Anonymous ID: 0beeac Oct. 31, 2023, 12:12 p.m. No.19837717   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Riding the goat is like riding the broom.

It's masturbation.

Because by the social design, sex isn't regularly available.

First they Take the foreskin,

And then They sell access to the pussy for rings and houses and insurance and retirement plans.

Anonymous ID: 0beeac Oct. 31, 2023, 12:34 p.m. No.19837791   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19837762

JOAN of Arc born on 1/6/1412 (or so says the Vatican)

 

January 6 – Joan of Arc, French soldier and saint (tradition holds that she was born on the Feast of the Epiphany, but there is no documentary evidence) (d. 1431)

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1412

 

Joan was put on trial for heresy[199] in Rouen on 9 January 1431.[200] She was accused of having blasphemed by wearing men's clothes, of acting upon visions that were demonic, and of refusing to submit her words and deeds to the church because she claimed she would be judged by God alone.[201] Joan's captors downplayed the secular aspects of her trial by submitting her judgment to an ecclesiastical court, but the trial was politically motivated.[202] Joan testified that her visions had instructed her to defeat the English and crown Charles, and her success was argued to be evidence she was acting on behalf of God.[203] If unchallenged, her testimony would invalidate the English claim to the rule of France[204] and undermine the University of Paris,[205] which supported the dual monarchy ruled by an English king.[206]

 

Execution

Public heresy was a capital crime,[242] in which an unrepentant or relapsed heretic could be given over to the judgment of the secular courts and punished by death.[243] Having signed the abjuration, Joan was no longer an unrepentant heretic but could be executed if convicted of relapsing into heresy.[244]

 

As part of her abjuration, Joan was required to renounce wearing men's clothes.[245] She exchanged her clothes for a woman's dress and allowed her head to be shaved.[246] She was returned to her cell and kept in chains[247] instead of being transferred to an ecclesiastical prison.[248] Witnesses at the rehabilitation trial stated that Joan was subjected to mistreatment and rape attempts, including one by an English noble,[249] and that guards placed men's clothes in her cell, forcing her to wear them.

 

As Joan's abjuration had required her to deny her visions, this was sufficient to convict her of relapsing into heresy and to condemn her to death.[253] The next day, forty-two assessors were summoned to decide Joan's fate. Two recommended that she be abandoned to the secular courts immediately; the rest recommended that the abjuration be read to her again and explained.[254] In the end, they voted unanimously that Joan was a relapsed heretic and should be abandoned to the secular power, the English, for punishment.[255]

 

At this point, she should have been turned over to the appropriate authority, the bailiff of Rouen, for secular sentencing, but instead was delivered directly to the English[258] and tied to a tall plastered pillar for execution by burning.[259] At about the age of nineteen, Joan was executed on 30 May 1431. After her death, her remains were thrown into the Seine River.[262]

 

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