Captain_Orso wrote:Look in the ..\Civil War II\CW2\Settings folder if any of the .opt files has a line containing 'inoMusicVolume'.
If you cannot find it, add it to ..\General.opt, because that's where your personal settings reside, and that file does not get overwritten by patches, etc.
The line should look like:
inoMusicVolume = 60 # Any comment you might wish to add.
Set to anywhere between 0 and 100, and try out different settings to see what you like. Now off with you, you Memphis boys![]()
DrPostman wrote:Midtown. I've always been a Midtowner, except when I was in the USAF
and a brief few years of insanity when I lived in West Memphis.![]()
James W. Starnes wrote:Haha West Memphis is the Detroit of the South. I'm guessing you're aware they city council are trying to take down that N.B. Forrest monument? They are also trying to take him and his wife's remains...![]()
Captain_Orso wrote:IMHO intentions are very meaningful, when assessing a persons actions; they breath life into understanding a person. So to me, it's less a question of 'what' NBF did, as 'why' he did it, and that is very difficult to ascertain with any certainty.
But you guys have made statements, which insinuate knowing what Forrest's intentions were, what values lead to his decisions. My question is, why do you feel the need to project what you believe to be Forrest's intentions onto his actions?
Captain_Orso wrote:But you guys have made statements, which insinuate knowing what Forrest's intentions were, what values lead to his decisions. My question is, why do you feel the need to project what you believe to be Forrest's intentions onto his actions?
James W. Starnes wrote:Can you elaborate? Forrest's actions are put under a microscope, which are analyzed with modern norms in play. Do that with just about anyone at the time such as William Tecumseh Sherman, and you'll find his actions made him a man of his time. I don't know if that's what you were asking, but hopefully that mihgt clear something up.
DrPostman wrote:I'm going by NBF's own words:
Forrest : Memphis' first White Civil Rights Advocate
Captain_Orso wrote:I wish there were a monument of him not having to do with the war.
The whole war, everything which led up to it, and everything that happened after it, all the way up to the present day, is such a huge and complex subject, an entire year on high school would be pressed to cover every important aspect of the entire conflict, which still lives on today.
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