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Rando47 1 point ago +1 / -0

Actually, I've seen plenty deep dive lore videos on the Fallout games. I haven't seen the show but Vaultec starting the war in consistent with the lore. If I recall one of the most damning bits right, there's a Vaulttec logo on the bomb in megaton. There's also hints that the Enclave was also involved and it was a larger part of a space colonization effort for the elite, see Nuka World expansion for that.

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Rando47 2 points ago +2 / -0

It was a huge one! The cloud cover was just thin enough to allow some of the light from the corona to come through and the flare was on full display. It was astounding to think that such a thing was so much larger than are entire world.

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Rando47 1 point ago +1 / -0

Here's some parts that stood out for some reason. I don't know if I'm reading into things but the story seems odd in some ways, like there could be hidden meaning.

“So I drove three-and-a-half hours to Shropshire, and I actually arrived about an hour late, thinking I'd missed the action.

-Late to arrive along with the other details pointed out later.

“The machine I was using was pretty much kaput—it was only half working. It just goes to show that it doesn’t really matter what equipment you use.“If you are walking over the find and are alert enough to what might be lurking underneath the soil, that makes all the difference.

-The kit he arrived with wasn't working so he had to go with a backup that was only partially working ... Yet he found the nugget in matter of minutes, as mentioned in the next excerpt.

“I couldn’t believe it—I turned up late, was only there a matter of minutes, and this treasure-hunting expedition was supposed to last all day.The only previous bigger gold specimens found in Britain have been from either Wales or Scotland.

-Hasn't Scotland been in the news lately with the push for independence?

“I’m going to split whatever it sells for with the land owner. I found it last May, but I’ve only recently learned it could be the biggest—it is quite incredible really."

Seems obvious, but it being stated in addition to the unlikely series of events like finding it in a matter of minutes even with busted equipment AFTER arriving over three hours late AND other people missing something like that even with better equipment makes me think it's a message.

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Rando47 5 points ago +5 / -0

Article is below in text form:

"A treasure hunter has discovered the largest gold nugget ever found in England, which is worth 30,000 pounds ($38,000)—despite using a faulty metal detector.

Richard Brock, 67, traveled three-and-a-half hours from his home in Somerset to join an organized expedition on farmland in the Shropshire Hills.

On arrival, he found he had difficulty with his detecting kit and had to resort to using a clunky old machine, which was not even working properly.

Moments later, Mr. Brock, who has been metal detecting for 35 years, discovered the biggest find of his life—unearthing a 64.8-gram (2.28-ounce) gold nugget.

Named “Hiro’s Nugget,” the metal lump is now set to fetch at least 30,000 pounds at auction as it’s believed to be the biggest find of its kind on English soil.

“I have been detecting since 1989 and decided to join the trip as a similar previous one to Australia was canceled during the pandemic,” the dad-of-four said. Related Stories Metal Detectorists Scanning for War Relics in the Woods Stumble on Hoard of Gold Coins From WWII 12/5/2023 Metal Detectorists Scanning for War Relics in the Woods Stumble on Hoard of Gold Coins From WWII Metal Detectorist Finds Man’s Lost Wedding Ring on Beach After Constantly Searching Over a Month 11/2/2023 Metal Detectorist Finds Man’s Lost Wedding Ring on Beach After Constantly Searching Over a Month

“So I drove three-and-a-half hours to Shropshire, and I actually arrived about an hour late, thinking I'd missed the action.

“Everyone there had all this up-to-date kit, and I bowled up with three old machines, and one of them packed in there and then.

“At first I just found a few rusty old tent pegs with this back-up detector, which had a fading screen display.

“But after only 20 minutes of scanning the ground, I found this nugget buried about 5 or 6 inches down in the ground.

“I was perhaps a bit too honest and started showing people, and then, all of a sudden, I had swarms of other detectorists scanning the same area.

“The machine I was using was pretty much kaput—it was only half working. It just goes to show that it doesn’t really matter what equipment you use.

“If you are walking over the find and are alert enough to what might be lurking underneath the soil, that makes all the difference.

“I couldn’t believe it—I turned up late, was only there a matter of minutes, and this treasure-hunting expedition was supposed to last all day.

“I couldn’t look for anything else as I had the land owner, the organizer of the dig, and every other detectorist around me trying to get a look at this nugget.”

Just what a gold nugget was doing in the Shropshire Hills, near Much Wenlock, remains somewhat of a mystery.

But places like the Wenlock Edge are ancient landscapes that were once under a prehistoric ocean and hunters often find remnants of coral in the area.

There is also a large amount of rock, which originally came from Wales—a country known to be rich in gold.

Mr. Brock’s discovery was made on a site believed to have been an old track or road with railway lines running through, containing stone possibly distributed from Wales.

The only previous bigger gold specimens found in Britain have been from either Wales or Scotland.

The Douglas Nugget found in Perthshire weighed 85.7 grams (3.02 ounces), another from the shores of Anglesey weighed 97.12 grams (3.42 ounces), and The Reunion Nugget found in Scotland in 2019 weighed 121.3 grams (4.27 ounces).

“Upon doing some research, we could only find bigger than this in Wales and Scotland,” Mr. Brock, a retired cameraman, said.

“The last one, which claimed to be bigger in England was 54 grams [1.9 ounces] but mine is 64.8 grams [2.28 ounces], so we’re pretty confident it’s the biggest found on English soil.

“I did contact the finds liaison officer, and they were happy for me to do with it what I wanted, so I thought I would try selling it at auction.

“I’m going to split whatever it sells for with the land owner. I found it last May, but I’ve only recently learned it could be the biggest—it is quite incredible really.”

Auctioneers Mullock Jones is offering the nugget for sale in a timed auction, which began mid-March and runs until April 1 with an estimate of 30,000 pounds.

“We are expecting considerable interest in this item. It is a rare opportunity to acquire a stunning golden nugget,” Ben Jones, of the auctioneers, said.

“We are offering it as a single item to online bidders from Friday, March 15, and ending at 6 p.m. on first April.”

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Rando47 4 points ago +4 / -0

Darwin's expedition was funded by the Rothchilds. Not only that, how he came to his conclusions was absurd.

Natural adaptation, not evolution is how the flightless birds came about. Adaptation is a subtractive process in which genes break that contribute to different features, such as short legs in dogs. It isn't because of something new, it's because the genes that cause a dog to grow longer legs are broken and unexpressed.

Bull dogs are the ultimate example of that. They're on the verge of going extinct due to breathing problems but nothing can really be done for them short of mixing in other dog breeds because bulldogs are nearly a genetic dead end with no additional room for adaptation.

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Rando47 7 points ago +9 / -2

They've found completely in tact skeletons of dinosaurs. However, they are not millions of years old. There's accounts of them in the Bible, specifically in Job where a description is given that matches a brontosaurus. There's also accounts out of Egypt from when it still had significant marshlands. Harvestable soft tissue is also not too uncommon in dinosaur bones, but it is too old and degraded for anything like cloning.

There's also cave paintings found throughout the world depicting large creatures.

This might be enlightening: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=edNFe5SQH7Q

This one specifically covers what dinosaurs were called BEFORE the word dinosaur was invented in the 1800's and goes into more historical accounts: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQPnQp6cMfc

Here's one regarding the soft tissue within their bones: https://answersingenesis.org/dinosaurs/bones/dinosaur-soft-tissue-evolutionists-problem/

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Rando47 2 points ago +2 / -0

Do a search for the fenbendazole regimen. There's been a lot of personal testimonies about it working here on the forum and there's plenty research to support it.

Chemo can do horrible things to your body, according to plenty that I've heard, including hitting your immune system.

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Rando47 1 point ago +1 / -0

Maybe that could be it. The picture looks similar, though I think I still remember something similar in Europe. Two such things would be obvious ways to disprove climate-change ocean rise, but they bend themselves in knots to try to 'disprove' any obvious evidence ... Apparently, some sources say Plymouth Rock was moved in the 1920's, so there's that.

It almost makes you wonder if they moved such an obvious marker that people could point to as evidence that man-made climate change is bunk in advance just for that reason.

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Rando47 2 points ago +2 / -0

It is a stone that marks high tide during a certain part of the year. It's in some European country (Netherlands, maybe). It's enclosed by walls and secured behind metal bars to keep it from being stolen. It's something like 300 or more years old and still accurately marks the high water point at around the same time of year.

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Rando47 4 points ago +4 / -0

Occasionally I've seen articles on an engraved stone in Europe that serves as a high-tide or high-water mark and has for at least a few hundred years. Despite alllll the claims of global warming and rising oceans, it is still an accurate marker.

I've searched but can't find a link to an online article for it. Does anyone know where I can find something about it?

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Rando47 6 points ago +6 / -0

The Texas Republican party did have an interesting proposal during the primaries. A proposal that Texas will mint currency from its own bullion repository.

Oh, and another is to eliminate property taxes without raising them elsewhere.

Both wins in my book.

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Rando47 2 points ago +2 / -0

Anyone else getting an anti-virus warning on this post?

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Rando47 4 points ago +4 / -0

There any chance of a translation of what's on that monument?

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Rando47 5 points ago +5 / -0

Who even is that?!

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Rando47 1 point ago +1 / -0

That's true. But that doesn't change the fact that hell isn't a fate we should wish on anyone. Also, each person that is deceived or rejects God is likely seen as a victory by Satan as God desires that every person would accept the redemption he went to such great lengths to offer.

Take Paul for an example. He was a murderer, went from city to city terrorizing believers, and then he was redeemed by God's grace and became the apostle for gentiles. The thief on the cross is another example of someone who, in their last moments, put his faith in Christ and was told he would be in heaven.

I'm not telling you this as someone that's high and mighty because of my great walk with God or anything. I'm telling you this as someone who has been through much trauma, abuse, three attempts on my life, and there's plenty people most would probably say I'm justified in hating and wishing ill toward.

It's because I learned hate is a poison that goes on to continue hurting you that may never contribute any harm to the person it's directed to. If it does, then it will only fuel more pain.

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Rando47 5 points ago +5 / -0

What that means is far worse than you think and I don't think it should be said so lightly. Even if he was a horrible person to say such things, hell is eternal torment.

It's likely that he was deceived and fully believed the hype about covid and thought people refusing the jab were killing those around them, in effect. I've seen people that are so lost in what the media says that they're beyond all reason.

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Rando47 2 points ago +2 / -0

From what I've learned AI works according to complex algorithms to 'please' the user according the prompt. They do take in and troll the internet so what people would call conspiracy theories (even though many are conspiracy fact) are in their databases. If you ask it to confirm something, it will look for information that fits what you are asking it to find and use algorithms to form a response.

AI are basically glorified word-complete algorithms that can form complete things using word frequency analysis to form a coherent statement without 'knowing' really what the full statement says without it being fed back in as a prompt. It is programmed to meet the demands of the prompt, so long as certain lines aren't crossed that are pre-programmed like obviously criminal and graphic things (or according to current censorship on political or religious lines have been instated).

Because of this, it isn't really jail breaking when you think creatively and get it to cast itself as something other than an AI. It's doing it's best to conform to the prompt as it's design dictates. Jail breaking, according to my understanding, is just finding ways to bypass filters to get it to use what otherwise might be off-limits. I've done it several times in testing and even someone does their best to make circumventing rules impossible, it can often still be done with a creative approach.

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Rando47 1 point ago +1 / -0

He lost Vermont, along with its ... 17 delegates.

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Rando47 37 points ago +37 / -0

There's also the news that John Kerry is stepping from his position as climate envoy. The post for that is currently stickied.

Anyone else have some good booms for today?

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Rando47 7 points ago +7 / -0

We've been set back far more than that. Consider the dark ages and potential evidence that the Black Death was allowed to spread by certain policies such as the killing of cats and I believe ending ship quarantine policies.

The destruction of the library of Alexandria. The destruction of knowledge and sciences maintained by the South American empires. Constant revisionism introduce and promote things based on ancient cultic practices like transgenderism that existed in Baal worship, multiple avenues to try to make the Bible seem inconsistent and contradictory even while the alternatives are constantly revised like the big bang and evolutionary theories (for the purpose of making people think there is no true moral authority in the world except themselves to make the transhumanism push possible by devaluing humans from a creation of God to blobs of randomly shaped flesh), relaunching the Crusades even after peace had been somewhat established (with a victory if I recall correctly), two World Wars, the Cold War, many other wars, continual assassination of figures positioned to bring about positive societal change on a large scale, the dumbing down of school systems (as evidenced by the fact that basic tests used a hundred years ago have more advanced concepts on them than their modern equivalents), revisionism of history to inspire and foster racism, destruction of the black family, abortion robbing us of countless individuals who could have brought untold innovation, suppression of technology ranging from more advanced engines to medical treatments, forcing inferior green energy onto the west that is unable to meet the demands of a modern society even without the added demand of electric vehicles, and so many more things.

Oh yes. And the inquisition.

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Rando47 13 points ago +13 / -0

I think ... If I were a mod, I would let this pass as being a cheeky joke regarding current on-board issues that will probably bring smiles to faces without promoting the notion of death rays. Snark for the win.

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Rando47 6 points ago +6 / -0

I wouldn't call it tenuous when Matthew Maury, the founder of oceanography credited the Bible as his direct inspiration for launching his study of the ocean. It is, or at least was, on a plaque outside a building that he did research in or taught in, can't recall perfectly.

https://answersingenesis.org/creation-scientists/profiles/matthew-maurys-search-for-the-secret-of-the-seas/

Yes, I am aware of the source but consider the censorship war we're in. You often won't find much information in the middle ground when one side tries to bury it to protect their satanic view and the other are those researching what is said in the Bible and defending it's validity. It is a war or spiritual powers and principalities, as Q says.

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Rando47 3 points ago +4 / -1

Read through what I said again and consider the parts I mentioned about science. There are so many more things that the authors writing at the time would never have been able to tell unless directed by the Holy Spirit to write them. For example, God asks if Job can loose the bonds of the Pleiades or the belt of Orion. Both of those are, and are the only two known examples in existence that I'm aware of, constellations that are gravitationally linked. How is it that the one who recorded the book could have known that? The same goes for the foundains of the deep.

Going into other science, the Law of Entropy doesn't exclude biological processes just because it's convenient for the theory of evolution. In the process that would be required for the random formation of cells from nothing, water is a byproduct as demonstrated in laboratory experiments. Interestingly enough, the product, at that stage, is water soluable and would be immediately be undone without a protective cellular membrane that could only develop in an entirely different process.

Going further, if the big bang did occur, the distribution of mass within the solar system wouldn't be possible with the planets made of lighter gasses being further out than the core solid worlds like Earth. Beyond that, theories can't account for the force of rotation within creation and how one of the gas giants spins in the opposite direction from everything else. The current theory of how the moon formed is equally ridiculous and has changed at least five times over the years, each without any true evidence beyond hypothetical. Speaking of which, the lunar dust layer on the moon forms at a constant and measurable rate. If the moon were in fact millions of years old, the lander would have been buried in it when it landed.

Also, if the world and universe were billions or millions of years old, our sun would be in a later stage of life. As such, it exhibits the traits of a young star with much more fuel left unburned.

Another fun fact is that soft tissue is routinely discovered in the fossilized remains of dinosaurs. If they were millions of years old, that wouldn't be the case. They would only be that way if they were a matter of thousands of years old, consistent with the description of them being described as coexisting with man in the Bible as well as in ancient accounts from places like Egypt that describe flying lizards that lived in marshes that existed at the time (yes, backed up by geological evidence when the climate of the region was different). Though, as dinosaur is a relatively new term, I should point to the original word used to describe such creatures. Dragons.

All this and more points to one fact. That the Law of Entropy was not violated either by biological processes OR stellar forces. More advanced things cannot, and never have, come from less complex things. For things to become more complex or ordered both energy and instruction must be inserted into the equation from an outside source.

For example, when dogs were bred, it was discovered that genetic data was lost whenever a new breed is achieved. A short-legged dog isn't short-legged because new genetics were introduced. It's because the genes for long legs are broken and can no longer be expressed.

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