KnudsonRegime
KnudsonRegime t1_jeguak3 wrote
Reply to My SO do this for some reason. by Xcavor
I am not your SO, but I too dismantle the Oreos and just eat the cookies. At least I used to. At Aldi they have them without the sugar paste stuff, and they’re delicious.
KnudsonRegime t1_jegljj4 wrote
Reply to comment by tukekairo in TIL that as President-Elect, US Pres. James Buchanan improperly wrote to a Supreme Court justice asking him to vote pro-slavery in the Dred Scott case. The court would rule 7-2 that Scott was a possession, not a person, and denied his petition for freedom by archfapper
Frozen human embryos are still considered property and are traded under regular contract law. Slavery, and the people who support it, are still around.
KnudsonRegime t1_jeg4nfa wrote
Reply to What's something you thought was 'normal' until you moved away from the place where you grew up? by 4a4a
Violence. Drug abuse. Fundamentalist Christianity. States rights as the cause of the Civil War. Obesity.
KnudsonRegime t1_jdxrumx wrote
Reply to comment by DontBeADramaLlama in Over 2,000 Mummified Sheep Heads Unearthed In Egypt Temple by cargo_run_rust
There were 8,000,000 mummified dogs at Saqqara.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/found-8-million-dog-mummies-180955679/
KnudsonRegime t1_jdxkthp wrote
Reply to comment by x925 in This apology note on my handleless gallon of water. by flowingink22
Which is about $2 million against an annual revenue of $36 million. Pennies add up.
KnudsonRegime t1_jdriiz6 wrote
Reply to comment by sashinexists in These bananas at the grocery store are sold on the stalk they grew on by co1063
The only reason it’s not is logistics. Bananas are notoriously quick to spoil in transit and fast transit is expensive. The banana trains in the US are still the fastest long haul freight method and they have priority over any other train on the tracks.
Since you can fit more bananas without their stalks it’s vastly more economical than wasting a bunch of space with non-edible material.
What nobody talks about is how stalked bananas are shipped LTL (less than truck load) and their carbon footprint is 20x+ that of bulk bunches.
KnudsonRegime t1_jdl19gg wrote
Lived to see his prediction remaining valid. He’ll be positively incorrigible in the afterlife.
KnudsonRegime t1_jcirjmv wrote
They ship fully grown fighting cocks too. Also, bees. All my bees come USPS.
KnudsonRegime t1_ja0bzyg wrote
Reply to comment by Butterbrotbox in Mysterious marks on Ice Age cave art may have been a form of record keeping. by Rifletree
That’s why I call it the moon sickness.
KnudsonRegime t1_j9igxmq wrote
Reply to comment by blerg1234 in TIL - English physician William Harvey was a prominent skeptic regarding allegations of witchcraft. He was one of the examiners of four women from Lancashire accused of witchcraft in 1634, and as a consequence of his report, all of them were acquitted. by wendalltwolf
He was very wise in the ways of science.
KnudsonRegime t1_j8ux2ta wrote
Westinghouse was famous in his own time. Which, importantly, ended 30 years earlier than Tesla’s. It’s not really a very fair comparison.
KnudsonRegime t1_j70evm2 wrote
Reply to comment by dfields3710 in LG Releases OLED Monitor Inspired by Dragonfly Eyes | There are over 5,000 micro lenses per pixel, enabling up to 2,100 nits and 160 degree viewing angles. by chrisdh79
I thought it was an ass in a thong with Shaun the Sheep going in deep.
KnudsonRegime t1_j6l9s8z wrote
Reply to comment by 35Lcrowww in 39 year old can of Pac-Man pasta by Chef Boyardee by OneUpExtraLife
It tastes exactly like SpaghettiOs Goldfish.
KnudsonRegime t1_j575lni wrote
Reply to comment by Zestyclose-Advisor71 in Did ancient Greeks think that observation prevented observation of the paranormal / paradoxa? by Zestyclose-Advisor71
Indeed. The presence of the impure could act like a gateway of sorts and the vengeful spirits/demons could enter the world and cause all sorts of problems. I think it’s supporting evidence of the belief that normal people in general were capable of derailing magic by their mere presence.
Much like someone who has the power of invisibility, but it only works when no one is looking. Which I think is what Palaephatus is getting at.
KnudsonRegime t1_j55vr3j wrote
Reply to Did ancient Greeks think that observation prevented observation of the paranormal / paradoxa? by Zestyclose-Advisor71
I don’t have any references handy, but I have anecdotal evidence that supports the idea of the super mundane being affected by the viewer.
Essentially all of the non-divinatory mysticism of the Near East, Europe and Northern Africa requires the practitioner to be ritually clean; physically, mentally, and spiritually. A key element in achieving that state is often isolation from the mundane world, with the duration of that isolation being directly proportional to the power of the magical working being performed. If the intent is to directly communicate with or control a super mundane entity the requirements for isolation can get pretty extreme; spending 40 days in the wilderness with extended periods of fasting and stuff like that.
In addition to isolation during preparation, secrecy during the working is explicitly required. I can’t think of any examples where multiple people are prohibited from participating in a working. But the requirements for achieving the necessary level of purity often prohibit speech and combined with the other requirements it would be extremely problematic to involve multiple people.
Problematic ranging from the magic simply not working to the summoned being obliterating or possessing the practitioner. So the stakes are pretty high to get it right. The overall implication is that if you want to summon angels or demons or bend the very fabric of existence it’s not a party trick. It’s something done by an individual, in isolation.
There are plenty of less esoteric mystic examples of super mundane practices requiring isolation. In Judaism only the High Priest could enter the Holy of Holies and speak to G-d on the Mercy Seat of the Ark of the Covenant. Elijah carried the dead body of Zarephath’s son upstairs, apart from the others, and brought him back to life. Elisha did something similar in Shunem where he laid on top of a dead boy and after some time apart from the others he took the now living boy to his mother. Peter did the same with Tabitha in Joppa where he explicitly cleared the room and brought her back to life.
Conversely, there are many examples of public displays of super mundane acts in the Bible. The feeding of the 5,000, resurrections, casting out of evil spirits and all kinds of things In Exodus. The Rod of Aaron turning into a snake and eating the snake conjured by Pharaoh’s magi. These public events are treated specially because they were witnessed by regular people and demonstrate that they were of divine origin. The super mundane that didn’t have to be practiced in private to witness the results (magic was accepted as real, it was the fact these events were public that made them notable).
I used a lot of Biblical examples because there’s little separation between the mystical practices of Sumerian inspired Babylonians, the Jews, Egyptians, Greeks and Islam. The deities, beings, spirits and creatures vary, but the actual practices involved are not very different. All demand privacy and secrecy. Only certain individuals could engage in these practices and the public are prohibited from even knowing about what goes on.
The implication being that the involvement of, and even the presence of, the uninitiated and unclean will prevent the super mundane/paranormal from being actualized. It cannot manifest except in the presence of the pure, the believer. The exceptions to this invariably involve the direct intervention of a deity (Achilles, Hercules, Moses, Gilgamesh, etc… all had direct involvement with deities).
KnudsonRegime t1_j3zcpqy wrote
Reply to Of the 270,000 photographs commissioned by the US Farm Security Administration to document the Great Depression, more than a third were “killed”. by VinkyStagina
It does suck. But they could have simply thrown the whole thing away and we’d have nothing.
KnudsonRegime t1_j221dct wrote
Reply to comment by Notagenyus in TIL the original 1881 "Pinocchio" was a dark story that included the puppet's execution by hanging for his bad behavior (which included murdering Jiminy Cricket) by foodtower
In the book Jiminy Cricket comes back as a ghost to haunt Pinocchio.
KnudsonRegime t1_j220y7v wrote
Reply to TIL the original 1881 "Pinocchio" was a dark story that included the puppet's execution by hanging for his bad behavior (which included murdering Jiminy Cricket) by foodtower
Jiminy Cricket had it coming.
KnudsonRegime t1_j21ewqs wrote
Reply to comment by food_chronicles in TIL Around the 10th century, one of the largest and wealthiest Hindu temples in the world was demolished at Multan, Pakistan, and historians today are still unable to pinpoint its exact position in Multan. by cactus_sunshine
My point was that not being able to find the former site of a wealthy temple is the kind of thing Graham Hancock fans like to hold up as evidence that history is really just a coverup and “they” don’t want us to know the truth because academia would have to rewrite all the textbooks.
Apparently my point was not well made.
KnudsonRegime t1_j1wod16 wrote
Reply to TIL Around the 10th century, one of the largest and wealthiest Hindu temples in the world was demolished at Multan, Pakistan, and historians today are still unable to pinpoint its exact position in Multan. by cactus_sunshine
History conspiracy theorists go nuts over stuff like this.
KnudsonRegime t1_j1o6y71 wrote
Reply to TIL about Saturnalia - a Roman Holiday held between 17 - 23 December. The holiday was celebrated with a sacrifice at the Temple of Saturn, in the Roman Forum, and a public banquet, followed by private gift-giving, continual partying, and a carnival atmosphere. by TurboBennett
I give Saturnalia greeting cards to everyone for Christmas. That way I don’t have to worry about getting anyone’s holiday wrong, because I get them wrong for everybody.
KnudsonRegime t1_j1l7r77 wrote
Reply to comment by Actedpie in TIL: Hidden Valley ranch dressing is manufactured by Clorox. by MohammadRezaPahlavi
My granny called it bull milk.
KnudsonRegime t1_j1l2p6u wrote
Clorox is also Burt’s Bees. Chemicals is chemicals and everything is made of chemicals so a chemical company making chemicals seems pretty normal.
What would be weird is if Kotex made marinara sauce. Or Agtech cattle insemination corp made mayonnaise.
KnudsonRegime t1_j1c41jp wrote
The swords also sucked. Their effectiveness came from the training of the soldiers and allowed them to make what are, essentially, the original Pakistani steel. Because they did have a military industrial complex they were big into recycling broken weapons, further reducing the need for high quality products. The standard issue Chinese Jian style sword was the same kind of thing. All about volume production.There were weapons for the wealthy and powerful of much high quality than the Legionaries (and Chinese) infantry used, but they were not the standard.
Popular history gets things kind of muddled because the price of steel weapons skyrocketed as the Western Roman Empire crumbled. During the Middle Ages steel weapons were quite uncommon and served as a mark of wealth that often passed through multiple generations of a family, sometimes reaching near legendary status. That concept was retroactively, and incorrectly, applied to Roman weapons.
KnudsonRegime t1_jeh27sf wrote
Reply to Which conspiracy theory sounds the most reasonable? by MrMoshion
That the Christian Trinity doctrine was instituted to maintain the worship of Yaldaboth via Jesus as a proxy.