Duat do what | |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/08/2016 01:09 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/08/2016 01:29 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Once it goes up and reaches the sunlight, then it can grow leaves. One of the vines can grow across 100 acres of rainforest. [link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)] A liana is any of various long-stemmed, woody vines that are rooted in the soil at ground level and use trees, as well as other means of vertical support, to climb up to the canopy to get access to well-lit areas of the forest.[1] Lianas are characteristic of tropical moist deciduous forests (especially seasonal forests), but may be found in temperate rainforests. There are also temperate lianas, for example the members of the Clematis or Vitis (wild grape) genera. Lianas can form bridges amidst the forest canopy, providing arboreal animals with paths across the forest. These bridges can protect weaker trees from strong winds. Lianas compete with forest trees for sunlight, water and nutrients from the soil.[2] |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/08/2016 01:38 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Once it goes up and reaches the sunlight, then it can grow leaves. One of the vines can grow across 100 acres of rainforest. Quoting: Fancypantz [link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)] A liana is any of various long-stemmed, woody vines that are rooted in the soil at ground level and use trees, as well as other means of vertical support, to climb up to the canopy to get access to well-lit areas of the forest.[1] Lianas are characteristic of tropical moist deciduous forests (especially seasonal forests), but may be found in temperate rainforests. There are also temperate lianas, for example the members of the Clematis or Vitis (wild grape) genera. Lianas can form bridges amidst the forest canopy, providing arboreal animals with paths across the forest. These bridges can protect weaker trees from strong winds. Lianas compete with forest trees for sunlight, water and nutrients from the soil.[2] What does 5th direction, caduceus(ningishzida), and the canopy(golden age), genesis story have in common? lol |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/08/2016 04:08 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
St Muse User ID: 69463594 United States 10/08/2016 07:55 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | When looking up the Duck River: Talking Leaves On November 28, 1785, the first Treaty of Hopewell was signed between the U.S. representative Benjamin Hawkins and the Cherokee Indians. The treaty laid out a western boundary for American settlement. The treaty gave rise to the sardonic Cherokee phrase of Talking Leaves, since they claimed that when the treaties no longer suited the Americans, they would blow away like talking leaves. |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 73139978 United States 10/09/2016 12:32 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | When looking up the Duck River: Talking Leaves Quoting: St Muse 69463594 On November 28, 1785, the first Treaty of Hopewell was signed between the U.S. representative Benjamin Hawkins and the Cherokee Indians. The treaty laid out a western boundary for American settlement. The treaty gave rise to the sardonic Cherokee phrase of Talking Leaves, since they claimed that when the treaties no longer suited the Americans, they would blow away like talking leaves. Yes |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 73139978 United States 10/09/2016 12:42 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 73139978 United States 10/09/2016 12:48 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The lord of the good tree. Upper region of tree light and Lower dark. Had to do with the stealing of one of the mated eggs into the lower region. The P/ bird which the Hindu call g- wingspan can block out the sun. The Hindu n- serpents, do they rise before the wingspan or after. Remembering 5th direction is called black or night sun. See, the female egg is guarded by the shapeshifting guardian. Producers and consumers and decomposers all goes back to the sun as energy source, no matter if web or chain. That's enough for now:0) Last Edited by Fancypantz on 10/09/2016 12:49 AM |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 73139978 United States 10/09/2016 12:50 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
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Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/09/2016 10:56 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Read more at: [link to transcripts.foreverdreaming.org] |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/09/2016 11:00 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to earthboppin.net] Date: October 04, 2016 at 07:26:57 Subject: Gamma Ray Burst 10-04A -16 That is interesting development. I did see apex this morning, lol I have no clue what apex or lol has to do with this topic. [link to www.livescience.com] Quoting: Fancypantz The Spooky Secret Behind Artificial Intelligence's Incredible Power Spookily powerful artificial intelligence (AI) systems may work so well because their structure exploits the fundamental laws of the universe, new research suggests. The new findings may help answer a longstanding mystery about a class of artificial intelligence that employ a strategy called deep learning. These deep learning or deep neural network programs, as they're called, are algorithms that have many layers in which lower-level calculations feed into higher ones. Deep neural networks often perform astonishingly well at solving problems as complex as beating the world's best player of the strategy board game Go or classifying cat photos, yet know one fully understood why. Reminds me of Deep Blue. That reminds me of the commadore 64 and there was a program that was like an ai, dr. something. I can't recall the name but you ask it questions and it answered. You had to program it in too. [link to www.c64-wiki.com (secure)] There are many programs for the C64 that claim to use AI. Although many are actually a series of algorithms that can not (and do not) react to external influences, there are some that successfully strive to create rudimentary machine learning. Imagine someone's been diddling with our creations? It's the simplest solution. Ah, Mr. Occam's razor. The problem, Bernard, is that what you and I do is so complicated. We practice witchcraft. We speak the right words. Then we create life itself... out of chaos. (machinery whirring) William of Occam was a 13th century monk. He can't help us now, Bernard. He would have us burned at the stake. Read more at: [link to transcripts.foreverdreaming.org] Ophiuchus speaks |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/09/2016 11:02 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
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Fancypantz
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Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/09/2016 11:14 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/09/2016 06:32 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What is the arcadia and peru connection? [link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)] Alpacas have been domesticated for thousands of years. The Moche people of northern Peru often used alpaca images in their art.[2] There are no known wild alpacas, and its closest living relative, the vicuña (also native to South America), are believed to be the wild ancestor of the alpaca.[3] The alpaca is larger than the vicuña, but smaller than the other camelid species. |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 11:21 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What is the arcadia and peru connection? Quoting: Fancypantz [link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)] Alpacas have been domesticated for thousands of years. The Moche people of northern Peru often used alpaca images in their art.[2] There are no known wild alpacas, and its closest living relative, the vicuña (also native to South America), are believed to be the wild ancestor of the alpaca.[3] The alpaca is larger than the vicuña, but smaller than the other camelid species. Some pyramids had limestone casing and limestone core skeleton of radiating walls but some cross compartments were filled with sand. But on other pyramids the cross compartments was filled with mudbrick instead of sand. |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 11:34 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 11:41 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Most people have no idea of who is pictured above, but you should. The sight of this man should cause a similar revulsion to that of seeing Mussolini, Mao, Stalin or Hitler, as he committed an African genocide that resulted in the killing of over 10 million people in the Congo. His name is King Leopold II of Belgium. When Leopold II ascended to the throne in 1865, he ruled with the kind of gentle hand that Belgians wanted from their king after the democratization of the country in the wake of the multiple revolutions and reforms. He had great ambitions of building an overseas empire, and was convinced, like most statesmen of his time, that a nation’s greatness was directly proportional to the resources it could extract from those colonies. He disguised his business transactions as “philanthropic” and “scientific” efforts under the banner of the International African Society and used slave labor to extract Congolese resources and services. His reign was enforced through work camps, body mutilations, torture, executions, and his own private army. Read more at [link to thefreethoughtproject.com] |
S__
User ID: 72153406 Russia 10/10/2016 12:35 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | "When you shut down emotion, you are also affecting the immune system, you're nervous system. So the repression of emotion, which is a survival strategy, then becomes a source of physiological illness later on." Quoting: Fancypantz -Gabor Maté This is pretty relative. I've seen people who shut down their emotions and had no problems with their health. Some of them did even better than they were before when emotions consumed them. |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 01:19 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | "When you shut down emotion, you are also affecting the immune system, you're nervous system. So the repression of emotion, which is a survival strategy, then becomes a source of physiological illness later on." Quoting: Fancypantz -Gabor Maté This is pretty relative. I've seen people who shut down their emotions and had no problems with their health. Some of them did even better than they were before when emotions consumed them. It is. Not everything reacts to the common but there is still common between everything. Medicine and diagnosis today is only based on the common and medications is a one size fits all. See the problem? |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 5002761 United States 10/10/2016 01:32 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | "When you shut down emotion, you are also affecting the immune system, you're nervous system. So the repression of emotion, which is a survival strategy, then becomes a source of physiological illness later on." Quoting: Fancypantz -Gabor Maté This is pretty relative. I've seen people who shut down their emotions and had no problems with their health. Some of them did even better than they were before when emotions consumed them. Emotion triggers memory. And memory kick starts movement. |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 01:33 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 01:40 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | "When you shut down emotion, you are also affecting the immune system, you're nervous system. So the repression of emotion, which is a survival strategy, then becomes a source of physiological illness later on." Quoting: Fancypantz -Gabor Maté This is pretty relative. I've seen people who shut down their emotions and had no problems with their health. Some of them did even better than they were before when emotions consumed them. Emotion triggers memory. And memory kick starts movement. Does emotion trigger all memory or just the emotional memory into cascade of the other aspects of memory? |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 01:56 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Fancypantz
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song waves User ID: 72229564 United Kingdom 10/10/2016 02:19 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I think so. It was a certain place but forgot the name. It was written on the mad thread I think. Bit of a difficult one - I went to so many - anything else I talked about whilst there? if I talked about Sal flowers it would have been Mulkrigala: [link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)] It has to be somewhere there because FunForLouis is in Sri Lanka, lolol [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] Sorry for the late reply got (rhymes with fanned). Had a look at Louis site but couldn't find anything with him at a temple? - if you can link a direct vid then I might be able to tell you where it was. Having bit of trouble replying to anything right now - hit one of those polarity black walls pretty hard - life growth - feels like I ripped my soul in half. The things you have to do sometimes to realise something. Oh and 'we' as in the proverbial we - as in - its come up in conversation here before. |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 05:16 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | ... Quoting: Fancypantz I think so. It was a certain place but forgot the name. It was written on the mad thread I think. Bit of a difficult one - I went to so many - anything else I talked about whilst there? if I talked about Sal flowers it would have been Mulkrigala: [link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)] It has to be somewhere there because FunForLouis is in Sri Lanka, lolol [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] Sorry for the late reply got (rhymes with fanned). Had a look at Louis site but couldn't find anything with him at a temple? - if you can link a direct vid then I might be able to tell you where it was. Having bit of trouble replying to anything right now - hit one of those polarity black walls pretty hard - life growth - feels like I ripped my soul in half. The things you have to do sometimes to realise something. Oh and 'we' as in the proverbial we - as in - its come up in conversation here before. No temples, just the vicinity. He mostly went to the rainforest and beach. No worries. That kind of reminds me in his video they were hiking and noticed two trees that grew entwined together and then split apart to create their own canopy. The girl in the video said it reminded of when she had to leave her friends after moving. I knew what you meant. |
Fancypantz
(OP) User ID: 71884387 United States 10/10/2016 05:30 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What is the arcadia and peru connection? Quoting: Fancypantz [link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)] Alpacas have been domesticated for thousands of years. The Moche people of northern Peru often used alpaca images in their art.[2] There are no known wild alpacas, and its closest living relative, the vicuña (also native to South America), are believed to be the wild ancestor of the alpaca.[3] The alpaca is larger than the vicuña, but smaller than the other camelid species. Some pyramids had limestone casing and limestone core skeleton of radiating walls but some cross compartments were filled with sand. But on other pyramids the cross compartments was filled with mudbrick instead of sand. Peru is near the Yucatan and from the Cayce records the real story of the Maya goes back to Lemuria and Atlantis with land changes. I noticed he talked about moral decline and alterations in behaviors that was associated with the land changes. Which makes sense in a way because if the land formations and boundaries and movements of things mirror the sky then sky give shape to all things personalities and behaviors and movements. The upheaval would be the hedge or transitional phase between both where boundaries cease or become constantly warred over. The no man land/zone, so to speak. Phases of life are like that. Back to the Maya Said, Lemuria was in the Pacific Ocean and bordered what is now west coast of N and S America and began to sink. Atlantis was broken up into several large islands with the southern portion sunk altogether. So migrations to Yucatan from Lemuria began with first cataclysm. The second cataclysm being the great exodus from the principal remaining Atlantian which occurred over many thousands of years. He said the merging at wide intervals of time of the red race from Atlantis in the east with those earlier settlers of the brown race from Lemuria in the west and Peru to the south mixed many cultures and faiths. Then says, some early inhabitants of southwestern US, Israelites of Egypt drifted far south as Yucatan bringing their cultures as well. All the Mayas too, which led to the "all for one, one for all" mentality. Which you know sounds like very mitakuye oyasin(all relatives), lol |