DOITQ!
DOITQ!
▶Q !!mG7VJxZNCI 01/11/19 (Fri) 00:19:34 467fd2 (1) No.4707080
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Q
LIVE FOREVER
>5313705
Colossal if not confabulation
A story collected by the 19'th century English explorer and ethnographer Sir Richard Francis Burton in the marketplace at Khartoum.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Francis_Burton
The Ruin of Kasch
25 minutes
He was voted to death.
Child stealing rings often prey on children in remote areas of third world countries, here a witness recounts what happened to one unfortunate pedovore in the Guatemalan Highlands.
The Natural History of Elephants
Ready for the GITMO git down?
PEDOVORE BOOGIE
The Land Where Money Talks
THINK Q
You should start a thread for the 2.8 quad - sounds like it could be important.
St hubertus society. "Death is murder, murder is death" is what they sat. No one dies a natural death. When your time comes you are notified that you have x time to put affairs in order and take leave of loved ones.
At a time of their choosing fellow members take your life.
Wilhelm hosted royal hunts at Rominten and his hunting parties often included his cousin, Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria. These men and other royal guests harvested many extraordinary trophies there, especially the great red stag, which, as legend has it, had also been a favorite quarry of Hubert in the forests of the Ardennes in the late 700’s AD.
Elaborate ceremony was observed in the field regarding the game taken at Rominten. Antlers were mounted on ornate plaques, many beautifully hand-carved by artisans using Linwood and other hardwoods from the forests of the area. Permanent inscriptions were often made in calligraphy on the mounts, memorializing the location at which the trophy was taken and the date of the hunt. Some of the magnificent trophies were adorned with medals and pendants representing the military affiliation of the entourage accompanying Wilhelm on the hunt, or the title or rank of a guest. In the case of trophies taken by Wilhelm himself or other royalty, such as his cousin, Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph, a royal cipher, made of gold, was sometimes affixed to the mount.