>>1645165 (l/b)
>>1645355
agree, gives the culprits a feeling of invincibility, especially when bridges & tunnels are involved.
the Egyptians probably did something similar in the Pyramids.
>>1645165 (l/b)
>>1645355
agree, gives the culprits a feeling of invincibility, especially when bridges & tunnels are involved.
the Egyptians probably did something similar in the Pyramids.
at the danger of falling into a gold/cryptobug slide,
>>1645657 (lb)
agree, and new old $ (cough, LOOP CAPITAL, cough).
>>1645698
when the name of the game is speed, the game is rigged to the boyz that can afford the best toys, always.
but WHAT IF the proof-of-work algo isn't the only method to secure a digital currency?
>>1645650
saying it's the "only" choice and ignoring the questions posed unforunately negates any further discussion.
so be it, the questions still stand.
>>1645639
returning this topic to /qresearch/, anybody come up with any adequate answers to the crumbs on 11/22/17?
specifically the relevance to the 'skin of the gods' question?
isn't the price also dependent upon supply?
how much supply is there globally really?
is the World Gold Council figure accurate?
Does the WGC have a vested interest in a given figure?
Do all countries on the planet accurately report their annual mining production?
#ThingsThatMakeAnonGoHmmm
>https://goldsilver.com/blog/as-gold-gets-harder-to-find-world-production-supply-is-falling/
Bloomberg ( Original ) APR 5, 2018
The producer-funded World Gold Council has estimated that world supply may have peaked, while Frank Holmes, chief executive officer of U.S. Global Investors Inc., said this week that mine supply topped out in 2017 or will do so this year.
As it is virtually indestructible, nearly all of the gold ever mined is theoretically still accessible in one form or another and potentially available for recycling.
> the answer to that one might lead to dark places.
seems par for the course for almost every topic here at /qresearch/.
curious about pre-1916 myselfโฆ
>https://infogalactic.com/info/Nebu
Nebu is the Egyptian symbol for gold. It depicts a golden collar with the ends hanging off the sides and seven spines dangling from the middle.
Ancient Egyptians believed that gold was an indestructible and heavenly metal. The sun god, Ra, was often referred to as a mountain of gold. The Royal Tomb, in fact, known as the "House of Gold". The Pharaohs of the Old Kingdom were called the "Golden Horus".
In Middle Egyptian the hieroglyph for nebu is
>pic 1
It was sometimes followed by the goddess determinative:
>pic 2
this changed its meaning to "the Golden One", an epiphet of Hathor.[1]
The Ancient Egyptian name for the city of Ombos, Nebet, also used the nebu hieroglyph.[1]
saw one passing by earlier, was enough. what i wonder is where/when did this ritual come from? do the articles mention?
if we can determine the answer, then we can perhaps get a better ID on the overall ideology behind it.
You're very welcome. Me too. On an ancient Egypt jones atm with a full cup of covfefe in me, so we may dig a bit deeper tonight.
>Ombos anagram = ?
>MAH NIGGA / exiled in Russia
<pic related.
Is that a MOUNTAIN behind Ed? Wonder which mountain?
>โThe government and corporate sector preyed on our ignorance. But now we know. People are aware now. People are still powerless to stop it but we are trying. The revelations made the fight more even.โ
would agree with this full statement. typical Tyler to selectively edit for max doomporn effect.