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#451 Re: The Garden » Post Your Pic Thread - Let's see what you look like! » 925 weeks ago

lol, not really, more arabic like, a sort of fancy dress as we always did every year or twice a year with family, families of the people married into the family and friends of the family

We didn't do anything posh, we just grabbed curtains and stuff, but we were drunk ( especially since chris, my uncle ( guy with mustache 4rth on the right with huge smile, he was born in 62) had made  curry that was so spicy we drank too much to wash our mouths) and i was stoned too, because chris's ex wife ( beside him and me, the dark haired with is my mother next to her brother) had brought pot ..hehe..

It was fun actually, some good moments, although it was fun because my uncle's friends were.

#452 Re: The Garden » Long-lost text lifts cloud from Knights Templar » 925 weeks ago

I have a fantastic book about germans and jews, it's called " hitler's willing executionners" writtend by jonah goldhagen.

Here is what is said about him :

Daniel Jonah Goldhagen (born 1959) is an American political scientist. He is best known for his book, Hitler's Willing Executioners (1996), which posits that ordinary Germans not only knew about, but also supported, the Holocaust because of a unique and virulent "eliminationist" antisemitism in the German identity, which had developed in the preceding centuries. Goldhagen writes that this special mentality grew out of medieval attitudes from a religious basis but was eventually secularized.

Goldhagen's book, which began as his Harvard doctoral dissertation, was written largely to rebut the claims of Christopher Browning as to perpetrator motives. The dissertation won the American Political Science Association's 1994 Gabriel A. Almond Award in comparative politics.

Goldhagen has won acclaim for his ability to make harsh historical analysis interesting to a large public. He was awarded the prestigious Democracy Prize by the German Journal for German and International Politics, in that his work forced Germans to reckon with the phenomenon of pervasive and violent antisemitism, and as such it provided a corrective to any notion that an end to the Sonderweg of modern German history was at hand. The laudatio was given by Jürgen Habermas and Jan Philipp Reemtsma.

Hitler's Willing Executioners was commercially and popularly successful and has been widely translated, prompting two of its most visible academic critics, Norman Finkelstein and Ruth Bettina Birn, to publish an extensive joint critique of the book purporting to debunk its scholarship.

#453 Re: The Garden » Post Your Pic Thread - Let's see what you look like! » 925 weeks ago

well, since you like it, some more :

she used to be my best friend, two years younger, a bit like a sister, she took coke and H and we fell apart
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My brother speaks a language i don't understand
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Happy times
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My depeche mode period and MY DOG MINE " Bouchon"
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Weird family and two grandparents and me at the bottom of the room
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My parents and my brother when i lived in london, probably some time in 92 or 93
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#454 Re: The Garden » Long-lost text lifts cloud from Knights Templar » 925 weeks ago

So you also believe that:

A man put on a cross in scorching hot temperatures, drenched in his own blood, probably already rotting due to insects feeding on his blood,

A man dead, taken into a cave, again in very hot temperatures, already decomposing because of it, his corpse spending 3 days in that place when it SCIENTICALLY TAKES TWO IN HOT TEMPERATURES  TO BE DECOMPOSED, suddenly walks out and says " hi i am alive" ?

Do not tell me you believe CORPSES can walk ? i mean, closer to a skeleton really, and a smelly one at that...

#455 Re: The Garden » Long-lost text lifts cloud from Knights Templar » 925 weeks ago

Pride&Glory wrote:

Jesus was put on the cross.

How can you prove this ?

Other than by a book written centuries after his supposed death i mean

#457 Re: The Garden » Long-lost text lifts cloud from Knights Templar » 925 weeks ago

Well, Hitler did find out something :

Jesus was never crucified.

Although he already knew about it, the nazis found parchments mentionning Jesus, son of the King, being captured ans sent to work as a slave in mines.

He came out past 70 years old ( extraordinary old age if you look at the frame time) and left for france where Marie Madeleine already was with her uncle, her children and other family members and close ones.

Apparently, she placed all her kids in the best then royal families, their name being Del Aqua.

The arthurian tables speak of a del aqua being married to arthur or someone.
Also, the germans became anti jews when marie madeleine had a son marry into the royal line and it passed onto her family, meaning the saxons started to be ruled by immensely wealthy " strangers" and that's when the hatred apparenty started.

So, maybe the templars found enough evidence to threaten both papal and royal powers ?

Maybe this 2000 year old carnage is all linked to one same thing :

There is one and unique royal lineage, that unites norh and south, east and west through blood, that goes back to ancient pharaohs and that is immensely wealthy, making them the heirs to :

the world.

#458 Re: The Garden » NEW MEMBERS introduce yourself here » 925 weeks ago

I really admire people who can snowboard.

I was born in the mountains and i can't ski well, well, i nearly decapited a child trying to stop. 17

#459 Re: Management » Welcome Everyone! » 926 weeks ago

Thank you guys, let's get started and have fun..

#460 Re: The Garden » Long-lost text lifts cloud from Knights Templar » 926 weeks ago

I wouldn't be surprised.

Out of all the people in the world, these are the ones i will definately never trust and will probably die wishing them the very worst.

I cannot be neutral when i think about it all.

I know the templars were crushed, most their titles money and possessions went to the knight of St John afterwards ( who became Knights of Malta and who created the order bearing the same name).

I keep wondering about these 7 knights templar and their " treasure".

What did they find ?

Was it archeological, ideological, financial ?

Or did they just find freedom ?

All i hope is, should someone or some organisation bomb the vatican one day ( which they probably will), i hope they plan well enough to keep the vaults and the library standing, because much of the world's truth is in them.

Wether you're atheist or not, catholic or muslim, scientific evidences happen to be in there too.

We're all concerned.

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