Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 05, 2025 04:25AM
Fun fact: Teutonic (where English and a few other languages come from) had the
word 'wis-an': to be, remain, continue to be. In Gothic it was 'wes-an'. With
the arrival of catholicism and its technique of defining right from wrong to
suit those in power, so they would be dependent on the monks and priests, the
word and concept dropped out of the language.
Fun quiz: what influence has this had on the mind and governments?
Hint: ideas and concepts influence events, events affect people. Ideas and
concepts affect behaviour. It's hard to adopt an idea or be influenced by a
concept if you don't have words to express it in.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 06, 2025 12:00AM
Fun fact: the vatican launched the Albigensian Crusade, or Cathar Crusade, a
military and ideological campaign initiated by Pope Innocent III, to eradicate
Catharism in 1209. All who participated on the catholic side were promised
forgiveness by God for whatever sins they had committed. Just like that. A
very flexible depiction of God. On this crusade a noble asked the Papal Legate
how they would distinguish between Cathars and catholics. He replied:
"Kill them, for the Lord knows those that are His". This introduced
the term and concept: 'Kill them all, God will sort them out' ever since.
The Cathars were not only a rival hierarchy preaching from the bible, but...
wait for it... let women hold positions in the hierarchy! The vatican would use
a book it published:
The Witches Hammer, to teach its monks and priests
how to identify women to be killed, for speaking out of their level in society,
questioning catholic doctrine, whatever. A murder campaign that shaped Europe
for centuries.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 07, 2025 04:18AM
Fun fact: catholic monks and priests used to claim water from the ocean
travelled underground, up inside mountains and hills, then out again as brooks,
creeks and streams. If you argued you could be burned at the stake. It wasn't
until the 1640's that experiments by protestants demonstrated the amount of
water flowing down from the mountains and hills was almost the same as the rain.
It seems obvious to us now, but it was a revolution then.
This was the time of Robert Boyle, whose 'Boyle's Law' states that the pressure
of a gas will double if its volume halves. This seems obvious to us now, but it
paved the way for the steam age.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 08, 2025 08:31AM
Fun fact: in Old Teutonic (where English, German, Dutch, Icelandic and
Scandinavian languages come from) 'man' meant 'one'. In English, this has
broken down into 'an': an house, an year, an object. 'An' has further broken
down into 'a': a house, a year, but we don't say a object. Jane Austen, in the
late 1700's-early 1800's, wrote "an house". That was accepted as
correct English at the time.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 12, 2025 08:21AM
Fun fact: in Old English, the word 'a' would not be used if only one instance
of the subject was then mentioned. It acted as a double negative. For example:
"He waes God man" (He was a good man) - around 1100AD. 'God' was the
same spelling as an attribute of God, 'good' and you read it in context. 'Waes'
reflects that written English followed the local dialect at the time.
Strangely, royal documents and laws written in London used 'a' as we do, and of
course, royal and government use affected the language.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 13, 2025 08:29AM
Fun fact: the first attempt at a standard English dictionary was in the
1700's. This led the catholic monks and priests in France to counsel the French
king to plan a war against England, for this dictionary was organised in the
protestant manner (called 'English manner' in academia): alphabetically.
In France under the Bourbon Kings the monks and priests controlled the French
dictionary, and organised it by subject. That meant a word had very different
meanings, not only regards different subjects, keeping the general population
confused with a word trick, but regards subjects only taught to select groups -
so in theory different groups could not work together against those in power, as
they couldn't properly understand each other. It's a trick described by
Machiavelli, and allegedly still used in rural Italy.
So the dictionary was a tool of mind control - a power taken from them by a much
needed revolution.
[
archive.org]
To be frank:
- dictionaries must
always be organised alphabetically;
- words must
always mean what the dictionary says they do, and;
- it must
always be the same dictionary for everyone.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 15, 2025 08:56PM
Fun fact: by telling those who trust them they're Christians, yet teaching
them to pray to someone else, Mary, catholic monks, priests and nuns condition
them to be gullible. Mary is dead. She died two thousand years ago. She can't
hear you.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 16, 2025 10:00PM
Fun fact: cognitive dissonance is where the mind believes conflicting things.
This creates a mental stress. This in turn can be exploited by one offering a
solution. Viewing the fact above, think of the mind of their follower as like
the ball in a pin ball machine, they are able to bounce it around as they wish.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 19, 2025 04:17AM
Fun fact: statements where words have second meanings are called
concatenations. By talking to those who trust them, whilst deliberately using
concatenations, and constantly correcting them, catholic monks, priests and nuns
condition them to think they're not as intelligent as the monks, priests or
nuns. It's word tricks. Subjugating your mind.
If you're often confused in talking with a catholic monk, priest or nun, you're
as yet still too intelligent for them.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 19, 2025 09:54AM
Correction: "concatenation" should read "double entente".
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 21, 2025 07:58AM
Fun fact: at an upper level, amongst the sects, members of the vatican
hierarchy are taught to do algebra, at the same level as primary school. Each
equation is given a special meaning. They are just made up, yet presented as
knowledge. Studying maths teaches you to analyse. Yet it's a doctrine of the
Vatican that their priests are instruments of the faith, not its analysts. This
conflict in reasoning acts as a filter, ensuring only the stupid pass. The last
equations are: three times three is nine. One times nine.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: May 27, 2025 07:53AM
Fun fact: in 1129AD King Henry I overruled the papal order that archdeacons
and priests could not have wives, and they kept their wives. It was one of the
precedents and things used by Henry VIII four hundred years later. There's a
list of those.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: June 01, 2025 07:15AM
Fun fact: soon after King John was forced to sign the Magna Carta in 1215, the
pope 'annulled' it. Catholics use this to morally claim there is therefore no
Magna Carta. But King John promised the pope money to 'annul' it and
excommunicate the barons.
He also promised "Lands, and large possessions" to any foreign
soldiers came to England to help him in his planned war against the barons.
Fourteen thousand people answering this call, told to them encouragingly by
catholic bishops and priests, were at sea when they were hit by a "sudden
tempest" and all were drowned, the shore was "infected with their
putrid bodies". Echoed by the Spanish Armada 370 years later.
1218AD: "Waldo the legate being sent for by the pope to return, departed
toward Rome with an infinite quantity of money gotten by one means or
other."
Having no support from the barons or the townspeople and lost the foreign
soldiers, the only way he could keep the support of the catholic bishops was to
pay up.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: June 02, 2025 08:38AM
Fun fact: above we can see a pope's decision was bought and paid for.
Centuries later catholics claim the decision is moral.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: June 05, 2025 09:23AM
1241AD: "The fourth day after Christmas the legate was by the pope to the
court of Rome: whereupon taking his leave of all the prelates, he took his
journey towards the sea, whom the king with great pomp and an innumerable
company of the nobles, with trumpets sounding before them brought to the seas,
so that on the morrow after the twelfth day, the legate (after the king with
great sorrow for his departure, had embraced him) took shipping at Dover, at
whose departure no man was sorry but the king, and such as the legate had
enriched."
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: June 08, 2025 09:06AM
Fun fact: in 1326 King Edward II set up the militia in England. All church
steeples and other high buildings had iron brackets placed on them, to hold
torches to warn all surrounding able bodied men between 16 and 40 to arm
themselves and assemble at their assigned places. The arms and equipment were
regulated by the value of their (land based) estates. They had to present the
arms and equipment in good condition twice a year. They were organised by
shires and hundreds.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: June 11, 2025 07:59AM
Fun fact: in 1522 there was a tripartite alliance between France, the German
Emperor and England. Disputes between Germany and France led to war. The
French attacked the English, who were not involved in the disputes.
So King Henry VIII enrolled the whole militia and its office bearers, and for
every organised 100s of militia, what local industries could be used to maintain
the war against France, who were their owners, and the names and places of all
foreigners and of what birth and current nationality, and what their occupations
were. This was the planning and mobilising of what we would call total war, and
completely bypassed the old systems of the king simply employing soldiers, or
relying on nobility and bishops to supply money and/or armed men. Henry VIII
also maintained a large navy, one more than able to control the "Narrow
seas".
- 26 May: the German Emperor, with 8 bishops, 10 abbots, 30 chaplains and
others, arrived in
England before travelling to Spain, to form alliances against France.
- June: the alliance with Germany was concluded.
- 1 July: the Emperor's navy with 180 ships arrived to transport him to Spain,
arriving there 10
days later.
- During this time the Earl of Surrey, Lord Admiral, attacked and burned towns,
castles and
anything else along the French coast.
- Ever since Edward Long shanks (1239 – 1307), wars between England and
Scotland were proxy
conflicts for French interests. Knowing this, Henry VIII's navy burned all
ships in Scotland's
ports. England then assembled a sufficient Northern army that the Scots
signed a truce for six
months.
- 1523: after the truce, the Northern army burned 37 villages, and
"dispoiled" the south of the
country from East to West, destroying their strongholds.
- England's parliament, including the catholic bishops, raised a great sum of
money for the
coming war, agreeing to do so for five years. "Such war in France as
had not been seen."
- For the second time, the catholic bishops in England overstated how many
parishes they had
and how wealthy they were, promising they could fund the needs of government,
so making it
dependent on them.
- September: the first English army of 10500 men seized and demolished a
French castle.
- The Duke of Burgundy rebelled against France and joined Germany and
England.
- Spain entered the war.
- 1524: the Northern English army invaded Scotland, the Scots army ran
away.
The French army at that time relied on nobility, who saw nothing wrong in riding
over their own vanguard to attack the English, as was their right to do, and
catholic bishops, in armour and carrying weapons, who brought their own armed
men to battle and fought in the battle themselves. Some of these bishops died
fighting the English. In times past catholic bishops in England did exactly the
same thing. At least one died in battle in one of England's internal wars.
Therefore it isn't odd that Cardinal Richelieu wore a sword whilst besieging
Protestants at La Rochelle in the 1620's.
Thus the mass mobilisation under a civil administration was not only a threat to
France, but to the catholic bishops' status and power.
Note that the Act of Supremacy, where Henry VIII broke from Rome and became head
of the Church of England, was not until 1534.
- 1526: The French king being taken prisoner, peace was agreed between England
and France.
pro_junior Report This Comment Date: June 11, 2025 10:08PM
fun fact: no one has read any of that ^^^^^
quasi Report This Comment Date: June 12, 2025 10:27AM
Actually, I read it, but it wasn't fun at all. Fun facts are generally along
the lines of, "The opossum is the only North American marsupial."
pulse Report This Comment Date: June 12, 2025 10:39AM
Fun fact: Wombat poo is square.
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: June 14, 2025 03:58AM
Fun fact: 1326-1328: Whilst the former Edward II was imprisoned at Barkley,
"For as touching poisons, which they gave him often to drink, by the
benefit of nature he dispatched away."
woberto Report This Comment Date: June 15, 2025 07:37AM
Fun Fact:
As of 2025 California has been owned by;
Spain 52 Years
Mexico 27 Years
USA for 177 years
Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: June 17, 2025 01:07AM
Fun fact: 1326-1328: whilst some catholic bishops supported the imprisonment
and 'abdication' of the former king Edward II, those catholic bishops opposed to
it were beheaded. The parliament then voted the Queen what amounts to a
pension, equalling 2/3rds of government revenue. The chronicles don't record
where the money went.