>Jace is survived by his son Oliver (La Crosse), Mother Angela Scholler (La Crosse), Father Dan (Shelly) Scholler (Plainview, MN), Brother Corey (La Crosse), Sister Brittany (La Crosse), Grandmother Sherry (Idaho Falls, ID), Grandfather Tom (Wild Rose), Oliver’s Mother, Olivia Moran Rodriguez (La Crosse), and numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins.
So no, probably not, but might be part Indian.
Her brother died in a bad car accident. Very sad, since he was young only 24.
People should not say the N word, because it summon the N words.
Just like our ancestors, did not say "bear" but instead said "brown one".
>We know the common English word "bear" and its less common variant "bruin" (from Dutch "bruin", meaning brown. French "brun" and "brunette", also signify the color brown, though the French word for bear is, as we saw above, "ours"). The Dutch word for bear is "beer". In German, the word for bear is "baer" (now spelled "bär" with a-umlaut). In Old Norse, and its descendants Danish and Swedish, the corresponding bear word is "bjorn". These words appear in personal and family names and also in place names in Germanic speaking lands, for example "Berlin" in Prussia, "Berne" in Switzerland, "Brno" (German "Brunn") in Moravia in the former Czechoslovakia. All these words are derived from the PIE word *bher- = "brown". The Germanic speaking peoples, who inhabited and hunted in northern climes and were presumably in frequent contact with the bear, did not use its common name. Instead, they used a circumlocution: "the brown one", and this is reflected in the modern word for bear in all the Germanic languages. Linguists hypothesize that in old common Germanic, the true name of the bear was under a taboo -- not to be spoken directly. The exact details of the taboo are not known. Did it apply to hunters who were hunting the bear and did not want to warn it? Or to hunters hunting other animals and did not wanting to rile up the bear and have it steal their prey? Or did it apply to anyone who did not want to summon the bear by its name and perhaps become its prey? Whatever the details, the taboo worked so well that no trace of the original *rkto- word remains in Germanic languages, except as borrowed historically in learned words from Greek or Latin. The Greeks and Romans apparently had a more laid-back relationship with the bear, perhaps because there were relatively few encounters, and preserved the ancient name.
If you account for the time dilation due to the expansion of the universe, it is still the sixth day. in other words, if you were standing outside the universe and not subject to expansion, the universe would be 5.x days old, i.e. the sixth day.
veridic 3 points 3.2 years ago
According to locals, yellow is wheat, and blue is sky.
/v/AskVoat viewpost?postid=6222fe427cee4
veridic 0 points 3.2 years ago
From her brothers obit:
>Jace is survived by his son Oliver (La Crosse), Mother Angela Scholler (La Crosse), Father Dan (Shelly) Scholler (Plainview, MN), Brother Corey (La Crosse), Sister Brittany (La Crosse), Grandmother Sherry (Idaho Falls, ID), Grandfather Tom (Wild Rose), Oliver’s Mother, Olivia Moran Rodriguez (La Crosse), and numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins.
So no, probably not, but might be part Indian.
Her brother died in a bad car accident. Very sad, since he was young only 24.
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=6222c261469d2
veridic 1 point 3.2 years ago
It's Turkish, in phonetic script.
https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/voynich-manuscript-cracked-0011914
http://www.turkicresearch.com/files/articles/001c02b8-4f98-4717-bafe-adac0941252f_VoynichManuscriptRevealed%20OZAN%20Ingilizce%20Makale.pdf
/v/Tartaria viewpost?postid=621310e2d5d4f
veridic 1 point 3.2 years ago
Just hold up a blanket.
/v/UpliftingNews viewpost?postid=62110b96cb487
veridic 0 points 3.2 years ago
He had the child's permission:
https://youtu.be/W_pp6R4qmN4?t=38
/v/funny viewpost?postid=6204ff0141839
veridic 0 points 3.2 years ago
Keep up the good work.
/v/TellVoat viewpost?postid=620352d802bac
veridic 0 points 3.2 years ago
הוֹמוֹסֶקסוּאָל
/v/funny viewpost?postid=6202052fb32db
veridic 2 points 3.2 years ago
People should not say the N word, because it summon the N words.
Just like our ancestors, did not say "bear" but instead said "brown one".
>We know the common English word "bear" and its less common variant "bruin" (from Dutch "bruin", meaning brown. French "brun" and "brunette", also signify the color brown, though the French word for bear is, as we saw above, "ours"). The Dutch word for bear is "beer". In German, the word for bear is "baer" (now spelled "bär" with a-umlaut). In Old Norse, and its descendants Danish and Swedish, the corresponding bear word is "bjorn". These words appear in personal and family names and also in place names in Germanic speaking lands, for example "Berlin" in Prussia, "Berne" in Switzerland, "Brno" (German "Brunn") in Moravia in the former Czechoslovakia. All these words are derived from the PIE word *bher- = "brown". The Germanic speaking peoples, who inhabited and hunted in northern climes and were presumably in frequent contact with the bear, did not use its common name. Instead, they used a circumlocution: "the brown one", and this is reflected in the modern word for bear in all the Germanic languages. Linguists hypothesize that in old common Germanic, the true name of the bear was under a taboo -- not to be spoken directly. The exact details of the taboo are not known. Did it apply to hunters who were hunting the bear and did not want to warn it? Or to hunters hunting other animals and did not wanting to rile up the bear and have it steal their prey? Or did it apply to anyone who did not want to summon the bear by its name and perhaps become its prey? Whatever the details, the taboo worked so well that no trace of the original *rkto- word remains in Germanic languages, except as borrowed historically in learned words from Greek or Latin. The Greeks and Romans apparently had a more laid-back relationship with the bear, perhaps because there were relatively few encounters, and preserved the ancient name.
/v/FreeSpeech viewpost?postid=61feca1b8c6f3
veridic 3 points 3.2 years ago
F
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=61fcb9f4293f8
veridic 8 points 3.2 years ago
Have to keep the price of fertilizer high:
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/farming-insider-warns-coming-food-shortages-are-going-be-far-worse-were-being-told
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=61f8cfa9a0f0c
veridic 0 points 3.3 years ago
https://files.catbox.moe/8kki6r.mp4
/v/videos viewpost?postid=61f5bc9f62eba
veridic 3 points 3.3 years ago
Actual charge was "Resisting an Officer". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVe3BvBYmSY
He was in jail for 4 days because of this.
/v/WTF viewpost?postid=61f08764806cd
veridic 3 points 3.3 years ago
Knowing how to read is suspicious.
/v/WTF viewpost?postid=61f08764806cd
veridic 0 points 3.3 years ago
You should have held it on good Friday, to troll them.
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=61efdbbc5a256
veridic 0 points 3.3 years ago
God only creates 3 things. 1 = Universe, matter, light, dark etc. 2 = life (initially). 3 = Soul of man.
Everything else, the formation of the Earth, the plants and animals, etc, he "let there be".
The first day is about 8 billion years. The second day is about 4 billion years. The third is 2 billion, etc.
Everything lines up.
/v/AskVoat viewpost?postid=61d8919ce1641
veridic 1 point 3.3 years ago
If you account for the time dilation due to the expansion of the universe, it is still the sixth day. in other words, if you were standing outside the universe and not subject to expansion, the universe would be 5.x days old, i.e. the sixth day.
/v/AskVoat viewpost?postid=61d8919ce1641
veridic 0 points 3.3 years ago
Thank you for your service.
/v/BlackPilled viewpost?postid=61cc06d1e57c7
veridic 0 points 3.4 years ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EK32jo7i5LQ
https://youtu.be/dktH8hJadyU?t=918
/v/pics viewpost?postid=61c2ac9f0e9fe
veridic 7 points 3.4 years ago
Good. Maybe now he will start calling out Jews.
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=61ba25795debf
veridic 2 points 3.4 years ago
You should read Blackstone.
http://files.libertyfund.org/files/2140/Blackstone_1387-01_EBk_v6.0.pdf
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=61b8b9f0800cb
veridic 4 points 3.4 years ago
When the AIs take over I hope they remember what the liberals did to Tay.
/v/OLDbutGOLD viewpost?postid=61b39453ea7fd
veridic 0 points 3.4 years ago
If you are going 80 mph how long does it take you to go 80 miles?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOFJpsDmKvU
/v/funny viewpost?postid=619ee1309364c
veridic 0 points 3.5 years ago
Does he mean Sophies Choice?
Nevermind:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077025/?ref_=nm_flmg_act_91
Holocaust TV Miniseries
/v/TellVoat viewpost?postid=6195049eb5572
veridic 1 point 3.5 years ago
Don't prove her wrong. Quit your job and be stay at home husband.
/v/AskVoat viewpost?postid=619421aba480e
veridic 0 points 3.5 years ago
http://18.198.170.188/all-your-base64-are-belong-to-us
/v/WarGames viewpost?postid=61903b9ff25e2