Why do sailors use "port" and "starboard"?

The average sailor has the IQ of a burnt piece of toast. You can’t expect them to remember their rights and lefts.
Literally this. In fact they're so low IQ that entire sides of the vessel are literally color-coded with flashing lights so that they can tell the "port" (red) from the "starboard" (green) without even having to think about it. Aircraft, too.
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It's all holdover bullshit emanating from the fact that English originated from a culture that wasn't nearly as navally advanced as the Romans were.
Starboard is a millennium-long corruption of "Steering-board", because they couldn't figure out a central rudder, so literally one dude with a super big fucking oar served as the rudder on one consistent side. The right side, since most people are right-handed. And you don't want to dock that side for risk of damaging your rudder, so the other side became the Port side.
 
Literally this. In fact they're so low IQ that entire sides of the vessel are literally color-coded with flashing lights so that they can tell the "port" (red) from the "starboard" (green) without even having to think about it. Aircraft, too.
From an aviation standpoint, it allows you to see other aircraft around you at night, and you can tell what direction they are moving by observing their navigation lights and beacons.
 
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