ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
It's comic to imagine if the game was a bridge and if Curtis was designing it.
He'd look at the Golden Gate, insist that the cables were just for decoration, and that the only thing that mattered was that the piers be big and strong. There'd be nothing you could say that would dissuade him. He'd take no interest in -- would have no awareness of -- the actual physics of the problem. It'd be a matter of big piers. That would be obvious.
Forget about improving TOAW. We'd never have gotten out of the Stone Age with this guy.
Notice that practially every post from Colin Wright is literally filled to the brim with personnel insults. Doesn't really bother me, but ever notice how thin-skinned he is?
Actually, I kind of like the free-fire zone principle. Normally, I try not to apply it though, because (a) others don't like it, and (b) it pretty much guarantees we won't get anywhere.
But in the current case, (a) you certainly set ground rules that gave me carte blanche, and (b) I can't imagine you proving amenable to either reason or evidence regardless of how it was presented.
When I am arguing with some one that is keeping a civil tongue in their head -- Vahauser or Golden Delicious, for example -- I do my best to do the same. Moreover, in the case of such individuals, while one rarely 'wins,' the discussion does cause both parties to refine their point of view. Some clarification and logical development does occur.
However, there's not much chance of that in your case. Other than the waste of time, there's nothing to be lost.
What I wrote
does pretty much describe the spectacle of Curtis 'improving' TOAW. There's the same willful refusal to understand how wars have usually gone, and to understand the actual principles driving their outcome. The difficulty is not that it cannot be considered an engineering problem, but that you're hardly approaching this as an engineer.