>>41774773>space kitten cult
>>41774921Adorbs
>>41774773King Of The North
>>41774773Gonna post it or not?
>>41776181Can't you read? There's Tumblr-Level access required
>>41776188And?
>>41776195And? You see anyone with blue hair around here?
SARDINIAN RITUALS: SIMBISCIADURA.For generations, in many villages in the interior of Sardinia, simply uttering the word simbisciadura was enough to lower one's voice. It wasn't a tale to be told in broad daylight, nor something to be explained to children. The simbisciadura belonged to that ambiguous territory where religion, superstition, and fear intertwined, and it had a specific location: the cemetery.According to oral tradition, it was a magical ritual practiced at night, often at midnight, when the boundary between the world of the living and the world of the dead was at its most blurred. It was mostly performed by women, driven by unrequited love, abandonment, or the desire to "bind" someone against their will. It wasn't about seduction, but about coercion: the goal was to bend someone's feelings, to call back a distant person, or to prevent another from falling in love.
>>41776651The cemetery wasn't a random choice. In Sardinian popular belief, the dead were not entirely absent from the world of the living. Souls, especially those restless or restless, retained a strength that could be invoked, but never without consequences. The ritual often took place before an unmarked grave, or that of someone who died young, violently, or without sacraments. It was said that those souls were more "available," closer to human pain.Stories speak of whispered formulas, never shouted, repeated over and over, of precise gestures that could not be mistaken. Sometimes personal objects of the person being struck were used: a thread, a piece of cloth, a hair. Everything had to be kept secret. Talking about the ritual, even hinting at it, meant compromising its effectiveness and attracting punishment. Silence was part of the spell.But simbisciadura was not seen as a "useful" practice. On the contrary, it instilled fear. It was said that the bond created was unhealthy, that it brought obsession, illness, and unhappiness. Those who resorted to it risked being followed by spirits, hearing footsteps behind them on their way home, and dreaming of the dead asking for something in return. Unraveling a simbisciadura was considered difficult, sometimes more dangerous than actually performing it. Not everyone was capable, and turning to the wrong person could make the situation worse.
>>41776653There were plenty of stories of love affairs gone awry, of men suddenly dying, of women consumed by waiting. Whether real or imagined, these episodes contributed to building a dark aura around the ritual, so much so that even those who professed not to believe in it preferred not to joke about it. The cemetery, at night, remained a place to avoid.Today, the simbisciadura is no longer practiced, at least not openly. It survives in the tales of the elderly, in anthropological studies, and in literature that explores the dark side of Sardinian folklore. It bears witness to a closed society, governed by strong moral codes, in which love, when it found no legitimate space, sought alternative, risky, and fear-filled paths. More than a simple magical rite, the simbisciadura speaks of discomfort, loneliness, and the need for control in a world where everything, even love, had to be subject to strict rules.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
>>41775156>Adorbsə-ˈdȯrbz informal
>>41776201>stands upi'm bluei will doo ba de doo what needs to be da be done
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>>41776993Burrito boy
>>41774773deens
https://youtu.be/SNUPxAHDt5I
>>41777197doing that kind of shit DOES get you legit gang stalked, be careful.
>>41777222Gangstalkers are fags
>>41776673Glory
>>41776651What did Megatron say to job? Do not be afraid of all the giants eyeball skin. Wat.
aHR0cHM6Ly9jdXR0ZXJzLWNob2ljZS1yYWRpby5yYWRpb2N1bHQuZm0vc3RyZWFt
>>41774773Yaldabaoth
https://pitchprash4aqilfr7sbmuwve3pnkpylqwxjbj2q5o4szcfeea6d27yd.onion/@nobody
WHAT IS NECROMANCY? THE DARK FASCINATION THAT SPANS THE CENTURIES
This scene demonstrates how deeply rooted the practice was in the classical imagination.Between the Middle Ages and religious condemnation.It was in the European Middle Ages that necromancy achieved its most sinister fame. In an era marked by plagues and uncertainty, the idea of bending death to one's will became a source of terror and persecution. The Church harshly condemned these practices, associating them with heresy and a pact with the devil. Historical documents reveal that some scholars and alchemists, often educated clerics, devoted themselves to erudite rituals, convinced that evoking spirits was a path to higher knowledge.Myth, science, and psychology.Today, necromancy is no longer practiced as it once was, but it continues to interest historians, anthropologists, and psychologists. According to some scholars, its success lies in the human need to give voice to the unknown and to process grief. Speaking with the dead, even symbolically, becomes a way to confront one's own mortality and the unanswered questions of existence.The Return in the Contemporary ImaginationFrom fantasy novels to video games, the figure of the necromancer has returned to pop culture, often reinterpreted in a less demonic and more complex light. No longer just an evil sorcerer, but a tragic figure, guardian of forbidden knowledge. A sign of the times. In a hyper-technological world, the ancient mystery of death continues to exert a powerful pull.Between fear and attraction.Necromancy remains a frontier territory, where history and legend intertwine. It is not so much the promise of dominating the dead that captures the imagination, but rather the profoundly human desire to wrest at least an answer from death. Perhaps this, today as yesterday, is the true secret of its dark allure.
Between myth, history, and pop culture, the art of "speaking with the dead" continues to question the present.Always suspended between fear and curiosity, necromancy is one of the most controversial and fascinating practices in human history. Summoning the dead to gain knowledge, predict the future, or influence destiny is an idea that has spanned millennia, civilizations, and religions, resurfacing today in books, TV series, and academic debates on the boundary between myth and anthropology.The origins of an ancient rite.The term "necromancy" derives from the Greek nekromanteía, literally "divination through the dead." Rituals for interrogating the spirits of the deceased already existed in ancient Mesopotamia and the Egypt of the pharaohs, as they were considered the custodians of truths otherwise inaccessible to the living. In the Odyssey, Homer depicts the hero Odysseus summoning souls from Hades to receive advice on his return to Ithaca.
>>41776651>It was mostly performed by womenbitches do be likehttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MPHyR92MQic
https://pitchprash4aqilfr7sbmuwve3pnkpylqwxjbj2q5o4szcfeea6d27yd.onion/p/d75fc39d#p-3ece44af
THE VAMPIRE CEMETERY OF DRASKO: WHERE THE DEAD WERE CHAINED TO THE EARTH...PolandIn the quiet countryside of Western Pomerania, far from tourist routes and brightly lit cities, there is a place where death alone was not enough to guarantee peace. In Drawsko, a small town in northwestern Poland, the earth has given back what had remained buried for centuries: tombs designed not to honor the dead, but to prevent their return.It is here that what is now known as the vampire cemetery stands...Between the 17th and 18th centuries, in this rural area marked by famine, epidemics, and fear, some deceased were buried with disturbing rituals. Archaeologists discovered it while digging into the compacted earth: skeletons with iron scythes resting on their necks, crushing stones on their chests, padlocks fixed to their ankles, as if even after death the body needed to be guarded.According to popular belief at the time, these individuals were dangerous. Not vampires in the romantic sense of the term, but restless dead, capable of returning to torment the living. They were believed to bring disease, bad luck, and madness.All it took was for a corpse to decompose quickly enough, for blood to flow from the mouth, or for the face to appear "too alive." Then fear took root...
>>41778382The scythe was not symbolic: if the dead man attempted to get up, he would decapitate himself. The padlock, however, was not decorative but served to keep the soul tied to the ground.Every detail speaks of a terrified community, willing to violate the sanctity of burial to protect itself from the unknown.Walking in the fields above Drawsko today means treading a history of superstition and desperation. There are no Gothic tombstones or rusty gates... only grass, earth, and silence. But that is precisely what makes the place disturbing. Here, the horror isn't theatrical; it's rational, born of genuine, shared fear.Scholars speak of folklore, scientific explanations, and poorly understood epidemics.But the question lingers: why so much care in holding onto those dead? Why them?Perhaps because, in an age without answers, death wasn't a clear boundary. It was a door ajar, and in Drawsko, some feared that something that should never have come back might come back through that door.The earth, for now, is silent but does not forget.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
Envy is a form of secret and painful admiration.And it's a surgical definition, because it captures the exact point at which this feeling ceases to be superficial and reveals its deeper nature.Psychologically, envy arises from regret over the happiness or success of others, but it isn't limited to that. It carries with it a dual movement: on the one hand, the desire to appropriate what the other possesses; on the other, the often unspeakable hope that the other will lose it. Not so much to gain something, but to restore a threatened internal balance.If the other ceases to shine, the comparison fades. If the other falls, the pain subsides.Envy is rarely a "pure" feeling. It is a complex mixture of a sense of injustice, impotence, and personal worthlessness. It is the narcissistic wound of those who experience the success of others as living proof of what they feel they have not been, have not been able to achieve, and are not worthy enough.And in some cases, this wound is compounded by a destructive rage: the need to belittle, ridicule, sabotage. Unable to bridge the distance, we try to narrow the gap by dragging the other down.We tend to think that envy only affects distant or openly competitive relationships. This is a naive consolation.In reality, the dynamics most steeped in envy often nest in close relationships: friendships, romantic relationships, family relationships. Precisely where comparison is most intimate and inevitable, and where the other's success cannot be ignored or neutralized by distance.
>>41778413When those close to us fail to question the roots of this feeling, to recognize it, contain it, and transform it, envy becomes toxic. It doesn't stimulate growth, but corrosion. It doesn't generate healthy competition, but silent devaluation.Perhaps we should revisit an old cliché: authentic relationships aren't recognized only in need. Their quality is often measured in moments of victory, when you stand on top of the podium and uncork a bottle in celebration.Some actually applaud.And others, instead, prefer to comment on the label, the grape variety, the serving temperature.And in that seemingly innocuous gesture, much more is revealed than one would like to admit.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
THE LIES OF OUR ACADEMIC CULTURE WERE DEBUNCHED 500 YEARS AGO BYGIORNO BRUNO, WHO CLAIMED THAT IN HIS TIME THERE WERE DOCUMENTS FROM ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS 20,000 YEARS OLD AND THAT THE MEMORIALS (NOW DESTROYED) FOUND IN THE NEWLY DISCOVERED AMERICAS WERE INTACT AND BOASTED THE SAME AGE....as for the Greeks, Druids, and Mercury's tables, which count more than twenty thousand years—I don't mean lunar years, as some meager glossers say, but those round, ring-like years that are computed from one winter to the next, from one spring to the next, from one autumn to the next, from one season to the same season... For a new part of the Earth has recently been discovered, which they call the New World, where they have records of ten thousand years and more, which are, as I tell you, complete and complete, because their four months are the four seasons, and because, when the years were divided into fewer, they were also divided into larger months.Distribution of the Triumphant BeastImage: The "Codex Dresdensis," a magnificent example of Mayan drawing art, is an 11th-century re-edition of an original written in the classical period. It deals with astronomy (tables of eclipses and Venus) and divination.
GREAT MINDSDISCUSS IDEAS;AVERAGE MINDS DISCUSS EVENTS;SMALL MINDS DISCUSSPEOPLE.
no taxation without safety nets
>>41779000
>>41779003
There are no coincidences.Everything truly meant for you always finds its place in your life. And everything that no longer resonates with you eventually drifts away.Let things flow naturally, without forcing them, without clinging to what wants to leave. Trust the rhythm of life, even when nothing seems to make sense at the moment.Every detour, every silence, every change has a purpose. What leaves often makes room for something more aligned, something greater.Free yourself from what no longer nourishes your energy. Your inner space deserves to be filled with what nourishes you, what helps you grow.Your happiness is not a coincidence; it is a conscious creation. Choose yourself. Move forward. Listen to your needs. Stay true to what truly calls to you.Unexpected detours are sometimes life's most beautiful gifts. They gently guide you toward horizons you never even imagined.Remember: there are no coincidences. Only revelations about who you are becoming.
https://youtu.be/_jvPdqHGmFc?si=MnPQ-LPkiL3Q6EYq
https://socialbuzz.space/hellsride3.txt
>>41779041Bump. 13th prime
https://youtu.be/OTFSi3ZLUU4?si=W5qYX-Iu8mizbDzf
>>41779041>Unexpected detours are sometimes life's most beautiful gifts. They gently guide you toward horizons you never even imagined.
>>417790416 of Swords type shit
But like wtf is your message in all this shit? We all know ghosts is real, like show me something that actually matters
>>41778570Sages don't discuss. See: The Nobody
https://socialbuzz.space/ChatExport_2026-01-08/messages.html
>>41774773>used to zog>lots of government admin>documents and letterhead are extremely regulated down to the fractional inch and fontSeeing fake/larp government documents makes me reeeee internally.
https://youtu.be/qpHWsWySwmc?si=3AARbbqNdO7ZMVn-
https://cutters-choice-radio.radiocult.fm/stream
https://pitchprash4aqilfr7sbmuwve3pnkpylqwxjbj2q5o4szcfeea6d27yd.onion/p/d75fc39d#p-c5a7ab83
Who's this
>>41781090It's me, what's up?
>>41781115No I mean the guy in the pic lol Not the anon posting it all
mj level post. the french haven't learned about discord yet
J-tard suck my cock asshole. God will kill you all! Damn bastards
https://x.com/CuttersChRadio/status/2009621721192792150?s=20
https://x.com/CuttersChRadio/status/2009622172021756240?s=20
i'm going to give this thread a low score unless someone explains to me RIGHT NOW whats going on.
https://socialbuzz.space/2026-01-09_094005.gif
https://pitchprash4aqilfr7sbmuwve3pnkpylqwxjbj2q5o4szcfeea6d27yd.onion/p/98aea500#p-f942e137
AdaCiC1033 @nobodyhttps://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/736ff1d2c2efd17878ce343dd2f4c2b5b10e4403016f95af224edacbf0ce9167.png>>41774773https://x.com/CuttersChRadiohttps://vk.com/cutterschoiceradiohttps://www.argmusic.online/s/welcome-space/https://cutters-choice-radio.radiocult.fm/streamhttps://socialbuzz.space/https://t.me/metatoxinhttps://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/74008e9a14c6e42323185728cb085df53563c983cf9b339339be39bcdfbaaecf.png>>41774773https://www.argmusic.online/p/REGISTRATIONhttps://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/947d4fef1f159c22ef9c0f6cf358e9e617f08d24a3da6c1e10ffd1b7ac989236.gifhttps://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/cdbb50aed9e345ad6bc720bc2faf483f3a44c0884295f95e8dbcac4116b75897.gifhttps://cutters-choice-radio.radiocult.fm/stream09:35:13 <+kinis> https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/38712c0ee7c84757e0c159d09e59112ce151065819b634a32fb0954212da6b40.gifhttps://socialbuzz.space/2026-01-09_094005.gif
The Sola-Busca Tarot is one of the most fascinating and complex historical decks of Italian tarot art, both for its rich iconography and because it is the only complete Renaissance deck to have survived with detailed images on all cards.The deck is named after the merchant and collector Giovanni Sola and the dealer Francesco Busca, active in Milan between the late 15th and early 16th centuries.Each card is richly illustrated with human figures, animals, instruments, and symbols, often with elements that reference philosophy, astrology, and alchemy.These cards are produced by Meneghello, which for fifty years has crafted every card in every deck entirely by hand, with the goal of faithfully restoring ancient historical decks using artisanal techniques.
World of Wisdom, [09/01/2026 05:46]A 15 cm bronze figure of Pazuzu, son of Hanpa—king of the evil spirits of the air—now displayed at the Louvre Museum.Pazuzu is one of the most distinctive figures in Mesopotamian demonology. Despite his fearsome appearance—lion-like face, bulging eyes, wings, talons, and a scorpion tail—he was not purely malevolent. Pazuzu was widely invoked as a protector, especially against Lamashtu, the demoness believed to endanger pregnant women and infants. His image was worn as an amulet or placed in homes to repel greater evils.The inscription on this bronze figure reads:Such inscriptions assert identity and power, transforming the object into an active protective force, not merely a representation. Dating to the Neo-Assyrian / Neo-Babylonian period, figures like this reflect a worldview where disease, disaster, and protection were deeply intertwined with the supernatural.Feared, invoked, and trusted—Pazuzu embodies the paradox of protection through power in the ancient Near East.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)World of Wisdom, [09/01/2026 09:01]"This gospel will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come."Matthew 24:14.
ᛞᛖᚲ`ᛟᛞᛖ ᚦᛁᛋ ᚨᚾᛞ ᚲᚾᛟᚹ ᛗᛟᚱᛖ ᛞᛖᛖᛈᛖᚱ••
https://youtu.be/d2aRyCmIm_k?si=LhqP0WmT0UP6JJsC
Fake Friends Are Like Shadows They Follow You In The Sun, But Leave You In The Dark.
https://siprnet.on.websim.com/
Today we're talking about one of the 20th-century inventions that almost no one remembers anymore, but which was fundamental for a while: the water integrator.It was one of the first analog computers ever built in the Soviet Union. It was used to perform very complex calculations, especially to prevent cracks in concrete.Its name in Russian was Gidravličeskij integrator. It's an interesting example of how practical solutions were sought before the arrival of electronic computers. Its operation was based on a simple idea: "the physical equivalence between the behavior of fluids and the mathematical relationships expressed by differential equations."It all began in 1936 in Moscow, in the laboratories of the Institute of Roads and Traffic (now TsNIIS). Engineer Vladimir Sergeyevich Lukyanov had a problem: understanding and controlling the formation of cracks in reinforced concrete.The behavior of concrete depended on many variables, such as composition, temperature, humidity, and curing time. The equations to be solved were very difficult to manage by hand.Lukjanov thus had the idea of building an analog calculator where water represented the mathematical variables. The system consisted of pipes, tanks, valves, and glass chambers. The water level corresponded to the numerical values, and the flow simulated the evolution of the variables over time.By adjusting the taps, one could set a mathematical problem and see the solution directly in the final system configuration.In the 1940s, Lukjanov developed a modular version of the integrator, which allowed different problems to be solved by changing the arrangement of the pipes.
>>41782515Over time, two-dimensional and three-dimensional models also emerged, useful not only for construction but also for hydraulics, geotechnics, and infrastructure.The water integrator was used, for example, in the design of the Karakum Canal, one of the largest hydraulic projects in the world. In the 1950s, it was mass-produced and exported to various Eastern European countries.With the advent of digital computers, this invention was shelved. Today, two examples are preserved at the Polytechnic Museum in Moscow.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
An cup made from a nautilus shell with a silver frame and engraving on the shell. German work from the 19th century.
The Prophecy of the Three Fierce YokesBy Monk Abel (1757–1841) to Emperor Paul IMonk Abel:"About the fate of the Russian State, there was a revelation to me in prayer about three fierce yokes: the Tatar, the Polish, and the one yet to come — the godless."Emperor Paul I:"What? Holy Rus under a godless yoke? This shall never be! Empty babble you speak, black-robed one."Monk Abel:"And where are the Tatars, Your Imperial Majesty? Where are the Poles? The same will happen with the Jewish yoke. Do not grieve, Father-Tsar: the Christ-killers will bear their own."Monk Abel accurately predicted the deaths of Catherine II and Paul I, as well as the French invasion of 1812 — earning him over 20 years in prison.Source: Zyorna.ru. (2026). «Tpи лютых игa». [online] Available at: https://zyorna.ru/news/publications/%D0%B8%D1%82%D1%82%D1%82%D1%8C%D0%B1%D1%8E-2506.html
What you see in the photo is a real jade funerary robe. It was worn by Han Dynasty rulers, such as Liu Sheng. Today, it can be seen on display at the Capital Museum in Beijing.These robes were composed of thousands of pieces of jade sewn together with precious threads. Members of the Han royal family wore them after death from 206 BC to 220 AD, but the tradition continued into later eras.The Chinese royal family chose this type of robe over a standard one for burials. Each robe was unique and, in the case of emperors, was joined with gold thread.The robe was designed to resemble armor, intended to protect the body and soul of the deceased in the afterlife. This was believed to help achieve immortality.Only in 1968 were the first archaeological specimens discovered, including those of Liu Sheng and his wife, Princess Dou Wan, found in Hebei province.Jade also covered eyes, ears, and other orifices. Liu Sheng's armor was made of 2,498 pieces of jade.There is even an ancient text, "The Book of Later Han," which explained how to make these robes. The type of thread used varied depending on rank: gold for the emperor, silk for lower ranks.This practice continued until the 5th century, then was abandoned because the tombs were frequently looted.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
Noce, the Goddess of the Sky (from the sarcophagus of Psamtik II), Egyptian Museum (Turin), c. 595-589 BCShe is the large, elongated figure framing the central scene. Her body represents the sky; she was believed to swallow the sun each evening and give birth to it each morning.The celestial sphere. Within her body is a complex circular diagram representing the universe, including the various hours of day and night, the constellations, and the journey of the sun god Ra.The goddess's feet and hands touch the cardinal points, creating a barrier between the chaotic waters of the "Suore" (the void) and the ordered world of the living.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
Tarnishing someone's reputation will never take away their grace... It's like shaving a lion andbelieving it will become a dog.
"Be silent, or say something that is better than silence."
I ignore a lot of nonsense because drama doesn't interest me.But never mistake my calm for fear.I fear no one.
An ancient, life-size statue depicting an individual dressed as Hercules has been discovered within the Appian Way Archaeological Park, one of Rome's most historically layered landscapes. The figure is shown wearing the distinctive Nemean Lion skin and holding a club, two attributes that immediately identify Hercules, the quintessential hero of strength and endurance in the Greco-Roman world.Rather than representing the god purely as a myth, statues like this often portray a real individual adopting the iconography of Hercules. In Roman society, this was a powerful visual statement. Being associated with Hercules signaled courage, physical prowess, moral fortitude, and even divine favor. Emperors, generals, and elite patrons often commissioned such images to project authority and heroic virtue, blurring the line between mortal identity and mythical ideal.The discovery along the Appian Way is particularly significant. This ancient road was not only a vital artery of movement and trade but also a ceremonial and commemorative space lined with tombs, monuments, and statues to be seen and remembered. A figure of Hercules placed here would have conveyed strength and prestige to all who passed by, reinforcing the social status or aspirations of the person he represented.Discoveries like this deepen our understanding of how the Romans used myth as a language of power. Hercules was not just a legendary hero; he was a symbolic model onto which individuals could project their identity, ambition, and legacy. This statue reminds us that in ancient Rome, mythology was not limited to stories, but was carved in stone and woven directly into public life.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
>>41782474I'll see your random shit and raise you with identity.
There's something really fucking weird about this thread. My Spidey senses are tingling
>>41780241Oh. I see. What's his name? My pet's name is astaroth, or Apollyon. Depending on the culture
>>41782550Meaningless ritual.
>>41782747Yeah but those digits aren't meaningless. There's something really fucking weird about this matrix
Silver's atomic number is 47. Wonder what's causing the economy to implode? Can't stop fatehttps://youtu.be/yWlplQ3ZxVU?si=IgOel6IFmxO3byQq
>>41782796333, 9th Wonder. Causing the scarcity of trees on tundra13 dimensions. F theory is a psyop
Welcome to the circus, to nobody in particular
Archaeologists already knew that some Mayan adults had jade inlays in their teeth.Now, for the first time, these inlays have also been found in the teeth of Mayan children.According to a new study, children as young as 7 had jade in their teeth. This may have indicated a rite of passage or entry into society.During the Classic and Postclassic periods (250–1550 AD), decorating teeth was common among both men and women. More than half of Mayan adults had these gems in their teeth.The new study analyzed three teeth with jade inlays, preserved in Guatemala. They were found to belong to children between the ages of 7 and 10.It is unclear whether the three teeth came from one or more children. They were not associated with complete skeletons.The Maya often shaped their teeth by filing or carving them. Then they inserted gems such as jade, pyrite, or obsidian, securing them with a natural glue.Previously, only adolescent teeth were filed, but without inlays. Inlays were very rare even among young adults.Perhaps inlays were not placed on children to avoid damaging growing teeth, or because the procedure was too invasive. But X-rays showed no damage or decay.Analysis also suggests that the inlays were placed while the children were still alive.World of Wisdom (https://t.me/+umNDQY3WJwQzMTBi)
>>41782855Don't know what's sexier, the anorexic or the heart shaped fire
>>41782590>In his work The Jewish War (Book II, Chapter 12), Josephus describes how, during the Passover festival, a Roman soldier stationed on a portico of the Temple in Jerusalem to prevent riots showed his contempt for the Jewish people: >"...the soldier lifted up the back of his garments, turned his face away, and with his bottom to them, crouched in a shameless way and released at them a foul-smelling sound where they were offering sacrifice."
The Christian MessiahLet's remember that Jewish messiahs can begin under the guise of Christianity, a case exemplified by figures like Jacob Frank. The Cossack uprising of Khmelnytsky and astrology gave momentum to messianic expectations, and all kinds of Kabbalist pretenders to the holy crown came forward. After Sabbatai Zevi's followers, who established a significant presence across European Jewish communities, Zevi himself was converted to Islam by Ottoman Turks en route to the Holy Land. Frank then stepped into the vacuum, taking his messianic career to even stranger heights by converting to Islam and then to Christianity. Many of Frank’s supporters, including Jews, saw this as a clever maneuver to conceal his true messianic intentions—a suspicion that worried Christian authorities enough to arrest him and confine him to a monastery. Since this pattern of concealment shows how these figures happily used religious guise to hide their true messianic agendas, it is expected that they could do so again.
Sri Aurobindo on Nostradamus and Cagliostro"Sri Aurobindo: Have you heard of Cagliostro? He was a mystic freemason with a great prophetic power. He never charged anyone any money and yet he was affluent. It was said he could make gold. He prophesied about the French Revolution, the taking of the Bastille and the guillotining of the King and Queen. He used to prophesy about race-horses too. This got him into trouble. He was imprisoned and died in prison.Have you heard of Nostradamus? No? He was a Jew. At that time the Jews had a lot of knowledge. He wrote a book of prophecy in an obscure language and foretold, among other things, the execution of Charles I, the establishment of the British Empire and the lasting of the Empire for 330 years.Nirodbaran: Then there is a long time before it goes?Sri Aurobindo: No. It is to be counted from the beginning of Britain's colonies. That means from James I. In that case it should end now."Sri Aurobindo, Nirodbaran & Dr. Manila, Talks with Sri Aurobindo Volume 1, conversation on 14 December 1938.
>>41782892Confirmed. Nobody witnesses your madness
>>41776993french canadian, neat. would have been great if you got 11:11 timestamp. eh.
Insidious stripper rhythm is cryptic, prediction no fiction, it's all just a system
>>41777222>>41777222>>41777222
>>41783107We're all from Canada. I'm from whycocomagh, cape Breton Island. French immersion in school and learning Scottish Gaelic
>>41783115You can't gangstalk a fucking nobody. There's thousands of us, good luck killing one, 6 more will be born from the ashes. Look at steez, he killed himself. That woke me up, an activation if you will. The DNA alone doesn't wake up without a special string of quantum entanglement. You can't kill god
bumping cos wtf is this thread i need to know more lol
>>41782601Are you going to post something of substance at some point?Or just wax sophistry about history?
https://x.com/CuttersChRadio/status/2009835053119889788?s=20
oh its voca nigger
listen this... https://youtu.be/gJV_lxa42Xs?si=5Aax9nC3jezZ1wSp