The Worst Year in History to Be Alive
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TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 17, 2025 06:22 AM)
Steve Lake October 17, 2025 08:13 AM
Member since February 19, 2018
Come here. (love10)
Thanks for the love10, Stevey.
You should only do that in the right situation.
Unless you want to sing soprano in your choir.
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TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 17, 2025 06:44 AM)
Steve Lake October 17, 2025 08:27 AM
Member since February 19, 2018
Ur a dude? Is that what ur saying?
Or that you would kick me in the nuts if I tried to hug you
I've no idea why you thought that I could be a man; a man would break your nose.
A kick in the eggs
is a popular female defense tactic.
As said, depends on the situation…Schatzi. -
Steve Lake — 5 months ago(October 17, 2025 01:07 PM)
Well, let's get something straight. For the record. If a Man tries to break my nose I would put him in the hospital.
The only poster who had his account banned 4 times without ever breaking any rules each of those times. -
TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 18, 2025 08:17 PM)
Steve Lake October 17, 2025 03:07 PM
Member since February 19, 2018
Well, let's get straight something straight. For the record.
If a Man tries to break my nose I would out him in the hospital.
If you interprete his body language right beforehand.
I often experienced that many
'foreigners'
misinterpreted a smile of a Northener. Then it was too late…except I was able to intervene.
Drinking an ugly tasting north-beer with a stupid woman can avoid much violence.
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NightmareValkyrie — 5 months ago(October 18, 2025 11:40 PM)
I remember reading about this. A lot of people thought it was silly for George R.R. Martin to have his Westeros world have years-long seasons, but perhaps he got the inspiration from this; a winter during the early Middle Ages that lasted almost 10 years!
However, unlike Westeros, you showed that this was not due to our planet's seasons being dictated by magic, but by an unusual event of a volcano going off and spewing ash into the atmosphere instead. And this isn't the only time volcanoes have done that.
When Krakatoa went off in 1883, it caused "The Year Without a Summer" event. Or we had a volcano go off in the south Pacific in 2022 that caused a very wet winter and a really hot summer the following year. Honestly, the worst polluters on planet earth are volcanoes.
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TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 18, 2025 11:59 PM)
NightmareValkyrie October 19, 2025 01:40 AM
Member since October 14, 2025
I remember reading about this. A lot of people thought it was silly for George R.R. Martin to have his Westeros world have years-long seasons, but perhaps he got the inspiration from this; a winter during the early Middle Ages that lasted almost 10 years! However, unlike Westeros, you showed that this was not due to our planet's seasons being dictated by magic, but by an unusual event of a volcano going off and spewing ash into the atmosphere instead. And this isn't the only time volcanoes have done that.
When Krakatoa went off in 1883, it caused "The Year Without a Summer" event. Or we had a volcano go off in the south Pacific in 2022 that caused a very wet winter and a really hot summer the following year. Honestly, the worst polluters on planet earth are volcanoes.
Sorry to disappoint you:- George R.R. Martin neither invented dragons nor disaster; he had many 'sources'.
- The earth bubbles just again; vulcanoes aren't
'guilty'
but symptoms.
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NightmareValkyrie — 5 months ago(October 19, 2025 12:04 AM)
I never said he invented dragons or natural disasters. Read my post again.
When I was reading his books and watching the show, I merely thought the years-long seasons were a unique idea he had to show the world of Westeros was different from our own, because it doesn't follow the laws of physics like a spherical planet orbiting a sun and rotating all at once would do.
Our earth is not alive below the crust. Magma, gases, and hot water (depending on the eruption) are usually do to the internal forces of our planet, not due to emotions or other strange things people attribute this dirt ball to. -
TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 19, 2025 12:21 AM)
NightmareValkyrie October 19, 2025 02:04 AM
Member since October 14, 2025
I never said he invented dragons or natural disasters. Read my post again.
When I was reading his books and watching the show, I merely thought the years-long seasons were a unique idea he had to show the world of Westeros was different from our own, because it doesn't follow the laws of physics like a spherical planet orbiting a sun and rotating all at once would do.
Our earth is not alive below the crust. Magma, gases, and hot water (depending on the eruption) are usually do to the internal forces of our planet, not due to emotions or other strange things people attribute this dirt ball to.
Sorry, you're a very young…err…member here.
All what's described is to find in old legends and myths.
And I agree, it's not emotions it's motion.
But I still don't watch the Earth as a
"dirt ball"
.
The main question for me (as for many others) is:
Who created God? -
NightmareValkyrie — 5 months ago(October 19, 2025 03:11 AM)
Well…technically it's a ball of rock with both liquid and solid rock inside, and a biosphere on the outer crust.
That last question has been asked by countless people for eons. Nobody's been able to answer it so far, and 42 has not proved adequate. -
TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 22, 2025 05:17 AM)
NightmareValkyrie October 19, 2025 05:11 AM
Member since October 14, 2025
Well…technically it's a ball of rock with both liquid and solid rock inside, and a biosphere on the outer crust.
That last question has been asked by countless people for eons. Nobody's been able to answer it so far, and 42 has not proved adequate.
Yah yah, that "42" sounds fishy sophisticated. -
TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 29, 2025 10:19 AM)
/. October 29, 2025 11:01 AM
= faked shared account /.
Member since May 20, 2025
"Who created God?"
some call it the monad or ein sof.
the god of Abraham isn't the same thing.
And some call him-her-it Allah..or Odin, born by Borr and Bestla.
Nephilim
️ are also amazing creatures.
And then there's the
'big nothing'
.
Oh, in this context…today in the news:
Universe will end in a Big Crunch
https://www.filmboards.com/board/p/22853516/permalink/#p22853516
Does that bring us any closer to the answer? -
TaraDeS — 5 months ago(October 29, 2025 06:48 PM)
/. October 29, 2025 04:21 PM
= faked shared account /.
Member since May 20, 2025
interpreting the monad as a material creature fundamentally misrepresents the fractal nature of existence.
Who did that?
Discuss your straw man with someone else, bunny.