés was well-aware of this fact.  And it was for this rea­son, that he took a dif­fer­ent approach when he landed on the land of the Mayans.
Instead of charg­ing through cities and forc­ing his men into imme­di­ate bat­tle, Hernán Cortés stayed on the beach and awoke the souls of his men with melo­di­ous cadences – in the form of embla­zoned speeches.

His speeches were inge­niously designed to urge on the spirit of adven­ture and invoke the thirst of life­times of for­tune amongst his troops.  His ora­tions bore fruit, for what was sup­pos­edly a mil­i­tary exploit, now bore the appear­ance of extrav­a­gant romance in the imag­i­na­tions of Cortés’ troops.

But, iron­i­cally, it would only just be 3 words which Cortés’ mur­mured, that would change the his­tory of the New World.  As they marched inland to face their ene­mies, Cortés ordered, “Burn the boats.”

It was a deci­sion that should have back­fired.  For if Cortés and his men were on the brink of defeat, there wasn’t an exit strat­egy in place to save their lives.  Remark­ably though, the com­mand to burn the boats had an oppo­site effect on his men because now, they were left with only 2 choices — die, or ensure vic­tory.  And fight they did.

We know today, how Cortés’ deci­sion to burn his boats panned out.  Hernán Cortés became the first man in 600 years to suc­cess­fully con­quer Mexico.

Though his­to­ri­ans still dis­pute the verac­ity of Hernán Cortés burn­ing his boats, it’s doubt­less that Cortés did destroy his boats.  But, he wasn’t the first man to make such a bold, strate­gic deci­sion to ensure victory.

About a thou­sand years before, the world’s great­est empire builder, Alexan­der the Great burned his boats upon arrival on the shores of Per­sia.  By burn­ing his boats, Alexan­der com­mit­ted his men to vic­tory over the Per­sians, who far out­num­bered the Greeks in great num­bers.  Fur­ther­more, Per­sia then also had the dis­tinc­tion of hav­ing the most pow­er­ful naval fleet in the world.  Con­sid­er­ing what Alexan­der was fac­ing, the deci­sion to destroy the Greeks’ only hope of retreat was an extra­or­di­nary one.  Nonethe­less, it proved to be the cor­rect one.

Our his­tory books also boast of other fear­some Greek com­man­ders who exe­cuted the same strat­egy to guar­an­tee vic­tory.  Taric el Tuerto, oth­er­wise known as Tariq ibn Ziyad, the gen­eral who con­quered His­pania in 711, burned his boats when fight­ing the Spaniards, as he too had a valid rea­son to do so — his army was out­num­bered 5:1.

Was this act of burn­ing the boats a mock drama­ti­za­tion of brav­ery, or a clev­erly con­structed strat­egy?  In Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, it brings to light the logic behind the deci­sions of history’s great­est con­querors to burn their boats at the risk of being killed in enemy hands.  It was sim­ply to erad­i­cate any notion of retreat from the minds of their troops and com­mit them­selves unwa­ver­ingly to the cause – Vic­tory.  Defeat wasn’t an option at all.

http://burningboats.com/about-burningboatscom/