About this app
There is a soldier’s expression: "his bullets do not take, he is spellbound." This means that the person they say so will never die from a bullet in battle. Every soldier or general in a war dreams of it. But not everyone survives, especially a soldier. So what is really the secret of people who literally did not take a bullet? And is he at all?
Surprisingly, someone is destined to die from an absurd accident in the first seconds of his stay in the army, and someone openly scoffs at all possible laws of probability theory and returns unscathed from the most unthinkable alterations.
Why?
First, it’s worth looking at the history from the time of the first annals of military clashes. As for the literary adventures of heroes and knights of all ranks and all countries, the description of their military exploits suspiciously looks like modern third-rate fighters in which non-main characters serve exclusively as targets for the main characters. It seems that the epic knights were absolutely invulnerable to the arrows, spears and swords of the enemy. However, the reason is not hidden: conspiracies, magic amulets, amulets ...
Victory and defeat in a battle using edged weapons, as far as martial arts experts can believe, is a matter that is almost one hundred percent dependent on the fighting spirit of a person. In ancient Japanese martial arts, it was believed that the battle was won by a victory in a duel of views - the one who, with his eyes, convinces the enemy of his vulnerability, is the winner who, for formality, could only finish off the vanquished with the sword. Suppose that the way it was and it seems to be the way it is. But wizards invent gunpowder, and then firearms, which seem to neglect the arts and smite anyone without getting hit. And their own, and strangers. Then the classic of military affairs Suvorov pronounces his immortal: "A bullet is a fool, a bayonet is well done." Or: "Afraid of a bold bullet."
However, in order to get into a soldier from those primitive rifles, it would be necessary to make this very soldier stand still for a long time. To get into a moving target - into a brave man jumping into an attack - was practically hopeless. But is it easier to kill a runaway coward from a gun than a brave man running towards him? But the low accuracy of guns is not the point here. In real battles, not one or two shotguns participated, but a volley of musketeer ranks, which mowed down the ranks of the attackers better than a long line from a machine gun. It was when the regiments and armies thinned after each salvo that the officers noticed that not everyone was equally affected by the torrential stream of lead. In each regiment there was certainly a mustachioed grenadier whose legends were invulnerable ... By the way, based on centuries of experience, it follows that the safest place in the battle is to be close to the "happy" commander. And the most dangerous place begins already a meter or two from him ...
However, in terms of legends on this subject, it was not the European arrows who surpassed everyone, but the more backward tribes of Asia, Africa and America, who regarded death or victory in battle as a whole divine providence.
So, the second half of the XIX century. In the open spaces of the North American states, armed struggle of detachments of white and indigenous tribes of the Indians is in full swing. The Redskins, who did not even know firearms yesterday, but very quickly mastered Winchesters, Colts and horseback riding, transferred all their old military secrets almost entirely to new technical methods of warfare. White, many generations ago, ceased to regard his own weapons as a living being, and to fight as a logical conclusion to a magical rite. Hence the numerous obscure "white" pages in the history of this obscure war.
App Permissions
Allows applications to open network sockets.
Allows an application to read from external storage.
Allows an application to write to external storage.
Allows applications to access information about networks.
Allows using PowerManager WakeLocks to keep processor from sleeping or screen from dimming.