Anonymous ID: 01bdb6 June 2, 2024, 4:21 p.m. No.20957555   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7599 >>7641 >>7648 >>7814

>>20956343 lb

SAM05:5G5 east from a Beale AFB,Yuba City-CA stop of 40m…U2s drones based there as it’s under the Air Combat Cmd

 

Quite a long trip for a 40m stop

 

AF2 C32A kneepads still at Los Angeles Intl from it’s Seattle money grab yesterday

Anonymous ID: 01bdb6 June 2, 2024, 4:36 p.m. No.20957619   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7625 >>7641 >>7648 >>7710 >>7814

PF: RCH4606 C17 Globey EN across the Atlantic equipment for Potato’s visit to Normandy

 

The events have already begun yesterday and Friday.

 

A mass parachute jump over Normandy kicks off commemorations for the 80th anniversary of D-Day

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/nation-world/story/2024-06-02/a-mass-parachute-jump-over-normandy-kicks-commemorations-for-the-80th-anniversary-of-d-day

 

N757AF 757 was moved to Newark Intl from Laguardia about 5 hours ago

Anonymous ID: 01bdb6 June 2, 2024, 4:40 p.m. No.20957631   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20957620

Been around for long time

 

For more than 2,000 years encyclopaedias have existed as summaries of extant scholarship in forms comprehensible to their readers. The word encyclopaedia is derived from the Greek enkyklios paideia, “general education,” and it at first meant a circle or a complete system of learning—that is, an all-around education. When François Rabelais used the term in French for the first time, in Pantagruel (chapter 20), he was still talking of education. It was Paul Scalich, a German writer and compiler, who was the first to use the word to describe a book in the title of his Encyclopaedia; seu, Orbis disciplinarum, tam sacrarum quam prophanum epistemon… (“Encyclopaedia; or, Knowledge of the World of Disciplines, Not Only Sacred but Profane…”), issued at Basel in 1559. The many encyclopaedias that had been published before this time either had been given fanciful titles (Hortus deliciarum, “Garden of Delights”) or had been simply called “dictionary.” The word dictionary has been widely used as a name for encyclopaedias, and Scalich’s pioneer use of encyclopaedia did not find general acceptance until Denis Diderot made it fashionable with his historic French encyclopaedia, the Encyclopédie, although cyclopaedia was then becoming fairly popular as an alternative term. Even today a modern encyclopaedia may still be called a dictionary, but no good dictionary has ever been called an encyclopaedia.

https://www.britannica.com/topic/encyclopaedia

Anonymous ID: 01bdb6 June 2, 2024, 4:45 p.m. No.20957646   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20957625

Yeah no shit…that’s yer first experience and makes you a man right quick.

Have a lot of respect for all of them.

Muh ‘hood was filled with WW2, Korea and Vietnam vets so grew up with a healthy dose of reality from listening to them.

Anonymous ID: 01bdb6 June 2, 2024, 5:18 p.m. No.20957779   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20957735

>Presidio

Used to ride bike around it and the golf course at night.

Lots of noises emulating from the little hills in the area

Doors are literally placed on the side of mounds (hard to call them hills or mtns) that lead to Ii don’t know.

They look like doors on Quonset huts but ain’t no artillery or shit like that stored there

When stopping for breaks is when you could hear what sounded like humans coming from below it from the sides of these mounds.

it also sounded like many animals (chimeras?) as well.

Stopped riding in there after hearing the screams

Totally fuggen spoopy