Unsung: A Soldier's Virtue is Starvation



When done virtuously, within an interpretable light, there is no way to undo the good the comes about from starvation. This is where the sentiment of a soldier comes from. Wherever it is that a battlefield is present, the greatest of victories are ones that are won from disciplines that actionably account for wroughtly ascertained successes granting of true and lasting good. War is a fielded approach that makes sense of the different principles, and from their wrought philosophical fundamentality, there arises virtue. The art, or martial art, of starvation, then accrues to maintain the stringently effective scope of definitive finality. For whatever the reason may be, the different measures of efficacy founded in their conceptual basis does not change in accordance with the structural foundation for sustained good that does not break from the art of starvation integral to its form. No war, once started, can end without resolution, elsewise, there would be no war at all, and within these dynamics, starvation is the only true way in which any other conflict can be resolved. This is so because if all elements of an embattlement are completely deprived of energy, the opposition can not survive. The method by which this is done, though, is how one pathologically defines the principles inherent in the different components at work in the inevitability of peace and resolution. When considering, then, the virtues that manifest from the sustained pathologies of the prior described methods of natural construction, the whole of what is embodied as sustainable warmth finds housing along the tracks of virtuous ascription and earned understanding.

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