Attack Its Weak Point: Difference between revisions

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** Also by chewing its eyes out and also PRYING ITS GODDAMN MOUTH OPEN and sending ants inside.
** Also by chewing its eyes out and also PRYING ITS GODDAMN MOUTH OPEN and sending ants inside.
* The field of social engineering came about as a method of attacking the weak point inherent in every digital security system. [[Humans Are Morons|The people who use it.]] There's no better method of getting a password than convincing someone who knows it that they should give it up.
* The field of social engineering came about as a method of attacking the weak point inherent in every digital security system. [[Humans Are Morons|The people who use it.]] There's no better method of getting a password than convincing someone who knows it that they should give it up.
* Really any form of combat style at any level is "attack weak point/prevent same". The tricky part is getting at it and sometimes finding even what it is(at high policy levels this can often require what amounts to telepathy to decide which mind tricks will deflate one's foe and which will just make him more mad, or worse make neutrals mad).
* Really any form of combat style at any level is "attack weak point/prevent same". The tricky part is getting at it and sometimes finding even what it is. At high policy levels this can often require what amounts to telepathy to decide which mind tricks will demoralize the foe and which will just make him angrier, or worse make neutrals mad.
* The German word for this translates as "sharp place". Basically in their old blitzkrieg doctrine, much of which is still sound though making it work is as always the tricky part, the offensive starts by feeling around about the front(which means the poor chaps that "feel out" the wrong place get shafted) until it starts to give in one place, then rushing reserves to it and shatter it then racing the tanks who did this through rather recklessly ignoring their flanks(they are going to fast to be hit on a flank anyway), and being rather cavalier about supply lines(this was a doozy and was often the [[Achilles' Heel]] of the whole system) and getting in among the enemies infrastructure to cause a cascade failure in supplies, morale, and pretty much everything.
* The German word for this translates as "sharp place". Basically in their old blitzkrieg doctrine, much of which is still sound (though making it work is as always the tricky part), the offensive starts by feeling around about the front (which means the poor chaps that "feel out" the wrong place get shafted) until it starts to give in one place, then rushing reserves to it and shatter it then racing the tanks which did this through rather recklessly while ignoring their flanks (they are going too fast to be hit on a flank anyway), and being rather cavalier about supply lines (this was a doozy and was often the [[Achilles' Heel]] of the whole system), as well as getting in among the enemies' infrastructure to cause a cascade failure in supplies, morale, and pretty much everything.
**The same thing was done in the Pacific by both the Americans and the Japanese though the Americans did it better in the end having more resources. There were differences. It is easier to get into the enemy territory at sea then on land because the sea is so big and ships are so small compared to sprawling divisions of tanks and infantry. One limit many people do not know about is that airstops at the time needed a fairly steady prevailing wind to get lift under the wing which meant that not only could you not bypass every island, the islands you could not bypass could reasonably be guessed at. All that said, the Pacific often looks like a nautical version of blitzkrieg with carriers as armored divisions, battleships as artillery, and Marines as infantry doing the dirty mop up.
**The same thing was done in the Pacific by both the Americans and the Japanese though the Americans did it better, in the end having more resources. There were differences. It is easier to get into the enemy territory at sea than on land because the sea is so big and ships are so small compared to sprawling divisions of tanks and infantry. One limit many people do not know about is that aircraft at the time needed a fairly steady prevailing wind to get lift under the wing -- which meant that not only could you not bypass every island, the islands you could not bypass could reasonably be guessed at. All that said, the Pacific often looked like a nautical version of blitzkrieg with carriers as armored divisions, battleships as artillery, and Marines as infantry doing the dirty mop up.
***Actually the mop-up was done by the army. Marines were more likely to spend a few really intense days and be pulled out to train for the next island and the army was more likely to be dealing with what was left of a garrison that occupied some island that couldn't be bypassed. Perhaps the Marines were like the mechanized infantry prying open the breech the tanks made and the Army was like the infantry stomping on whatever fragments were left.
***Actually the mop-up was done by the army. Marines were more likely to spend a few really intense days and be pulled out to train for the next island and the army was more likely to be dealing with what was left of a garrison that occupied some island that couldn't be bypassed. Perhaps the Marines were like the mechanized infantry prying open the breech the tanks made and the Army was like the infantry stomping on whatever fragments were left.
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