Anonymous ID: 8b10a7 Oct. 6, 2020, 4:25 a.m. No.10944234   🗄️.is 🔗kun

If you haven't watched I, Pet Goat ii recently, you may see new things, as I did.

 

https://youtu.be/65xLByzT1l0

Anonymous ID: 8b10a7 Oct. 6, 2020, 4:39 a.m. No.10944294   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4313

>>10944285

>>10944283

 

Was just pondering the idea that if you sent a line straight up, perpendicular to the earth's surface, from the head of every human, those lines would diverge ever further apart, seemingly creating more space between them.

 

Consider the vastness of space.

Anonymous ID: 8b10a7 Oct. 6, 2020, 4:51 a.m. No.10944353   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4356

>>10944313

KEK

 

Someone should represent the concave earthers. In their world, all points would converge to a single point upon arrival.

 

Put another way, we are a simulation projected from a central source onto a curved screen?

Anonymous ID: 8b10a7 Oct. 6, 2020, 4:58 a.m. No.10944387   🗄️.is 🔗kun

We wind up in the same place, in the end, either way, but anon wonders, Burial or Cremation?

 

Burial, in a perpetual graveyard, celebrating a culture of death and past mistakes, seems satanic. Giant unproductive fields of dead bodies, filled with giant stones, seems like an offense to God.

Anonymous ID: 8b10a7 Oct. 6, 2020, 5:30 a.m. No.10944572   🗄️.is 🔗kun

No more Hollywood programming

No more Roman programming

No more Dept of Education programming

No more Greek Programming

No more Secret Programmming

No more Pyramid programming

 

Just people supporting themselves and others of their choice. Voluntarism, informed with the true knowledge of earth and it's creatures.

Anonymous ID: 8b10a7 Oct. 6, 2020, 5:55 a.m. No.10944738   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Lucky #7, the Roman letter G, formerly known as C or K.

 

The letter 'G' was introduced in the Old Latin period as a variant of 'C' to distinguish voiced /ɡ/ from voiceless /k/. The recorded originator of 'G' is freedman Spurius Carvilius Ruga, the first Roman to open a fee-paying school, who taught around 230 BCE. At this time, 'K' had fallen out of favor, and 'C', which had formerly represented both /ɡ/ and /k/ before open vowels, had come to express /k/ in all environments.

 

Ruga's positioning of 'G' shows that alphabetic order related to the letters' values as Greek numerals was a concern even in the 3rd century BC. According to some records, the original seventh letter, 'Z', had been purged from the Latin alphabet somewhat earlier in the 3rd century BC by the Roman censor Appius Claudius, who found it distasteful and foreign.[2] Sampson (1985) suggests that: "Evidently the order of the alphabet was felt to be such a concrete thing that a new letter could be added in the middle only if a 'space' was created by the dropping of an old letter."[3] The 3rd-century-BC addition of the letter G to the Roman alphabet is credited to Spurius Carvilius Ruga.[4]

 

George Hempl proposed in 1899 that there never was such a "space" in the alphabet and that in fact 'G' was a direct descendant of zeta. Zeta took shapes like ⊏ in some of the Old Italic scripts; the development of the monumental form 'G' from this shape would be exactly parallel to the development of 'C' from gamma. He suggests that the pronunciation /k/ /ɡ/ was due to contamination from the also similar-looking 'K'.[5]

 

Eventually, both velar consonants /k/ and /ɡ/ developed palatalized allophones before front vowels; consequently in today's Romance languages, ⟨c⟩ and ⟨g⟩ have different sound values depending on context (known as hard and soft C and hard and soft G). Because of French influence, English language orthography shares this feature.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G