Anonymous ID: 5f8fab April 26, 2020, 5:23 p.m. No.8932028   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2035

>>8931853

>>8931831

What until they read the reports coming out that show most people where exposed in Nov-Dec and already have antibodies, and that the mortality rates are in line with a regular to severe Flu season this time of year (0.4%). Shutdown the global economy, cause public hysteria and force mass vaccinations and rampant unemployment, good stuff, good stuff.

Anonymous ID: 5f8fab April 26, 2020, 5:38 p.m. No.8932139   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8931991

>>8932041

Language records many secrets obfuscated by time.

Jupiter (Latin) = Zeus-Pater (Greek) = Dyaus pitar (Sanskrit) = (God Father or Heavenly Father)

 

from Latin Iupeter, Iupiter, Iuppiter, "Jove, god of the sky and chief of the gods,"

from PIE dyeu-peter- "god-father" deiw-os "god" (from root *dyeu- "to shine," in derivatives "sky, heaven, god") + peter "father" in the sense of "male head of a household"

The Latin forms Diespiter, Dispiter … together with the word dies 'day' point to the generalization of a stem dije-, whereas Iupiter, Iovis reflect [Proto-Italic] djow~.

These can be derived from a single PIE paradigm for '(god of the) sky, day-light'.

Compare Greek Zeu pater, vocative of Zeus pater "Father Zeus;" Sanskrit Dyaus pitar "heavenly father." As the name of the brightest of the superior planets from late 13c. in English, from Latin (Iovis stella). The Latin word also meant "heaven, sky, air," hence sub Iove "in the open air." As god of the sky he was considered to be the originator of weather, hence Jupiter Pluvius "Jupiter as dispenser of rain" 1704), used jocularly from mid-19c.

 

https://www.etymonline.com/word/Jupiter