https://x.com/nicksortor/status/1866555471219527810
#68
Can we expose every crooked politician?
70%.
HUMA.
Follow HUMA.
Alice & Wonderland.
what if the everything is a FF and even the video of the shooting a deep fake?
Scavino
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what if theyre going off ancient Roman calendar ROMULUS? and DECember is 10th month? and its
December 10th, tomorrow, thats marked on the clockโฆ
oopsies, today is the 10th then,โฆ well.. iwork graveyard shifts so dates and days get mixed
In the ancient Roman calendar ROMULUS
DECember is the 10th month โฆ
December 10thโฆ
fail again, this post isnt meant to be apparently
>>22142539
jesus or arch angel "who can be like God?" volunteered to be the scapegoat and pay the price for our disobedience to our Father in the Garden โฆ
jesus is the G.O.A.T.
jesus always protecting us, he aint ded
we have the SOn of the King shielding us and no one should be afraid of the accuser
well elon told us yesterday we exist on a motherboard, a chip in the brain is a joke when we live in a computer program
poor luigi, that female cop stomping in there after him means business
let me refer to my romulus thumbnail see whut month january is, i want say the first month, hmm
you think i cant formulate an opinion on my own of elon? hes the desert fox for pete's sake โฆ erwin rommel
Q read his book
kinda fits with my romulus theme
romulus was the wolf
ohhh youre rightโฆ
"The first month in the oldest Roman calendar, believed to have been established by Romulus, was Martius, also known as March. The calendar had only ten months, and the year was based on the lunar cycle"
i remember reading about this calendar afore, lunar basedโฆ
looks like henry cavill
its going to be BIG
Q008
No, the Roman calendar did not include January under Romulus, the legendary founder of Rome:
Original calendar
The original Roman calendar had 10 months, with the first month being Martius, or March. The year began in March and ended in December, with an uncounted winter gap.
Addition of January and February
Numa Pompilius, the second king of Rome, added January and February to fill the winter gap and synchronize the calendar with the lunar year. The new calendar had 12 months and 355 days.
January's name
January is named after Janus, the Roman god of beginnings, transitions, and time.
January 1 as the start of the year
January 1 was not the official start of the Roman year until 153 BCE
>The year began in March and ended in December, with an uncounted winter gap.
>Addition of January and February
the "break'? the winter gap?
how can they have an uncounted winter gap? shirley it was counted in order to keep track of new year?
i asked grok insteada google to explain the ancient roman romulus calendar โฆ why did they change the name of august?
can you explain the romulus calendar? including the uncounted winter gap?
Answer
The Romulus Calendar, traditionally attributed to the legendary founder of Rome, Romulus, is one of the earliest known calendars used by the Romans. Here's an explanation of its structure, including the concept of the "uncounted winter gap":
Structure of the Romulus Calendar:
Year Length: The Romulus Calendar initially consisted of 10 months, totaling about 304 days. This was far less than a solar year (approximately 365.24 days), which led to significant discrepancies over time.
Months: The months were:
Martius (March) - 31 days
Aprilis (April) - 30 days
Maius (May) - 31 days
Iunius (June) - 30 days
Quintilis (July) - 31 days
Sextilis (August) - 30 days
September - 30 days
October - 31 days
November - 30 days
December - 30 days
Days: Each month had either 30 or 31 days. The names of the months from September to December reflect their original positions (seventh to tenth months, respectively, in the year).
The Uncounted Winter Gap:
Winter Period: The period from roughly mid-December to mid-March was not formally accounted for in the Romulus Calendar. This gap, which we would consider winter, was left unnamed and uncounted.
Purpose: This might have been due to several reasons:
Agricultural Cycle: The Roman year was closely tied to agricultural activities. Winter was a period of inactivity in farming, so there was perhaps less need to count these days meticulously.
Religious Practices: Some scholars suggest this period was considered sacred or dedicated to deities, where time was not measured in the same way.
Adjustment: Over time, this gap would lead to the calendar drifting out of sync with the solar year. To correct this, an extra month (or period) was sometimes added, known as an intercalary month, though this was not formalized until later with the introduction of the Numa Pompilius calendar, which added January and February to make 12 months.
Historical Context: This system reflects the early Roman society's less structured approach to timekeeping before the influence of Greek astronomy and the eventual reforms by Numa Pompilius and Julius Caesar.
The Romulus Calendar's structure and its winter gap illustrate the evolution of calendar systems from practical, agrarian timekeeping to more systematic and astronomically aligned calendars. This transition was crucial for the synchronization of civil, religious, and agricultural life in ancient Rome.
i know they replaced Quintillis and Sextilis with July and August to honor the caesers agustus and i think julian.. but the original names were way cooler
then theres the Hebrew calendar.. hmm
can you explain the hebrew calendar?
Answer
The Hebrew calendar, also known as the Jewish calendar, is a lunisolar calendar used by the Jewish people for religious observances, festivals, and for calculating the dates of events in Jewish history. Hereโs an overview of its key features:
Basic Structure:
Lunar Months: The calendar consists of 12 or 13 lunar months, each beginning on the day when the new moon is first visible. This typically happens every 29 or 30 days, averaging out to approximately 29.53 days per month.
Year Length: A lunar year of 12 months totals about 354 days, which is shorter than the solar year (about 365.24 days). To align with the solar year:
Leap Years: An extra month, Adar II, is added approximately every 3 years (7 times in a 19-year cycle) to keep the calendar in sync with the seasons. This makes the year 13 months long, totaling around 383 or 384 days.
Months of the Year:
The Hebrew months are:
Tishrei (30 days)
Cheshvan (29 or 30 days)
Kislev (29 or 30 days)
Tevet (29 days)
Shevat (30 days)
Adar (29 days) or Adar I and II in leap years (29 days each)
Nisan (30 days) - the first month of religious year
Iyar (29 days)
Sivan (30 days)
Tammuz (29 days)
Av (30 days)
Elul (29 days)
Key Aspects:
Days: Each day starts at sunset and ends at the following sunset. Days are numbered from 1 to 30 (or 29), with the new moon marking the first day of a month.
Week: The week is seven days, with the Sabbath (Shabbat) from Friday evening to Saturday evening being a day of rest and worship.
Festivals and Observances:
Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year) falls on the first day of Tishrei.
Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement) on the 10th of Tishrei.
Sukkot, Passover, Shavuot, and other holidays have fixed dates within the calendar, but their secular dates vary year by year.
Era: The Jewish calendar counts years from the creation of the world according to Jewish tradition, which began with the year 1 Anno Mundi (AM), often correlated with 3761 BCE in the Gregorian calendar.
Calendar Calculation:
Dehiyyot: To ensure that religious observances occur on appropriate days and that holidays like Yom Kippur don't fall on a Friday or Sunday (to avoid consecutive days of rest), certain adjustments or "postponements" are made. These rules can shift the start of a year by one or two days.
Modern Adjustments: While historically, the sighting of the new moon was used to declare the beginning of a new month, today, mathematical calculations based on the Molad (the mean conjunction of the moon) are used, though some communities still practice the traditional observation.
The Hebrew calendar's complexity reflects its dual nature, attempting to reconcile the lunar cycle for religious purposes with the solar year for agricultural and seasonal festival timing, ensuring that important events occur in their proper seasons.
The Hebrew calendar months do not have exact, fixed correspondences with the Julian calendar months due to the lunisolar nature of the Hebrew calendar, where months can vary in length and leap months are added to align with the solar year. However, here are the approximate Julian calendar equivalents for each Hebrew month:
Tishrei: September/October
Cheshvan (Heshvan): October/November
Kislev: November/December
Tevet: December/January
Shevat: January/February
Adar (or Adar I in leap years): February/March
Adar II (in leap years only): March/April
Nisan: March/April
Iyar: April/May
Sivan: May/June
Tammuz: June/July
Av: July/August
Elul: August/September
Hebrew New Year:
Rosh Hashanah marks the beginning of the new year in the Hebrew calendar, occurring on the 1st of Tishrei, which usually falls in September or early October in the Julian/Gregorian calendar. However, for religious purposes, the year begins with the month of Nisan, which aligns with the spring season, typically in March or April.
This dual aspect of the new year reflects:
Civil New Year (Rosh Hashanah): This is considered the actual start of the Jewish year for most practical and religious purposes, commemorating the creation of the world.
Religious New Year (Nisan): Mentioned in the Torah as the first month, this is when Passover (Pesach) occurs, linking the religious calendar to the agricultural cycle in ancient Israel.
These correspondences are approximate because the Hebrew calendar's months shift relative to the Julian calendar each year, due to its lunar basis combined with the addition of leap months to keep festivals in their proper seasons.
sounds good, they are elimiinating the daylight savings maybee they can change the calendar too
i like the 4 weeks vs the 4.257, thats just not right
i remember reading something something about how taxpayers are linked to the gross national product and having everyone insured brings the product more valueโฆ hence obamacare
i wunder how this all applies if we locked into a computer program? we are considered a certain value of carbon energy?
https://x.com/LANACION/status/1866574247847772592
the mighty have fallen
10/10 strikes again
mazda looks pretty good
you are here
107 and 85 on the wiindow โฆ
#107 i dont remember reading this one afore
#85 "Who do you hire for a hit?
Who can be eliminated after the job is complete?"
LUigi followed snowden on X
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