Dead at Ypres

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader, like Robert the Llamabutcher, would be a Schoolmaster, Farmer, Bank clerk, Army officer, Clergyman, or Book keeper had he been born in 1905.

See what you would have been.

After scrolling through the possible answers, your Maximum Leader was both amused and filled with a bit of melancholy at how life turns out for most of the men. If you read them all you find that if you were a man born in Britain in 1905 your life was likely going to end at: Ypres, Jutland, Passchendaele, or Gallipolli. Frankly your Maximum Leader was a little surprised they didn’t list the Somne as a possible end. Your Maximum Leaer gets depressed when he contemplates the slaughter of the Great War.

NB: No surprises that our friend Lord Basil Seal turned out the way he did.

Also, thanks to Lord Seal, your Maximum Leader discovers that he is only 87% snob. His result reads:

Close but no Cohiba rolled on the thighs of Cuban virgins, Maximum Leader. You are 87% Snob. If your blood was a touch bluer, your pool a shade bigger, and your settee a chaise lounge, you could be up there with the ultra snobs. Meanwhile be grateful you’re not.

Sad. Your Maximum Leader was hoping to break at least 90%. Perhaps it was that question about his son marrying a stripper…

NB (2) - In the Mike World Order all of your Maximum Leader’s cigars will be Cubans rolled on the nubile thighs of Cuban virgins…

Carry on.

Historical Loons

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader hasn’t taken a quiz in a while. So, thanks to the Llamabutchers here is an new one.

I'm Nicola Tesla! Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzt!
Which Historical Lunatic Are You?
From the fecund loins of Rum and Monkey.

Here is the extended entry on Tesla:

A minister’s son from Simljan in Austria-Hungary, you were precocious from an early age. At three you could multiply three-digit numbers in your head and calculate how many seconds visitors to your home had lived. In awe of your older brother Dane, you shot a pea-shooter at his horse, causing it to throw him and inflict injuries from which he later died. This tragedy haunted you ever after. You frequently suffered bouts of illness with hallucinations throughout your life. During one affliction of cholera, you encountered the writing of Mark Twain, with whom you were later to be close friends. Later, another, this time mystery, illness inexplicably heightened your senses to a painful extent, only relenting when you hit upon the idea of the alternating current motor.

You developed an aversion to human contact, particularly involving hair, and a fear of pearls; when one would-be lover kissed you, you ran away in agony. Later, you insisted that any repeated actions in your day-to-day life had to be divisible by three, or, better yet, twenty-seven. You would, for example, continue walking until you had executed the required number of footsteps. You refused to eat anything until you had calculated its exact volume. Saltine crackers were a favourite for their uniformity in this respect. In the midst of important work, you forgot trivial details such as eating, sleeping or, on one memorable occasion, who you were.

Your inventions, always eccentric, began on a suitably bizarre note. The first was a frog-catching device that was so successful, and hence so emulated by your fellow children, that local frogs were almost eradicated. You also created a turbine powered by gluing sixteen May bugs to a tiny windmill. The insects panicked and flapped their wings furiously, powering the contraption for hours on end. This worked admirably until a small child came along and ate all the creatures alive, after which you never again touched another insect.

Prompted by dreams of attaining the then-ridiculed goal of achieving an alternating-current motor, you went to America in the hope of teaming up with Thomas Edison. Edison snubbed you, but promised fifty thousand dollars if you could improve his own direct-current motor by 20% efficiency. You succeeded. Edison did not pay up. It was not long until you created an AC motor by yourself.

Now successful, you set up a small laboratory, with a few assistants and almost no written records whatsoever. Despite it being destroyed by fire, you invented the Tesla Coil, impressing even the least astute observer with man-made lightning and lights lit seemingly by magic. Moving to Colorado Springs, you created a machine capable of sending ten million volts into the Earth’s surface, which even while being started up caused lightning to shoot from fire hydrants and sparks to singe feet through shoes all over the town. When calibrated to be in tune with the planet’s resonance, it created what is still the largest man-made electrical surge ever, an arc over 130 feet long. Unfortunately, it set the local power plant aflame.

You returned to New York, incidentally toying with the nascent idea of something eerily like today’s internet. Although the wealthiest man in America withdrew funding for a larger, more powerful resonator in short order, it did not stp you announcing the ability to split the world in two. You grew ever more diverse in your inventions: remote-controlled boats and submarines, bladeless turbines, and, finally, a death ray.

While whether the ray ever existed is still doubtful, it is said that you notified the Peary polar expedition to report anything strange in the tundra, and turned on the ray. First, nothing happened; then it disintegrated an owl; finally, reports reached you of the mysterious Tunguska explosion, upon which news you dismantled the apparatus immediately. An offer during WWII to recreate it was, thankfully, never acted upon by then-President Wilson. Turning to other matters, you investigated the forerunner of radar, to widespread derision.

Your inventions grew stranger. One oscillator caused earthquakes in Manhattan. You adapted this for medical purposes, claiming various health benefits for your devices. You found they let you work for days without sleep; Mark Twain enjoyed the experience until the sudden onset of diarrhoea. You claimed to receive signals in quasi-Morse Code from Mars, explored the initial stages of quantum physics; proposed a “wall of light”, using carefully-calibrated electromagnetic radiation, that would allegedly enable teleportation, anti-gravity airships and time travel; and proposed a basic design for a machine for photographing thoughts. You died aged 87 in New York, sharing an apartment with the flock of pigeons who were by then your only friends.

Ridiculed throughout your life (Superman fought the evil Dr. Tesla in 1940s comics), you were posthumously declared the father of the fluorescent bulb, the vacuum tube amplifier and the X-ray machine, and the Supreme Court named you as the legal inventor of the radio in place of Marconi. Wardenclyffe, the tower once housing your death ray, was dynamited several times to stop it falling into the hands of spies. It was strangely hard to topple, and even then could not be broken up.

Beauty, eh?

Carry on.

A poll worthy of your time

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader sees that Dr. Rusty Shackleford (once again) has his finger on the pulse of the blogosphere. Dr. Rusty gives us a poll that combines the best of all possible worlds. Babes. Gun Porn. And killin’ bad guys.

There are pictures! Consider it your duty to check out (wink, wink, nudge, nudge) the servicewomen that Rusty has included in his post. Then vote in the poll.

God Bless the USA! (And after the USA, then bless the IDF.)

Carry on.

News Quiz

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader, sort of at the suggestion of Phoenix, took the MSNBC weekly news quiz.

He scored 90%. Try it yourself.

He missed the question about the kids who were burning down the churches in Alabama.

And in a strange moment of serindipity… As he took the quiz and is now blogging about it, Elton John’s “Burn Down the Mission” is playing on your Maximum Leader’s iPod.

Make of that what you will.

Carry on.

Looter Quiz

What kind of looter am I? You decide!
You can also view a breakdown of results or put one of these on your own page!
Brought to you by Rum and Monkey

Another Quiz - SciFi related

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader, other than the foray into Episcopal sainthood, still has nothing. So back to quizzes…

It seems that your Maximum Leader would fit in on the Firefly crew:

You scored as Serenity (Firefly). You like to live your own way and don√¢??t enjoy when anyone but a friend tries to tell you should do different. Now if only the Reavers would quit trying to skin you.

Serenity (Firefly)

81%

Galactica (Battlestar: Galactica)

75%

Deep Space Nine (Star Trek)

75%

Andromeda Ascendant (Andromeda)

69%

Millennium Falcon (Star Wars)

63%

SG-1 (Stargate)

63%

Enterprise D (Star Trek)

56%

Moya (Farscape)

56%

Babylon 5 (Babylon 5)

56%

Nebuchadnezzar (The Matrix)

50%

Bebop (Cowboy Bebop)

44%

FBI's X-Files Division (The X-Files)

13%

Your Ultimate Sci-Fi Profile II: which sci-fi crew would you best fit in? (pics)
created with QuizFarm.com

Although he still hasn’t watched the show… He’s thinking of renting some episodes soon…

Thanks to the CalTechGirl for the link.

Carry on.

Got Nuthin’

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader has nuthin’ today. Just nuthin’. He does not want to opine or comment on anything that he can think of. Perhaps a muse shall strike him during the day.

And when he can’t think of anything to opine upon that means it is time for a quiz.

You scored as The Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann). The Eighth Doctor struck a chord with you after only one adventure. Maybe you are a fan of his audio adventures, or you just came to Dr Who quite late. Hope it wasn’t just the special effects that impressed you.

The First Doctor (William Hartnell)

75%

The Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann)

75%

The Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker)

69%

The Sixth Doctor (Colin Baker)

69%

The Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee)

56%

The Ninth Doctor (Christoper Eccleston)

50%

The Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton)

31%

The Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy)

25%

The Fifth Doctor (Peter Davidson)

19%

Which Doctor Who are you?
created with QuizFarm.com

Just to be clear… Your Maximum Leader has never watched a single episode of Dr Who that he can recall. So he has no idea if this is a good or bad thing.

Many thanks (and belated birthday wishes) to Robbo the Llamabutcher for this quiz.

Carry on.

Brian, Bill, and Kevin Are Right!

Smallholder is a heretic:

You scored as Pelagianism. You are a Pelagian. You reject ideas about man’s fallen human nature and believe that as a result we are able to fully obey God. You are the first Briton to contribute significantly to Christian thought, but you’re still excommunicated in 417.

Pelagianism

83%

Chalcedon compliant

75%

Apollanarian

75%

Nestorianism

67%

Monophysitism

67%

Arianism

58%

Monarchianism

58%

Modalism

42%

Docetism

25%

Gnosticism

25%

Socinianism

25%

Adoptionist

25%

Albigensianism

8%

Donatism

0%

Are you a heretic?
created with QuizFarm.com

not a heretic?

I decided to try that “heretic” quiz, using my theo class knowledge to finesse the results and see whether I could score as a non-heretic. Sure enough– 100%, baby. Read it and weep. I can pass for a good Christian at will.

You scored as Chalcedon compliant. You are Chalcedon compliant. Congratulations, you’re not a heretic. You believe that Jesus is truly God and truly man and like us in every respect, apart from sin. Officially approved in 451.

Chalcedon compliant

100%

Pelagianism

67%

Modalism

33%

Nestorianism

33%

Donatism

33%

Monophysitism

33%

Adoptionist

17%

Gnosticism

17%

Monarchianism

17%

Socinianism

0%

Apollanarian

0%

Arianism

0%

Docetism

0%

Albigensianism

0%

Are you a heretic?
created with QuizFarm.com

Carrion.

_

Heretic!

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader saw this quiz over on Brian’s site. He thought he’d give it a shot…

You scored as Pelagianism. You are a Pelagian. You reject ideas about man’s fallen human nature and believe that as a result we are able to fully obey God. You are the first Briton to contribute significantly to Christian thought, but you’re still excommunicated in 417.

Pelagianism

75%

Socinianism

67%

Docetism

42%

Gnosticism

42%

Nestorianism

33%

Monarchianism

33%

Modalism

25%

Monophysitism

25%

Albigensianism

17%

Adoptionist

17%

Apollanarian

17%

Chalcedon compliant

8%

Donatism

0%

Arianism

0%

Are you a heretic?
created with QuizFarm.com

One hopes there will be no burning as a result of taking this quiz…

Carry on.

Firefly Quiz

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader has never watched Firefly. So he doesn’t know if these results (from a quiz he saw over on Brian’s site) are any good.

Mal
You are Captain Malcolm Reynolds, aka. Mal or
Captain Tightpants. You saw most of your men
die in a war you lost and now you seek solitude
with a small crew that you are fiercely devoted
to. You have no problems being naked.

Which Firefly character are you?
brought to you by Quizilla
While your Maximum Leader doesn’t frequently wear tight pants (to confining you know…) he generally is okay with being naked….

Carry on.

The Love/Hate Fest Continues

Villainous minions often express surprise that a group of fellows so diverse in their political views can be good personal friends. We may go at each other’s ideology hammer and tongs, but if you look beneath the surface, the Maximum Leader and his minions are remarkably similar in their core values. Our friendships have stood the test of time. The Minister of Propaganda and I have been friends for two and a half decades. The Maximum Leader and Foreign Minister and I used to be college carousing buddies. Now we are family men whose families look forward intensely to our (too infrequent) reunions.

I think Brian B. would fit in very well with this group. My political commentary may drive him to disraction, but if you compare our “four things memes,” we aren’t that far apart.

Brian here.

Smallholder here.

I note with pleasure that Brian is also a fan of “Mad Dog and Glory,” a wonderful, subtle little gem of a movie.

His list of books differs from mine, but all but the Lewis work COULD have been on my list. I particularly smiled at the Armour book - I have a well-thumbed edition that I probably read once a year. I get on a sci-fi powered infantry kick and read Armor, The Forever War, and Starship Troopers in a weekend. I’ll confess that on long weekends, I’ll even add a couple of books from the considerably lower-brow Hammer’s Slammers series. I would add a caveat about Killer Angels. I enjoy the read and have re-read it several times, but I am troubled that Shaara seems to buy into the Southern hero mythology a little too strongly. I just can’t bring myself to think charitably of fellows who waged a treasonous war to preserve slavery.

I never watched the Firefly series, being unaware of its existence, but want to know that I’ve seen Serenity. The movie script lived up to Whedon’s reputation for snappy two-level dialogue. Brian and I are both fans of the Buffy series. It might interest that Willow hit on one of the Naked Villains, who spurned her advances. I won’t call out the putz. Said putz can confess his sins against the “great story value” code of guydom if he wishes.

—–
EXTENDEDBODY:

Meme for Bill

I’m not generally into the meme thing, but since our good friend Bill has tagged your humble Smallholder, I will oblige, if only to bring a smile to his face.

Meme for 2005

FOUR JOBS YOU’VE HAD IN YOUR LIFE
1. Butcher’s apprentice
2. Waiter
3. Grounds maintenance man
4. Camp counselor
5. Bureaucratic drone at SCOTUS
6. Ordinance officer, U.S. army
7. Pseudo-semi-professional football player (I should blog about this sometime)
8. Colonial Williamsburg archvist apprentice
9. History Teacher
10. Organic Farmer
Oops, that’s more than 4.

FOUR MOVIES YOU COULD WATCH OVER AND OVER
1. Last of the Mohicans
2. Aliens
3. Big Trouble in Little China
4. Mad Dog and Glory

FOUR BOOKS YOU COULD READ AGAIN & AGAIN
1. Gene Logsdon’s Contrary Farmer
2. Shakespeare’s Henry V
3. Stephen King’s The Stand
4. M.G. Kairn’s Five Acres and Independence

FOUR CITIES/PLACES YOU’VE LIVED IN
Going backwards chronologically
1. Batesville, Virginia
2. Laurel, Maryland
3. Williamsburg, Virginia
4. Aberdeen, Maryland

FOUR TV SHOWS YOU LOVE TO WATCH
1. Lost
2. West Wing
3. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
4. The Simpsons

FOUR PLACES YOU’VE BEEN ON VACATION
1. Cayman Islands
2. San rancsico
3. Americus, Georgia
4. Auburn, New York

FOUR WEBSITES YOU VISIT DAILY
1. Bill’s Comments
2. Memento Moron
3. Enjoy Every Sandwich
4. Agent Bedhead

Plus a few others.

FOUR OF YOUR FAVORITE FOODS
1. Sushi
2. Peanut butter sandwiches dunked in tomato soup
3. Mrs. Smallholder’s Mexican Casserole
4. Mutter Smallholder’s chipped beef

FOUR PLACES YOU’D RATHER BE RIGHT NOW
1. home
2. San Francisco
3. London
4. Visiting the Foreign Minister in Germany

I won’t tag anybody. Do the meme if the spirit moves.

Red Dawn Quiz

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader remembers loving the film Red Dawn when it game out. It was just the sort of mindless tripe he wanted to view all the time. So when he saw this quiz at I like your style, he knew he had to take it.

Jed
Jed Eckert…The Leader…

Which Red Dawn Character Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla

Carry on.

Just In Time For Christmas!

Greetings, loyal minions. Your Maximum Leader promised you fluff… And fluff you shall have…

Just in time for Christmas your Maximum Leader gets confirmation of the black nature of his heart.


How evil are you?

Many thanks to Lemuel for the quiz.

Carry on.

    About Naked Villainy

    • maxldr

    Villainous
    Contacts

    • E-mail your villainous leader:
      "maxldr-blog"-at-yahoo-dot-com or
      "maximumleader"-at-nakedvillainy-dot-com

    • Follow us on Twitter:
      at-maximumleader

    • No really follow on
      Twitter. I tweet a lot.

Did we mention, your Maximum Leader is hung like a mastodon?

    Villainous Commerce

    Villainous Sponsors

      • Get your link here.

      Villainous Search