Armitas

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Armitas

Armitas

@accabbat

Christ is King! The truth will set you free. Christian, Conservative. Discussions on Religion, Politics, Philosophy, and J6 Pipe Bomber investigations.

United States 가입일 Şubat 2022
178 팔로잉4.1K 팔로워
고정된 트윗
Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
Brian Cole Jr: Part 3 coming soon from @theblaze . Tease: "In a sane world, with the release of this story, the judge should throw the whole case out. Look at the DoJ and FBI, chastise them, and remand them back to the drawing board" After this article comes out, I don't know how there could remain anyone left on the fence regarding Cole's innocence. There are certain kinds of primary evidence that, on their own, have the ability to eliminate all forms and amounts of circumstantial evidence. I think come next week, it's going to be the DoJ who is on "trial" for perpetuating what will soon be, quite plainly, a sham.
Keith Malinak ATMshow.com@KeithMalinak

THURSDAY DEEP DIVE: Seeking Answers on the J6 Pipe Bomber with Steve Baker (3/12/2026) x.com/i/broadcasts/1…

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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@amuse Those who might come to the victim's aid will be prosecuted and defamed, in large part, by the very same establishment the victim voted for.
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@amuse
@amuse@amuse·
CRIME: Chicago prosecutors and judges collude to release violent criminals who are clearly insane and represent a clear and present danger to the community. They are never held accountable when their actions result in the deaths of the innocent.
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
It sounds like the Templars got their hands on some gnostic texts, and not being historians or scholars, ate it up as the truth. We have gnostic texts that you can read freely, their mere existence is not a form of credibility. Those scrolls are very very late, and not authentic. What forms of authenticity have the modern Templars conducted? Do they even have the original documents? Have you even seen any of them?
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Scott Wolter
Scott Wolter@swolterhookedx·
Tomorrow morning we open the Green Jar with both Brother Randall Carlson on his YouTube channel and the amazing AJ Gentile in his Basement podcast. We’ve waited a long time, but here it is. Please take our discovery in the spirit it is intended; in search of the truth…
Scott Wolter tweet media
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@lecternleader Just happened to stumble upon this in some body cam footage.
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@darwintojesus I always check the comments, and every time, there is no answer.
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@Aiism_Priest @darwintojesus One does not actually convert an extraordinary event into a prosaic one by dividing it into smaller steps. In fact, in doing so, the resulting product is often something far more extraordinary than what was originally perceived.
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Aidealist 🧙‍♂️
Aidealist 🧙‍♂️@Aiism_Priest·
You can create quick theory on the spot. First there were organisms which reproduced asexually. Secondly single sex organisms which reproduced sexually. Thirdly double sex organisms that specialized both male and female organs. Fourthly one of the organs atrophied with 50% chance to evolve binary male or female sex.
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Unearthed 🏺
Unearthed 🏺@UnearthedHQ·
The Giant “Door” Hidden in a 200-Million-Year-Old Cliff High above the ground, carved into the towering cliffs of Zion National Park, there is something that makes many hikers stop in their tracks. At first glance, it looks almost impossible — a perfectly shaped opening sitting quietly inside a massive vertical rock wall. From a distance, it resembles a giant doorway built by someone… or something. But the truth behind it is even more fascinating. The cliffs of this region were formed around 150 to 200 million years ago, during the age of dinosaurs. Back then, this land was not filled with mountains and canyons. It was an enormous desert covered with endless sand dunes. Over time, those dunes were buried, compressed, and slowly turned into the hard sandstone cliffs that dominate the landscape today. Then nature began its slow work. For millions of years, wind blasted against the rock, rainwater flowed through tiny cracks, and winter ice expanded and fractured the stone. Little by little, softer layers of sandstone wore away faster than the surrounding rock. Eventually, this process carved out a smooth, arch-shaped hollow — creating the mysterious cave-like opening seen today. Yet when you stand below it, staring up at the cliff, it’s hard not to feel a strange sense of wonder. The opening looks almost too perfect, like an entrance hidden in the rock by some ancient civilization long forgotten. Many visitors say it feels as if the mountain itself is guarding a secret inside. In reality, it is not the work of humans at all — but the result of millions of years of patient geological forces shaping the landscape of the American Southwest. And perhaps that’s what makes it even more mysterious. Because when nature takes millions of years to carve something, the final result can look so incredible… it almost feels designed.
Unearthed 🏺 tweet media
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
Brian Cole Jr: Part 3 coming soon from @theblaze . Tease: "In a sane world, with the release of this story, the judge should throw the whole case out. Look at the DoJ and FBI, chastise them, and remand them back to the drawing board" After this article comes out, I don't know how there could remain anyone left on the fence regarding Cole's innocence. There are certain kinds of primary evidence that, on their own, have the ability to eliminate all forms and amounts of circumstantial evidence. I think come next week, it's going to be the DoJ who is on "trial" for perpetuating what will soon be, quite plainly, a sham.
Keith Malinak ATMshow.com@KeithMalinak

THURSDAY DEEP DIVE: Seeking Answers on the J6 Pipe Bomber with Steve Baker (3/12/2026) x.com/i/broadcasts/1…

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Philip Carl
Philip Carl@redbird_pwc·
@accabbat @theblaze Looking forward to this. Thank you for your continued work in exposing what so many are trying so hard to ignore.
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
The whole site was sandblasted by water and sand erosion and then land-locked. Can we even predict the original surface out of the eroded landscape that remains? This location gets contested by examining the radius of the outer rings, but there is no necessity to count the outer rings as part of the city proper. It's quite possible that many of the city proper rings were eroded. If we look back over the story, each brother ruled a section of the city proper territory. Distant rings would be outer districts, not the city proper.
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William Smith
William Smith@4gottn_History·
The Richat Structure fits Plato’s description of Atlantis. End of story.
William Smith tweet media
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
The whole site was sandblasted by water and sand erosion and then land-locked. Can we even predict the original surface out of the eroded landscape that remains? People contest it by examining the radius of the outer rings, but there is no necessity to count the outer rings as part of the city proper. It's quite possible that many of the city proper rings were eroded. If we look back over the story, each brother ruled a section of the city proper territory. Distant rings would be outer districts, not the city proper.
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Jimmy Corsetti
Jimmy Corsetti@BrightInsight6·
This has been addressed many times before, here me out: The true size was certainly lost in translation, and moreover, the ‘described size’ is arguably far too small. 1) Atlantis is a ~12,000yr old story, passed down by probably at least a dozen languages before it even got to Plato. Measurements would easily be lost over a 11 millennia, and likely long before it ever got to Sonchis of Sais in Egypt. 2) The ‘described size’ given by Plato would consist largely of water (not inhabitable for homes/buildings) - Yet, Atlantis was described as being “busy all day and all night, with languages spoken from all over” - that’s a city consisting of millions of people. Ain’t no way the significantly smaller described size would fit that many people, not even close. 3) The Richat Structure is virtually the same exact size of modern day Paris and Cairo’s metropolitan areas. 4) Plato stated he would have to “endeavor to describe the nature and arrangement of the rest of the land” - essentially acknowledging that he did not have all the correct details, or failed to successfully decipher Solon’s passed down words. 5) The Richat Structure matches a dozen and a half of the most striking and consequential similarities to what Plato described, and this far outweighs the arguments against it. The Eye of the Sahara is by far the most likely location for the lost capital city of Atlantis 🌀🌍🔱
Jay Anderson@TheProjectUnity

@4gottn_History Not it doesn't lol. The size difference is insane.

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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@thevivafrei @retrogamei He was lying there unconscious this whole time, waiting for someone to help him, but they just passed him by. He tried to get help, over and over, but they just fled from his disfiguring injuries. He's still there, waiting for help that never came. 😭
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Viva Frei
Viva Frei@thevivafrei·
This was the greatest game ever. I still remember the “splat” noise, followed the suspenseful “game over” music. Funny anecdote: there was a level - I forget, which one - where you would always pass by corpses on the ground. And then when you got to a certain level, the corpse for the first time in the entire game sprung to life. I nearly fainted the first time that happened. Of course I was 10 years old all the time.
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Retro Games
Retro Games@retrogamei·
Prince of Persia (1989)
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@DrDavidMiano I'm not agnostic out of indifference. I actually find it very important to know about this era of construction. Out of that importance, I place, generally, a standard that some methodologies may not reach.
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David Miano
David Miano@DrDavidMiano·
@accabbat Age would determine if it was from the time of the supposed lost civilization.
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David Miano
David Miano@DrDavidMiano·
[NEW VIDEO] Why has “alternative archaeology” become a dead end instead of a path to discovery? And why do these beliefs so often become part of a person’s identity? I offer my thoughts here => youtu.be/4uvD30xw_ZY
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YouTube
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Hopeful Idiot
Hopeful Idiot@HopefulIdiot·
@accabbat @DrDavidMiano These are two separate questions. We can know the date of the construction of the pyramids without any knowledge the methods of construction.
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Jatmallet
Jatmallet@JATmallet·
@FreeStateWill yeah yeah, spin it however you want. The lot of you entered the Capitol with the intent to prevent the Congress from certifying the election- it's treason. You don't like that, which I understand. But that's what happened. Anyhoo I shouldn't have said anything bc y'all are nuts
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@DrDavidMiano I'm generally agnostic to age, but as I said the logic is sound, so if you can acquire pristine laboratory conditions then the conclusions should be sound. However, generally speaking, that will be unlikely, and citing rare circumstances won't change the overall condition.
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David Miano
David Miano@DrDavidMiano·
If there is a stone building (Puma Punku is a good example), in which organic material can be found inside the walls (undisturbed), this can make a date for construction far more reliable. It's amazing how much context can assist in these matters. Also with stone we have luminescence dating, which is very helpful.
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Armitas
Armitas@accabbat·
@DrDavidMiano The logic is sound, but it's still assumptive. I'll assume that's a typo there, but Dendrochronology would be heavily assumptive for relative dating when a stone was placed. I'm not sure how you could even dispute that it is heavily assumptive.
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David Miano
David Miano@DrDavidMiano·
@accabbat I disagree on it being heavily assumptive (your words). Are you saying you don't believe in carbon dating? Dendochronology?
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David Miano
David Miano@DrDavidMiano·
@accabbat "Dating isn't a litmus test, it is heavily assumptive" - translation: "I believe only what I want to believe."
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Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
Remove one thing to make the world more peaceful
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