• themeatbridge
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    79 months ago

    I don’t think I understand this one…

    • @ChicoSuave
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      79 months ago

      Outside of US Cavalry and some Native Americans, what part of this is Little Big Horn or Custer? That link doesn’t she’s light on what the comic means.

      • @dragonfly
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        49 months ago

        They’re saying “Neener Neener, you can’t catch me,” and from what we know about history, the Natives accepted the challenge and won. I’m not sure how else to explain it. You might not find it funny, and that’s okay, but it’s clearly a reference to that battle.

        • @zinaer
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          29 months ago

          What we know about history - the natives won?

          • @dragonfly
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            39 months ago

            They won the Battle of Little Bighorn, also known as Custer’s Last Stand, yes.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          19 months ago

          I am skeptical that this is about that battle as well, absent some sort of outside information like Larson explicitly saying it was.

          There were many battles that the cavalry had with Native Americans. I don’t think that you can say cavalry+Native Americans implies Custer’s last stand.

          Thst also wasn’t a raid on a fort. I do see references by Larson to that battle, but also cartoons that clearly are not, like this one, also about a raid on a fort:

          https://i.pinimg.com/474x/26/f9/33/26f933fc2af95faf28921416e58dd47d--cartoon-jokes-funny-cartoons.jpg

  • @lyam23
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    69 months ago

    I guess boomer absurdist humor is not compatible with millennial and gen z absurdist humor. I don’t think there’s much to read into here. There’s only 3 of them but one is a horrific, unnaturally large person. If I was there, I’d show some restraint as well. I mean WTF…

    • @dragonfly
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      edit-2
      9 months ago

      Yeah, I think that’s a problem with quite a few of Larson’s comics. A lot of it was based on tropes and stereotypes that were more accepted at the time. I’m gen x, so I get the humor, and found it funny back then, but with hindsight some of them were questionable if not outright offensive. In this case, however, he is ridiculing the cavalry for their hubris, when they should have had a better plan against the combined native forces. Custer screwed up and died as a result. If anything, it’s saying the natives were much smarter.

    • synae[he/him]
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      fedilink
      English
      19 months ago

      Speaking as an Oregon trail / Xennial, I have no problem with this either. Must be my younger brethren not getting the gag

  • @njm1314
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    49 months ago

    It’s like a scarecrow type joke? Like they built the big headed thing to scare off the Indians? I’m confused.

  • @ChicoSuave
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    29 months ago

    It’s two soldiers taunting the native Americans to attack as a form of reverse psychology. The joke is the native american perspective on things: it can’t be a guy right? But where did they get a hat that big?