>>9655979 (lb)
Watching this makes me feel like we all just got Mandela Effected
>>9655979 (lb)
Watching this makes me feel like we all just got Mandela Effected
>Anyone care to explain why the U.S. imports Russian LNG?
Trips confirm
Russian gas is best gas
Because all other gas smells like shit
>Rome was the greatest civilization to ever live
Not even close.
They stole credit for most of the work that already existed prior to them conquering the ruins of civilizations which had fallen from catastrophes which devastated our planet.
Both Romans and Nazis sought out ancient knowledge because the civilizations which existed prior to the catastrophes were far more advanced than we were told. Plenty of evidence in the megalithic ruins, where it's a common theme to find foundation blocks of "impossible" size, 1,000+ tons. Everything on top is significantly smaller and often of a lesser quality/precision, and does appear to be salvaging the site of a previous settlement, which may have likely been found in ruins
>Seems as though Rome/Greece was after the royals (interbred) of Egypt once Egypt became out of control out when ayyyyys tried to help them.
Not ayyyyy said the fly on the wall right before Pepe ate him
Really not entirely sure, cause I wasn't there.
But from what I gather, the culture being attributed to the "Ancient Greece" is kind of an amalgamation like that being attributed to Roman. I'm sure the royals were interbreeding and what not. But there power derived mostly over control of "ancient" knowledge and technology. A common theme among the royals was to claim that they were "descendants" of the planets that caused the chaos, which made the peasants tremble in fear for their lives. To many, these planets were "gods", and there was very real reactions which occurred every time another celestial body got too close to our home planet. That's what most of the stories in the Bible and other mythology was trying to relay.
The original "Pharaoh" was not a person, but rather a light which shone in the sky. People worshiped this beacon of Light, because once upon a time, there was no time, and we never really had much to look at other than a dim haze. There was no "Day" or "night". That changed really quickly, when the first major cataclysm struck, which ultimately resulted in us getting a moon, if I am to understand the story correctly. Anyway, the "Pharaoh" that we fled from in the story of the Exodus was, again, not a person, but rather our parent star, which we now know as the planet Saturn. The figure we know as Moses was actually the planet Mars. The "promised land" was our new orbit around what we now call "our" sun. The "Burning Bush" was the brilliant manifestation of the planet Venus, which played a key role in leading us "out of the desert". Also, not a bad time to point out it was this same planet Venus which appeared as the "Great Comet" which Julius Caesar said he was the physical manifestation of, which basically goes back to what all I was saying above. Pretty much the only reason why the assholes were allowed to rule as long as they were is by exploiting our own ignorance. Also, when we got wise, they just had the tendency to slaughter us off and enslave the survivors. So, I'm sure that didn't help our cause.
But the moral of the story is that the moral of the story doesn't always have a moral to the story, even when there are morals to the story