- Joined
- Sep 11, 2009
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- 1,812
Steroids ====> I just solved the problem
Steroids are bad. And its dependant. Generally steriods are just adding to you more of your natural body hormones. Such as Anebolic and testorone. This is generally extremly dangerous as an overdose on such hormones can cause some very genuine bad effects in your system.
You should not take steroids unles prescribed
I find this a fairly interesting topic to discuss, and I hope I posted it in the right section.
It has been said that the modern human would pale before his ancestors in regards to physical strength and capability. Has the Industrial Revolution and Information Age transformed us into half-pints of what our forefathers were? Anthropologist Peter McAllister seems to think so.
According to the anthropologist, a Neanderthal woman - whose remains were discovered in a cave in France and have been dubbed 'La Ferrassie II' - boasted ten percent more muscle mass than the average European man, and had enough upper arm strength to "slam him to the table without a problem.” (ref)
Many prehistoric Australian aboriginals could have outrun world 100 and 200 metres record holder Usain Bolt in modern conditions. These same aborigines could also hurl a hardwood spear 110 metres or more.(ref)
In Ancient Sparta, military training for men began at the tender age of seven, where they were sent off to military schools. One of the feats they had to achieve was enduring what could be considered "pain-proofing" - that is, beating and intense physical hardship.
During the reign of the Roman Empire in the first millennium A.D, a typical Roman legionary was expected to march, on average, one-and-a-half marathons (roughly 63km, or 40 miles) every day, carrying heavy gear which could weigh up to 20kg (44lbs).
In the middle ages, knights were expected to be able to ride, charge, fight, run and crawl in plate and chainmail armour, which could weigh anywhere from 27 - 32kg (60 - 70lbs), excluding their weapons and other armaments, such as swords and shields.
Almost twenty years ago, there were reports of Rwandan Tsutsi men being capable of leaping or springing higher than the world-class milestone of 2.45m.
And what about today, in our enlightened Information Age?
While men such as those in the special forces branches of many military institutions - such as the British Special Air Service, the Russian Spetsnaz, or the U.S Navy S.E.A.Ls - do us proud with the almost superhuman feats they achieve, it cannot be denied that, on average, the human race has deteriorated physically to a very worrisome extent. What do the statistics say?
In America, about one-third of adults (33.8%) are obese, and approximately 17% (or 12.5 million) of children and adolescents aged 2—19 years are obese. (ref)
Also in the U.S (not being nationally biased - all the statistics I've dug up seem to center around this country), alligators in Florida have killed 18 humans in the last 60 years, and around one human is killed by mountain lions every year. (ref) This is significantly less than what older generations of humans had to put up with. In fact, about two hundred years ago, warriors of the Zulu kingdom - the Impi - in Southern Africa were expected to prove their worth by killing a dangerous wild predator such as a lion as evidence they were men. This means aggressive encounters between man and beast were more than triple the statistics of what they are today.
So, can anthropologist McAllister's statement that "as a class we are in fact the sorriest cohort of masculine Homo sapiens to ever walk the planet," be justified? The scientist attempts to do so himself by explaining, "We are so inactive these days and have been since the industrial revolution really kicked into gear. These people were much more robust than we [are]."
What do you think? Is modern man really, as a whole, physically incompetent?
Be right back - doing a few push-ups.
PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS NOT REGARDING THE MENTAL OR INTELLECTUAL CAPACITY OF MODERN HUMANS. I'm well aware of how modern man is, collectively, extremely intelligent as opposed to his ancestors. This is about the aspect of physical strength and capability.
20kg and 27-32kg is nothing. The Norwegian military today has to walk around with up to 60kg on their back. I don't know how long they have to walk, but they have to walk really far. They also have to run and swim (not far though. These guys aren't Chuck Norris) with this gear without getting their weapons wet.During the reign of the Roman Empire in the first millennium A.D, a typical Roman legionary was expected to march, on average, one-and-a-half marathons (roughly 63km, or 40 miles) every day, carrying heavy gear which could weigh up to 20kg (44lbs).
In the middle ages, knights were expected to be able to ride, charge, fight, run and crawl in plate and chainmail armour, which could weigh anywhere from 27 - 32kg (60 - 70lbs), excluding their weapons and other armaments, such as swords and shields.
By future, you mean billions of years right?
If the ape-human transition took millions of years and barely changed anything
(other than maybe 3% of the DNA, more brain potential, etc..), then I'm guessing
that a major change like that should take a shitload of time![]()
No, there are already people that are 2 meters high right. I think that through genetic engineering and biomechanical technology a lot of things can be made possible in the future. More extreme things than you think.
I'm talking about 1000-2000 years into the future. Don't forget things like quantum computers.
No, there are already people that are 2 meters high right. I think that through genetic engineering and biomechanical technology a lot of things can be made possible in the future. More extreme things than you think.
I'm talking about 1000-2000 years into the future. Don't forget things like quantum computers.
That's where cattle mutilations go, to weird experiments mixtures of animals, sometimes involving human.. You'd think they could come up with some hybridizng to make future humans more healthy..
The_Reborn_Devil, actually before you start having a go at religious people...
Uz zo funneh man, u shud dafinitely join Merikaz got talontz.The_Reborn_Devil.exe has encountered an unknown error, and needs to restart.
Bruce lee>Chuck norris
Ipman was taught by Bruce lee. (both who learnt Wing chung)
Bruce lee originally studied Wing chung, before creating his own martial art Jeet kune do.
Longbows
To be fair, you need a lot of strength to use a Longbow.
once our space marine suits r releaseid humann can excirsie beter with Big sUit vry Heavy
One of the reasons we aren't altering humans in some way to make us better is because someone *cough*religious people*cough* don't want us to play *cough*god*cough*.
Yeah religion is bad and all. Now excuse me, I must go out and sacrifice kids because the gods demand it.
The Cossacks were jews(please correct me if i'm wrong)