Anonymous ID: 415555 Jan. 2, 2019, 7:53 a.m. No.4564920   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4963

>>4564489

> Whatever that is, lies on the other side of the Gate that is held by e-bot.

I'm not a fan of e-bot. Someone would have to dig and display his posts showing coherence to persuade me to consider this.

Someone did that for Glork, but I've never seen it for e-bot. Did I miss it if it was done? "Show me the money".

 

I do enjoy your philosophical ramblings.

Anonymous ID: 415555 Jan. 2, 2019, 8:07 a.m. No.4565077   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4564748

>Jack of Clubs apprehended.

>Intel secured.

>HVT en route.

Ummm, OK.

"FAMOUS JACK OF CLUBS:

Oprah Winfrey, John Forsythe, Elizabeth Taylor, Rozanda Chilli Thomas, Sarah Jessica Parker, Aretha Franklin, Notorious B.I.G., Michael Moore, Mr. T, Fats Waller, Brian Head Welch, Kathleen Turner, Salman Rushdie, David Hasselhoff, Camilla Parker Bowles, Ben Affleck"

 

"Androgynous by nature, these people are able to traverse the male/female boundaries with ease. They represent the Aquarian Age of melding the opposites, forward thinkers that test societal norms. This knack for traversing boundaries also includes the boundaries of honesty and dishonesty with the ability to swing from one to the other effortlessly."

 

" This is the card of memory, and as a rule, the Jack of Club people have this gift in an extraordinary degree.

 

The Jack of Club is also considered the "Card of the Future", and is used as one of the symbols of the androgynous state towards which the race is evolving. Many of the women of this card have masculine minds and masculine habits in life. They are seldom domestic, never clinging vines, and have little patience with pettiness or vanity.

 

Negatively there is irresponsibility, idle curiosity, and escape into a multitude of unfortunate life experiences, far removed from the wisdom they have come to preach.

 

For all Jack of Clubs, victory against the many obstacles in life is found in their positive application of knowledge, and their willingness to share it! "

 

"A jack or knave is a playing card which, in traditional French and English decks, pictures a man in the traditional or historic aristocratic dress generally associated with Europe of the 16th or 17th century. The usual rank of a jack, within its suit, plays as if it was an 11 (that is, between the 10 and the queen). As the lowest face (or "court") card, the jack often represents a minimum standard — for example, many poker games require a minimum hand of a pair of jacks ("jacks or better") in order to continue play."

 

So Who's Jack?