Reddit.
And I'm pretty sure raging neckbeards have never been the army's first choice for front-line infantry.
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Reddit.
And I'm pretty sure raging neckbeards have never been the army's first choice for front-line infantry.
Actually, they were the army's first choice for front-line infantry for roughly the entirety of human existence. You don't want to risk your skilled and competent warriors in combat when you can send wave after wave of the peasantry out there first. Especially once technology reached the point where you could give them guns that required little training, like in World War 1.
WELL FINE THEN
;____________________;
They kinda do, don't they? It just happens to be publicized that it's more "us" than "them", now.
People being wrong on the Internet.
/obligatory
I'm quite drawn to reddit, but I can understand why people don't like it. Depending where you go there is a certain level of snobbery and/or rehashing of old posts and conversations. I still use it for news relating to games based on the sub-reddits I am subscribed to.
I read reddit when I get bored. I look at the funny pictures, and I read AskReddit at work since it's usually not the same old reddit tomfoolery. The sports-related subreddits (/r/NBA and /r/NFL primarily) are really the only internet community I follow with interest in sports, so it's nice for that. But like Matt I understand people not liking it and I won't fight to the death defending it. It is what it is.