Anonymous ID: 367c56 May 22, 2018, 2:54 p.m. No.1509688   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9706 >>9744 >>9848

All you MAP fag clue droppers are the best.

 

60 day intervals. 60 minutes by time stamp. 6 full rotations is 360 days. Our Q clock only goes for 350 days. But then there’s that pesky 10 days of darkness we never quite figured out.

 

6 dates that line up side by side on the Q clock. Also, 6 timestamps to coordinate around as well. It has always been apparent that minutes on the time stamps line up sometimes perfectly side by side with other drops. Sometimes even the number of lines of a Q post. These are directly correlated.

 

But then we have a problem. All the timestamps aren’t accounted for. Our clock only goes as high as 5:50. (Assume 6:00 when you include my ten days of darkness theory)

 

Well, looks like we gotta keep cycling around. I think the dates stay static, but we need to fill in the rest of the time stamps up to 24:00. (Could be wrong about static dates). This makes all minute time stamps that are the same relate to each other.

 

That’s 3 more cycles to make 24 hours. Also makes sense when you THINK MIRROR on a 24 hour clock face. This doesn’t jive entirely with 5:5 = 5:25 on a standard clock but there’s a reason I think we need a 24 hour clock face.

 

If instead of, or next to, the time stamp organized in minutes on the Q clock we simply counted from 1 and up, each full pass through our current clock, including 10 days of darkness, adds up to 360.

 

Think circle. If we use a 24 hour clock, it puts all the clues on a single circular graphic. Doesn’t necessarily mean that’s the way to do it, there could be two clocks in general, or even 4.

 

Anyone remember when we found coordinates that seemed to stem from Q drops a while ago???

 

Well, longitude and lattitude are measured in degrees, minutes, and seconds. Think circle, there are 360 degrees in a circle. The map converts to coordinates in some way. I think this is where hours come into play. Coordinates would be degree based on where on clock it lands, if there are two 12 hour clock faces, one needs to be negative because that’s the way lattitude and longitude is expressed.

 

I hope this helps some people out, I’ll be back later to pick up from wherever we are on this. Have a full day off tomorrow so see you fuckers then to finish this fuckin map up.

 

I wanted to selfishly figure this whole shit out but POTUS’ economy has me having to go write contracts for a new client.

 

Happy hunting!

Anonymous ID: 367c56 May 22, 2018, 3 p.m. No.1509758   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9865

>>1509706

 

We are here to bring LIGHT! The light is Q clock. Ten days darkness follows Kennedy’s assassination date on clock. Mourning maybe?

 

Not as simple as gov shutdown.

Anonymous ID: 367c56 May 22, 2018, 3:13 p.m. No.1509927   🗄️.is 🔗kun

360 degrees in a circle faggots. We almost have 360 minutes on our Q clock. Add 10 days of darkness. Think circle.

 

Each degree is a minute, each time around the clock is a full cycle. Time stamps have to cycle around our current clock 3 more times and be filled in to account for all the times Q posts, which is every hour of the day.

 

Side by side circle by degrees and clock face. Possibly 24 hour clock face. Maybe not.

 

Also, degrees, minutes, and seconds are how you get latitude and longitude coordinates.

Anonymous ID: 367c56 May 22, 2018, 3:17 p.m. No.1509990   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1509865

 

If you’re dropping clues I’m trying to listen. Maybe you’re right about ten days of darkness. Idunno.

 

There is 365 days in a year. Maybe the ten days is the leftover 5 days from two successive years?

 

I’m trying to make the minutes fit into degrees around a circle.

 

Maybe it’s 10 “second” intervals, which there are 6 of them, in a minute, multiplied by 60 seconds to get a 360 degree circle.

Anonymous ID: 367c56 May 22, 2018, 3:20 p.m. No.1510028   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1509848

 

Possibly! There was some concrete movement in the past on here that seemed to link to Q posts. One being a pizza shop.

 

Not a coincidence our 60 minute clock is multiplied by 6 columns.