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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 70 responses total. |
walkman
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response 25 of 70:
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Dec 20 20:24 UTC 2021 |
I want curtains from the My Pillow grifter guy. For an extra $200 you
can get Sidney Powell to sign it, "If I killed myself, it was Hillary."
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tod
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response 26 of 70:
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Dec 26 23:45 UTC 2021 |
I thought it was Winnie the Pooh but his name was Newt
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walkman
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response 27 of 70:
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Dec 27 01:52 UTC 2021 |
https://nypost.com/2018/10/13/how-clinton-and-gingrich-started-the-great-
american-divide/
2024, if we ever get there will be interesting.
If there ever was a case that Trump was a globalist agent, it could be
made now with him going around with Bill O'Riley promoting the vaccines
while the crowds boo. I don't think even 5% of his base are for vaccines
and 0% are for mandates. 2024, if Trump runs will be like Romney vs
Obama. Anyone the left runs will win. Trump needs to step aside and let
someone like Desantis run. For FUCK'S SAKE!!!!!
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walkman
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response 28 of 70:
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Dec 27 18:12 UTC 2021 |
doubleplusgood
double-plus good
double plus good
++good
Antonyms: ungood, double-plus-ungood
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2020/09/the-terrifying-story-of-how-
qanon-infiltrated-moms-groups/
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tod
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response 29 of 70:
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Dec 31 15:03 UTC 2021 |
re #28
I'm a NextDoor moderator (for several accounts - ask me how I did that.)
What you see as a moderator reveals quickly who is pulling strings in
your community; and by community we can be talking a few blocks or a
Congressional district *wink wink*
It has been a lesson in "what FB, IG, Dischord, Whatsapp, etc potential
looks like"
I had a mayor pro-tem interview the hell out of me before making me a
mod for my own neighborhood. She uses an alias "don't tell anybody who
I really am" There are fringe websites claiming she does kooky things
like surveil her adversaries or naysayers - I can validate that. However
this is a person with power to do things to people such as that white
bicycle with candles I pass every day...a dead cop who got run off the road
bicycling that was one of her worst critics. That's just a sample platter.
Moms' groups is a real thing. We have Katie Porter in our District - just
a little while longer since the gerrymandering by Congress recently.
Katie got into our district who "WHO THE F#@& KNOWS" method because it's
staunch conservative and she's a puppet for VP Harris and the Left.
My living room TV died recently and as an EET it's a cakewalk to fix
but I haven't and won't. There is no good which can come from the media
nor the streaming channels. My kid asked me about Boba Fett and I told
him DisneyPlus is the Devil and we dont pay for that because my pronouns
will stay intact. Want to take an even deeper dive? Watch The Way Of The
Dog and tell me what the takeaway message is....it's more blatant than
the 'war' movie Thin Red Line which was another pedo freak movie.
Hey, if you like HP Lovecraft and the Egyptian boy he brought with him
to his Andy Warhol parties then I can't help you. Why did Epsteins guards
get off the hook for letting him hang while they played online games?
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walkman
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response 30 of 70:
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Feb 12 23:16 UTC 2022 |
1. They pyramids of Giza and the pyramids of Teotihuacan both align
perfectly overhead to Orion's Belt. There are further monuments at
Teotihuacan that also align with other stars beyond Orion.
2. A 15 year old boy found a lost Mayan city by overlaying star maps
over ancient temples. "X" marks the spot.
https://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-36259047
3. How did ancient man calculate with exact precision, immense monuments
that line up perfectly overhead to stars in the sky?
4. *Why* did ancient man line up immense monuments who's precise
alignment appear to match stars only to those FLYING above?
5. How did two civilizations separated by time and thousands of miles
create similar monuments that both aligned to the same stars without
knowledge or communications with eachother?
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papa
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response 31 of 70:
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Feb 14 01:04 UTC 2022 |
resp:30
1., 2.: Cool!
3.-5.: You're not saying it aliens ... but it's aliens? Don't sell human
ingenuity short.
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walkman
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response 32 of 70:
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Feb 18 01:06 UTC 2022 |
I'm just asking questions.
Yes, humans are intelligent.
Archaeologists and historians are afraid to connect the dots are ask the
obvious questions because doing so threatens the past work their
current beliefs are based on.
The almost exact similarities with archaeological structures spanning
the globe (construction methods & building shapes), belief systems,
religious themes (men from the sky, floods, creation myths, etc.), and
culture can't be explained away by coincidence IMO.
If we can rule out aliens and conclude smart humans, we should then ask
why civilizations, written history and monuments didn't appear before
10,000 BCE. Homo sapiens emerged in Africa around 300,000 years ago...
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tod
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response 33 of 70:
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Feb 18 20:02 UTC 2022 |
Civlizations are 5k years old but homo sapiens are 300k years old.
From 300,000 to 300 BCE...what kinda freaky carnival circus was going on
with homo sapiens that all of a sudden 5k years ago they started to
commune and farm?
Were they living on ice where nothing grew? Were their asses being
chased too frequently to stop and smell the roses? Did they decide
to walk upright? Were they domesticated by ET and observed how to
behave as a society?
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walkman
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response 34 of 70:
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Feb 19 01:09 UTC 2022 |
#33 That's what I'm saying.
If we extended the "humans were always great builders of civilizations",
we could then go down some roads. One road that you cited is
flood/ice/uninhabitable earth. With that we can say that humans may have
had a limited ability to convene and learn from each other to evolve
their civilization.
There's another intriguing road: great civilizations have come and gone
but were lost. Spooky and cool. Did they escape earth with rocket ships
and evolve elsewhere? Are *they* the aliens visiting earth? Or did they
just die out and or were their cities now under water? So many
questions. Were they more or less advanced than we are? Did they have
intriguing customs, languages, myths, inventions, etc?
What we do know is that we find ancient homo sapiens buried with simple
tools and that there is cave art, which by the way experts claim the
oldest is 35,400 years old. What were the ancient men portraying?
FUCKING ALIENS. Space ships, aliens, weird shit and of course, animals
and hand prints.
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papa
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response 35 of 70:
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Feb 20 11:50 UTC 2022 |
Most evidence of Mu, Atlantis, and Hyperborea was wiped out in the Deluge.
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tod
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response 36 of 70:
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Feb 23 18:25 UTC 2022 |
re #35
The Polish 1600s uprising?
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papa
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response 37 of 70:
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Feb 23 23:48 UTC 2022 |
resp:36 "Apre`s moi, le de'luge."
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tod
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response 38 of 70:
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Feb 24 23:47 UTC 2022 |
Ruine, si tu veux, quand nous sommes morts et partis
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walkman
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response 39 of 70:
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Feb 26 20:06 UTC 2022 |
This is outstanding:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHpC85p0ZM0
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tod
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response 40 of 70:
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Feb 27 13:22 UTC 2022 |
re #39
Sunwheel? How about UFO? It has a hold in the middle so they could
mimick the spinning.
Charred...Burned Beyond.....Recognition
Yea, if I see something burned then my first thought is going to be
Frankenstein
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walkman
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response 41 of 70:
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Feb 28 12:01 UTC 2022 |
#40 Those entities depicted were NOT Chinese. Ears, nose, eyes very
different. Humans don't have giant wrap around eyes...
The way they were depicted, the scale of the depictions...only to
deliberately bury them and set them on fire...those people were deathly
afraid of the "gods". 3,000 years ago. Just incredible. And yeah, that
wheel. Out of context it could represent anything but given the context
of those entities, it seems pretty obvious to me.
It really could be a sun wheel but it could also be a mag wheel from a
Olds 442. When we step back and look at artwork from the Sumerians, to
the Greeks, Romans, Mayans, Persians and so on we see flying discs.
The Zoroastrian god Ahura Mazda wasn't the only one depicted with wings
and a round disc juxtapositioned. The Mayans put their gods in space
ships!
Oh - did you notice some of the 3,000 year old art work from China had a
very strong resemblance to the Mayan art?
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tod
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response 42 of 70:
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Feb 28 17:49 UTC 2022 |
Thor Heyerdahl would be proud of all this. And yes, I agree.
Zorastrians temple has a big fire in its center. I know a few and
they have a house they've turned into a temple. It's pretty interesting
stuff. What's even more fascinating is that Iranians consider Mazda
a national symbol and wear the necklace but if you get down to it most
of them are Muslim...the majority of Zorastrians are Parsi (Not Farsi)
and came to Iran many centuries ago from India.
Old civilizations...
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walkman
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response 43 of 70:
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Mar 3 19:15 UTC 2022 |
Here's a good one. Why is the Book of Enoch (great-grandfather of Noah)
rejected by Jews and Christians? It's central to many biblical stories,
yet non-cannon.
I would think that fallen angels, giants, "the watchers" and UFO's would
be good reading! (sarcasm) Many of these ideas are making Disney (under
Marvel) hundreds of millions of dollars.
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walkman
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response 44 of 70:
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Mar 6 17:39 UTC 2022 |
This Japanese Sega arcade game from 1985 called, "I'm Sorry" features 3
bad guys: A CIA "man in black", O.J. Simpson, and Michael Jackson.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LoNPS2vDPE
I'm not kidding. It's actually a fun and challenging game but the stage
two villains are racist as f. I never got to the 3rd level. I wonder who
the villains are.
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tod
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response 45 of 70:
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Mar 6 19:39 UTC 2022 |
re #44
I don't know what the point of that game was but I felt like I was
skipping school and losing money just by watching/listening to it.
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walkman
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response 46 of 70:
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Mar 7 12:23 UTC 2022 |
Ha ha ha ha yes indeed
I remember the arcade strategically located next to the High School had
a slice of pizza and a coke for $1. That's almost unimaginable now. And
so many quarters in the Star Wars, Pac-Man, Tron, Crystal Castles,
Mappy, Q*Bert... all the burnouts playing Stargate/Defender. I would die
almost instantly with that game. I ended up owning that cabinet
(someone *gave* it to me around 2000 if you can believe it). I'm pretty
ace at that game now. (pretty sad really) LOL
For some strange reason, my brain just jumped to those Russian clones of
the British ZX Spectrum. I wonder how video games were played in Soviet
territory. Maybe one day I'll visit the "Museum of Soviet Arcade
Games"? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Soviet_Arcade_Machines
My brain just jumped again to bootleg VCR players in North Korea and
episodes of "Friends" being smuggled in. See, Americans don't really eat
their babies. They eat take-out Chinese food and drink expensive
coffee.
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tod
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response 47 of 70:
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Mar 10 02:51 UTC 2022 |
re #46
If you were playing Sea Battle in Jordache jeans in USSR then you were
the son/daughter of somebody at the top of The Party. That just didn't
happen, comrade.
I can't remember how many kopecs I put on the Kblo6epT (QBert) machine
in between tending the field and studying for the chess championships.
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walkman
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response 48 of 70:
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Mar 29 23:33 UTC 2022 |
If you ever wanted to load a Commodore Vic 20 cartridge image from a
floppy disk on a real machine, I wrote a guide on how to do this:
https://distantdark.com/2022/02/06/commodore-vic-20-2-rom-cartridge-
files-launch-from-a-d64-image/
It's actually a really difficult problem because most of the cartridges
are split images and the images are assigned to different memory blocks.
These games should be preserved and so far, it's quite difficult to play
them, even with emulators. With this method, you can create a disk
image with the rom images and run them on either a real machine or an
emulator.
#vic20rabbithole #jupiterlanderrocks
There were many more interesting Vic 20 games than even I was aware of,
especially those created by Sierra.
http://sierrachest.com/index.php?a=platforms&id=15
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tod
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response 49 of 70:
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Mar 30 23:25 UTC 2022 |
What is a floppy disk?
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