Anonymous ID: 37ef88 June 24, 2018, 5:13 a.m. No.1885703   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1885357

There is a familiar good cop bad cop pattern that was seen back on CBTS. Good cop is such a hero, will give the BVs a good talking to, everyone loves BO such wow. BV shits up everything. Nothing changes. It's fucky and has all been seen before.

Anonymous ID: 37ef88 June 24, 2018, 5:17 a.m. No.1885716   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5737

>>1885711

Q doesn't archive shit. I don't give a fuck. I'll post links all fucking day just to see your tampon get soaked. I'll seen shit get deleted from the archive sites so there's that. Stop being an obnoxious twat.

Anonymous ID: 37ef88 June 24, 2018, 5:28 a.m. No.1885755   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5787

>>1885737

Nah. Listen lady, there's a reason we don't let women on these boards. You come here thinking you're in change, start nannying everyone, acting like cunts. You're not in charge, sweetie. Go menstruate elsewhere newfag nigger. What me not do what you want.

Anonymous ID: 37ef88 June 24, 2018, 5:34 a.m. No.1885788   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5799

>>1885768

Your crackpot theories didn't construct the Western world out of barbarism. Christianity did, and also gave you universities, hospitals, the scientific method, and everything good about your life. So there's that.

Anonymous ID: 37ef88 June 24, 2018, 5:48 a.m. No.1885846   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5876

>>1885799

Stupid niggers can't even read Wikipedia

 

Hospitals

During the Early Middle Ages (476\529–800) and the middle time period (ca. 800–1100), the rise of Christianity had a great effect on the practice of medicine. Church-sponsored hospitals began to appear already after A.D. 350, but they primarily furnished bed and board and seldom ventured into actual treatment. Over the next seven centuries, the hospitals gradually passed from Church to monastic control. Soon many Christian monasteries became centers of accumulation of the medical knowledge and practical experience in Europe.

 

Universities

The first Western European institutions generally considered universities were established in the Kingdom of Italy (then part of the Holy Roman Empire), the Kingdom of England, the Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Spain, and the Kingdom of Portugal between the 11th and 15th centuries for the study of the Arts and the higher disciplines of Theology, Law, and Medicine.[1] These universities evolved from much older Christian cathedral schools and monastic schools, and it is difficult to define the exact date when they became true universities, though the lists of studia generalia for higher education in Europe held by the Vatican are a useful guide.

 

The word universitas originally applied only to the scholastic guilds—that is, the corporation of students and masters—within the studium, and it was always modified, as universitas magistrorum, universitas scholarium, or universitas magistrorum et scholarium. Eventually, however, probably in the late 14th century, the term began to appear by itself to exclusively mean a self-regulating community of teachers and scholars recognized and sanctioned by civil or ecclesiastical authority.

 

From the early modern period onwards, this Western-style organizational form gradually spread from the medieval Latin west across the globe, eventually replacing all other higher-learning institutions and becoming the preeminent model for higher education everywhere.