Friday, January 20, 2012

Opinion/Editorial

     The Mongolian army was just split into ninety-five units. Each unit consists of 1,000 men. In those units, there is a quaron of 100 men. In each squadron there is a squadron of scarcely ten men. The organization must be improved immediately. The army’s units go down to a microscopic number of ten. Genghis Khan should’ve left it at a quaran of 100 men. The reason that this is bad is because there are too many squadrons to communicate with eachother. There are 9,500 squadrons, which is way too many groups that need to be organized in one army. 
     Different quarons have different thoughts of attack and there are too many to organize all of the thoughts together. The suggestion is to eliminate squadrons and leave the grouping of men at quarons. This way, the army is still organized, but there are fewer units that have to fuss about their ideas of approaching. Squadrons were an attempt to make the army smaller, but instead it created more problems. With squadrons, more communication has to be done, and it’s easier to eliminate squadrons overall. No more squadrons, no time wasted on extra unnecessary units.

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