Steampunk is a genre that exaggerates the prevalence and influence of steam-powered mechanical devices in 19thC and Western settings, and imagines that they continued to be characteristic of future ages as well (e.g., steam-powered dirigibles and armored vehicles in 20thC military settings, etc.). It thrives on anachronism and on the beauty and complexity of the steel, iron and brass mechanisms featured. TV's "The Wild Wild West" was a steampunk show, since the two Secret Service agents were essentially modern spies and action/adventure heroes, but in a 19thC setting and using all kinds of steampunk tools too advanced for their day. "The Lone Ranger" cartoon (1966), here, is steampunk animation b/c the stories insert steam- and spring-powered weaponry, diving suits, armored trains, etc. into otherwise conventional Old West settings.
Inspired by the infamous Sand Creek Massacre of Nov. 1864, when a force of 675 Colorado Volunteer cavalry under COL John Chivington -- a highly-religious frontier lawyer with political aspirations -- surprised and devastated a village of peaceful Cheyennes and Arapaho who were camped under a flag of truce. Between 200-500 Indians -- 2/3 of them women and kids -- died in an hour.
@@charlesaguilar1708 And morally disgusting. Nobody under truce should have to fear for their lives. To quote Optimus Prime, “Freedom is the right of all sentient beings.” And those who died had all the rights to it.
What is this word used in this article steampunk mean I've seen it before please explain
Steampunk is a genre that exaggerates the prevalence and influence of steam-powered mechanical devices in 19thC and Western settings, and imagines that they continued to be characteristic of future ages as well (e.g., steam-powered dirigibles and armored vehicles in 20thC military settings, etc.). It thrives on anachronism and on the beauty and complexity of the steel, iron and brass mechanisms featured. TV's "The Wild Wild West" was a steampunk show, since the two Secret Service agents were essentially modern spies and action/adventure heroes, but in a 19thC setting and using all kinds of steampunk tools too advanced for their day. "The Lone Ranger" cartoon (1966), here, is steampunk animation b/c the stories insert steam- and spring-powered weaponry, diving suits, armored trains, etc. into otherwise conventional Old West settings.
Inspired by the infamous Sand Creek Massacre of Nov. 1864, when a force of 675 Colorado Volunteer cavalry under COL John Chivington -- a highly-religious frontier lawyer with political aspirations -- surprised and devastated a village of peaceful Cheyennes and Arapaho who were camped under a flag of truce. Between 200-500 Indians -- 2/3 of them women and kids -- died in an hour.
That's sad and useless waste of human life!
@@charlesaguilar1708 And morally disgusting. Nobody under truce should have to fear for their lives. To quote Optimus Prime, “Freedom is the right of all sentient beings.” And those who died had all the rights to it.
@@theodorehsu5023 Thank you Theodore, It's amazing that those who forget history are doomed to repeat it!
THAT sounds Right of ALL COWARDS!
bad guy's voice sounded like either Paul Frees or Marvin Miller
Someone also mentioned it might be Vic Perrin.
It's the voice of Doctor Zin all right!!🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
It was definitely Vic Perrin
i wonder do you might have the Lone Ranger 1966 Cartoon episode Sabotage if you do then could you please Post it here on youtube,
Who knew that this cartoon could mirror Trump supporters...... Wow
Who knew this cartoon would mirror IDIOT OBUMMER STOOLIES LIKE YOU? WHO KNEW? WOW.....your level of STUPIDITY never ceases to amaze me.
Who would have thought an IDIOT like YOU would be able to navigate on here,much less find your butt with both hands? Who knew? WOW
@@musicman201047 YOU MAD !!! HA HA