Board Thread:Lore Discussion/@comment-10993011-20130618024431/@comment-3573184-20130829054026

A. The Night of tears Theory was debunked by the College of winterhold questline.

Furthermore, the elves do not reproduce slower then men, they only supposedly kill off largen umbers of thier own children, but even that is suspect given the PGe's laughably obvious baised.

B. Except they cant. The Empire couldnt use morale to thier advantage to cancel out the AD's physical supplies. You are speaking out of bravado, not actual

C. the book also says

"The Aldmeri were unaware that he was no longer in Hammerfell, possibly because the Imperial veterans Decianus had left behind led Lady Arannelya to believe that she still faced an Imperial army."

Hiding an army NEAR an occupied city, which, the text only says near, not how near, and near is a vague word as you can be near something and yet not be close enough to be spotted, especially when they dont even think you would be there, really isn't that hard to do, especially in massively forested highlands.

Hating the jungle =/= the jungle wasn't useful. I can hate my cellphone for one minor thing despite it doing a million things well. Your argument is nothing short of a false equivalence.

D. Not really, a decisive victory is one where the Redguards beat the AD militarily, and don't have to resort to compromises and treaties in order to win. The Redguard's victory was not "decisive" by any meaning of the word.

Furthermore, their victory is lessened by the fact that the AD had largely given up interest in Hammerfell before the first great war even ended, having shifted thier views to Cyrodiil. The situation is more similar to how America just left Vietnam, rather then how the allied forces beat Nazi Germany.