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- CyberKitten
- I have a burning need to know stuff and I love asking awkward questions.
Sunday, June 23, 2024
From Wiki: The graveyard of empires is a sobriquet often associated with Afghanistan. It originates from the several historical examples of foreign powers having been unable to achieve military victory in Afghanistan in the modern period, including the Soviet Union and, most recently, the United States. The phrase, in reference to Afghanistan, does not seem to predate a 2001 article by Milton Bearden in the magazine Foreign Affairs. Alternatively, the term has been applied to Mesopotamia. Elsewhere, a very similar phrase, "the graveyard of nations and empires," has been used in a figurative sense to describe the Old Testament's Book of Isaiah. The anthropologist Thomas Barfield has noted that the narrative of Afghanistan as an unconquerable nation has been used by Afghanistan itself to deter invaders. In October 2001, during the United States invasion of Afghanistan, the Taliban founder and leader Mohammed Omar Mujahid threatened the United States with the same fate as the British Empire and the Soviet Union. US President Joe Biden referred to the sobriquet while he delivered a public statement after the 2021 fall of Kabul as evidence that no further commitment of American military presence would consolidate the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan against the Taliban.
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5 comments:
Such a great description by Wiki, I absolutely love that page. And the internet. You can get so much information. I always wanted a large encyclopedia as opposed to the one volume one my parents had. Nowadays, we all have that with the internet and there are still people who don't use it. Unbelievable.
Wiki is the first place I go for a quick investigation or when a question comes up chatting to friends around game time. Its never come up blank - so far!
Things have changed SO much since we were kids. If you wanted to know something - and didn't have a handy reference @ home - it'd be down to the library and a search through the catalogue or a chat with a friendly librarian. Today its Google, 5 minutes (or less) of surfing & you find what you're looking for - mostly! I've learnt SO much from the Internet. A brilliant invention - when used right!! [grin] Or then there's always cat videos... [lol]
We didn't have a library like that. There was a church library, open on Sundays after mass, but they had mainly fiction. I would have loved to be able to go to a library to find out things. I guess I must have read everything in our one-volume encyclopedia. And learned the atlas by heart.
I only really started using my local library when I hit my early teens. It was about a 30 minute walk away (in each direction) by was close to the main shopping area - and my senior school - so wasn't too out of the way with a bit of effort/planning. The staff were *really* good and (I'm guessing) put up with me because I gave them a lot of 'traffic', not only getting books out - that often exceeded my 'legal limit' - but also by ordered LOTS of books from other libraries. Yes, I was *that* kind of teenager!
I was SO lucky. Having a library like that really helped - back in the days when I had little disposable income and Amazon was LONG in the future. Libraries ROCK.
I certainly would have taken advantage of that it I had had the opportunity. Sadly, that was not the case. And I went everywhere by bike, so that would have been very close for me.
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