Quote:
Tomahawk wrote:
You need to study some history. Midway isn't even one of the "most epic" battles of WWII, let alone all of human history. It's only remarable from an aviation perspective. In terms of what people find attractive, there's no accounting for taste (or a lack thereof).
Each post that you make only reveals how far out of touch you are with reality.
!!!! Can you name three large-scale decisive naval battles from the past 500 years? (my quick list: Lepanto, Trafalgar ... and Midway; make it a list of five and I have to go to ancient Greek and Chinese history to fill out the list).
The most interesting thing to me about naval history is that there is so little large scale combat to be found. Countries spent so much of their national wealth over so much time to build a large navy that they became very reluctant to put it to risk. Besides Trafalgar, one is hard-pressed to find any battles between ships-of-the-line. In all WWII there were only two battleship-battleship engagements (the Bismark breakout and 2nd naval battle of Guadalcanal; Surigao Strait was more a battleship-battleship execution than a battle, and all of those were relatively small actions on the "epic" scale).
Midway was remarkable: One of the very few times in the past 2000 years where two naval countries put everything they could get together on the line, at a time when it could have gone either way, for one throw of the dice. The result was decisive, although some argue that Japan could have wiped the American Navy out at Midway and would still have lost the war. Midway and Stalingrad are the only regular additions to the 15 decisive battles list put together by Sir Edward Creasy in 1851, which I think is the widely agreed upon definition of epic. Tomahawk needs to be studying some history before making such general statements that show such a lack of large-scale perspective.
Of course, I am assuming that "epic" is meant to mean historically important. The word gets bandied about for small unit actions by Easy Company or PT-boats, but none of those actions likely influenced the course of the day let alone the war.