Perhaps it was Fredrick the Great that said, “an army marches on its stomach”.
Dude might be a chef but his successes in warfare cannot be diminished by his former career.
I’m not super into this war, but I’m against (((Zelenskyy))) persecuting Orthodox Christians. I’d rather both sides back down and stop fighting. That being said the fact that the prisoner private army guy was a chef doesn’t really tell me much.
If you want more interesting than him being a chef, check out how he met Putin in the 90s as a chef, and also check out his fathers faith. Those are more sketch details
Edit to add: General Grant, who won the U.S. Civil War (though at too high of losses) ran a general, or dry goods, store, prior to the war bringing him back into active service.
It's not a cope, as you say elsewhere in this thread. I'm generally on Russia's side in this war, but just because the dude's a chef, it doesn't mean he can't also be a capable (or semi-competent by recent very modest gains at least) general.
Some of the deepest thinkers I have met were in the grocery, restaurant, hospitality, and catering businesses. The difference with them is… they have a perfect face for the public, bc that’s their job. Some people confuse that with being of lesser intelligence, but I would argue that it is the opposite for those who start at the beginning and rise up to a great career.
Perhaps it was Fredrick the Great that said, “an army marches on its stomach”. Dude might be a chef but his successes in warfare cannot be diminished by his former career.
I’m not super into this war, but I’m against (((Zelenskyy))) persecuting Orthodox Christians. I’d rather both sides back down and stop fighting. That being said the fact that the prisoner private army guy was a chef doesn’t really tell me much.
If you want more interesting than him being a chef, check out how he met Putin in the 90s as a chef, and also check out his fathers faith. Those are more sketch details
A man of many talents perhaps?
Edit to add: General Grant, who won the U.S. Civil War (though at too high of losses) ran a general, or dry goods, store, prior to the war bringing him back into active service.
It's not a cope, as you say elsewhere in this thread. I'm generally on Russia's side in this war, but just because the dude's a chef, it doesn't mean he can't also be a capable (or semi-competent by recent very modest gains at least) general.
Some of the deepest thinkers I have met were in the grocery, restaurant, hospitality, and catering businesses. The difference with them is… they have a perfect face for the public, bc that’s their job. Some people confuse that with being of lesser intelligence, but I would argue that it is the opposite for those who start at the beginning and rise up to a great career.
This is only inexplicable to dumb bitches.
and fags.