Begin at PODCAST ONE:
https://whatonearthishappening.com/podcasts/WOEIH-021.mp3
Charlotte Iserbyt - Deliberately Constructed Idiocracy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDyDtYy2I0M
Oh teachers and enablers of kakistocracy, the "change agents"; WHAT HAVEYOUdone?
YOUreap whatyou= sow, sickos : Your sensitivity training has desensitised me. If you can't distinguish the difference between having and being the psychopath: you FAIL== the Test.
Is itFlesh Banquettime YET? My stomach has the rumbles for HANDS…
You SICK puppies should have taken the VET's euthanasia jab YEARS AGO. … But i guess it's never too late :-)
distinguish | dɪˈstɪŋɡwɪʃ |
verb [with object]
1 recognize or treat (someone or something) as different: the child is perfectly capable of distinguishing reality from fantasy.
• [no object] recognize or point out a difference: we must distinguish between two kinds of holiday.
• be an identifying characteristic or mark of: what distinguishes sport from games?
2 manage to discern (something barely perceptible): it was too dark to distinguish anything more than their vague shapes.
3 (distinguish oneself) make oneself worthy of respect by one's behaviour or achievements: many distinguished themselves in the fight against Hitler.
ORIGIN
late 16th century: formed irregularly from French distinguer or Latin distinguere, from dis- ‘apart’ + stinguere ‘put out’ (from a base meaning ‘prick’).
sicko | ˈsɪkəʊ |
noun (plural sickos) informal
a mentally ill or perverted person, especially one who is sadistic: the men who do it are real sickos | [as modifier] : this wasn't some sicko fantasy trip.
banquet | ˈbaŋkwɪt |
noun
an elaborate and formal evening meal for many people: a state banquet at Buckingham Palace.
• an elaborate meal with several courses; a feast: a lavish five-course banquet | figurative : a veritable banquet of seasonal events.
verb (banquets, banqueting, banqueted) [with object] (usually as noun banqueting)
entertain with a banquet: [as modifier] : a banqueting hall.
DERIVATIVES
banqueter | ˈbaŋkwɪtə | noun
ORIGIN
late 15th century: from French, diminutive of banc ‘bench’ (see bank1).
stomach | ˈstʌmək |
noun
1 the internal organ in which the major part of the digestion of food occurs, being (in humans and many mammals) a pear-shaped enlargement of the alimentary canal linking the oesophagus to the small intestine: [as modifier] : severe stomach pains.
• each of four stomachs in a ruminant (the rumen, reticulum, omasum, and abomasum).
• any of a number of organs analogous to the stomach in lower animals.
• the front part of the body between the chest and thighs; the belly: Blake hit him in the stomach.
• [in singular] the stomach viewed as the seat of hunger, nausea, anxiety, or other unsettling feelings: Virginia had a sick feeling in her stomach.
2 [in singular, usually with negative] an appetite for food or drink: she doesn't have the stomach to eat anything.
• a desire or inclination for something involving conflict or difficulty: the teams proved to have no stomach for a fight.
verb [with object] (usually cannot stomach)
consume (food or drink) without feeling or being sick: if you cannot stomach orange juice, try apple juice.
• endure or accept (an obnoxious thing or person): I can't stomach the self-righteous attitude of some managers.
ORIGIN
Middle English: from Old French estomac, stomaque, via Latin from Greek stomakhos ‘gullet’, from stoma ‘mouth’. The early sense of the verb was ‘be offended at, resent’ (early 16th century).