Apparently being a lesbian is much more brave than participating in the Battle of Verdun, the bloodiest battle in WW1.

Battle of Verdun is maybe the single most brutal battle in the history of humanity. Millions, yes millions, of shells dropped onto a single inhabited fort in that battle. There is still areas of that battlefield that have undetonated ordinance. Soldiers would frequently fall asleep during shellings, the stress so great that the mind would rather be unconscious.

If you want to know why WW1 was the absolute most brutal war in history, so bad that more men died in single days of battle than entire wars in history, spend your car rides listening to Dan Carlins Hardcore History. Specifically the podcasts Blueprint for Armageddon, which is about WW1 start to finish. He tells the story, often from the untold perspective of the young men on the ground dealing with te smells of a battlefield that hasn't moved in 3 years where you can still see your buddy's body who died months prior. Where you had to sit in your trench and listen to your friends slowly die over the next few days, with no way of reaching them even though they are but 10 feet away. Most people today have absolutely no idea just how horrific this war was. Entire generations of men in small towns completely wiped out. Entire family ancestories just stopped with no men left to carry on the name. And to girls kissing in the street is brave? Give me a big fat dildo fucking break.

Fuck lezbo bravery that isn't brave. You come out today everyone claps and hugs you and figures out how to attack white Christians in the wake of it all. WOMEN would go around English towns public ally shaming men who weren't fighting on the western front by putting a feather in their hat. Why don't they teach that in Feminist History of how Toxic Masculinity Ruins Everything.

Oh while we are talking about toxic masculinity, props to the men who gave up their seats 104 years ago on the Titanic to let the women and children survive.

Here is how this battle forever changed the landscape, even 100 years later. Those craters are where soldiers were known to frequently fall into and drown. Sometimes men could not pull their friends out, and had to move on and leave them to die. This war is too brutal to even make movies about.

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