James Bohlscheid
140 posts


I hate you cunts, I just paid my phone bill and I'm already getting throttled back..... I pay for unlimited 5G coverage.
WHERE THE FUCK IS IT?!!!!
@TMobile
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@RodSMayberry @GBC_Press facebook.com/share/r/19Ak65…
Perhaps you'll take the word of the
Late Lindsey Graham
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Morgan Freeman is an uneducated actor, he got his education in acting school and never studied American history or Western Civilization. He’s just as dumb as Robert DiNero and the other Trump critics spouting their stupid opinions. These popular idiots should focus their criticism of what they know, how to act.
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@jackunheard Trump is doing "the art of war" like it or not it is a very long process and not easy. First president ever to take this conundrum on ! Everyone needs to STFU and let him work!! Guarantee it will pay off !
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@BPworker1 @archeohistories Bless your heart.... But no seriously, it's right about 4 billion years old
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@archeohistories that is totally wild especially since the Earth is only 6,000 years old roughly. remember scientists have an educated guess it's called a hypothesis that doesn't mean fact or truth
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An 11-year-old boy found a 1.8 million-year-old elephant tooth during a beach walk...
In 2022, 11-year-old Ben from Suffolk, England, made an extraordinary discovery while walking along the beach with his family: a fossilized tooth from an ancient mammoth. Experts later estimated the specimen to be approximately 1.8 million years old, dating to a period when the ancestors of mammoths roamed parts of what is now Britain.
The find was made on the Suffolk coast, an area famous among paleontologists for its rich deposits of Ice Age and pre-Ice Age fossils. Coastal erosion regularly exposes ancient sediments, revealing remains of extinct animals including mammoths, mastodons, rhinoceroses, giant deer, and early horses.
Paleontologists identified the specimen as a molar, whose distinctive ridged structure was designed for grinding tough vegetation. Such teeth are among the most durable parts of a mammoth skeleton and are therefore commonly preserved in the fossil record.
During the Ice Ages, Britain was periodically connected to mainland Europe by a land bridge known as Doggerland. Humans, mammoths, woolly rhinoceroses, and other large mammals migrated freely across this landscape before rising sea levels submerged it beneath the North Sea thousands of years ago.
#archaeohistories

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@GilbertWanda @RpsAgainstTrump I'm sorry christmas, and Easter?!?!🧐🧐🧐
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@RpsAgainstTrump BUT… This TWISTED LUCIFER SHIT 💩 IS OKAY 👌 WITH THE DEMONIC DEMOCRATIC PARTY 😈😈☠️☠️👺👺🤮🤮🔥🔥


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@0nlyk1tt3n Yeah, right alongside the prophet Muhammad and the Lord Krishna
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@RobertBrandon70 @historyinmemes Yeah that was your grandfather... Not you.
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@historyinmemes My grandfather lied about his age to enlist in the Navy. Real life, not a film.
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In Apocalypse Now (1979), Laurence Fishburne was only 14 years old when filming started in 1976. To secure the role, he reportedly misrepresented his age and claimed to be older than he actually was.
To land the role of Tyrone “Mr. Clean” Miller, Laurence Fishburne reportedly claimed he was 16, even though he was younger. In a fitting twist, his character was also underage and had lied about his age to enlist in the military.
The production of Apocalypse Now became notorious for its lengthy delays, which included typhoons, equipment failures, script rewrites, cast health problems, and extensive reshoots in the Philippines. By the time the film finally premiered in 1979, Fishburne was 18 years old. Ironically, while he had originally been considered too young for the role, the prolonged production brought him much closer to his character’s age by the time audiences saw the finished film.

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@PatriotBenn @nicksortor Nothing like some AI generated slop to back up your point 🖕🏻🖕🏻🖕🏻
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🚨 BREAKING: Vice President JD Vance has made an UNPLANNED RETURN to Washington, DC, and his motorcade is racing to the White House
President Trump has summoned his whole national security team to a meeting on Iran.
POTUS is also scheduled to hold a conference call at 1pm ET with the leaders of several Arab nations.
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@x_Aurelion @histories_arch Uuuuhm... Well the fact that the entire culture was genocided off the face of the globe. That probably had something to do with it, the entire culture is gone the people that were trading in beans are now speaking Spanish and praying to the baby Jesus while they use cash money 🤷🏻
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I'd have to disagree with you on this:
"Metal has no more natural claim to monetary status than beans—both work because communities trust them."
You said the Cortes himself dismissed the whole idea, and the Spanish eventually replaced it.
The reason that metals do in fact have inherent value is because people have been using them for thousands of years as a store of wealth, and still do so today.
If beans were a competitive monetary system, then why did they go away?
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The Aztec Empire developed one of history's most unusual monetary systems between the 14th and 16th centuries. Cacao beans—the raw ingredient for chocolate—functioned as standardized currency throughout Mesoamerica. These beans possessed the essential qualities of effective money: portability, divisibility, durability, and universal recognition across the empire's vast trade networks.
Cacao's value stemmed from practical scarcity. The trees grew only in specific tropical lowland regions, making beans rare enough to resist inflation while remaining abundant enough for circulation. The Aztecs couldn't cultivate cacao in their highland capital of Tenochtitlan, forcing them to obtain beans through tribute from conquered territories or long-distance trade. A single bean could purchase a tamale; 100 beans bought a slave; 8,000 beans represented significant wealth.
The system created immediate problems with counterfeiting. Enterprising traders hollowed out beans and filled empty shells with dirt or avocado pits to increase their supply of currency. Merchants developed expertise in detecting fraudulent beans through weight, sound, and visual inspection. Unlike metal coinage, cacao eventually rotted, preventing long-term hoarding and encouraging active trade rather than wealth accumulation.
Spanish conquistadors recorded detailed accounts of the cacao economy when they encountered it in the 1520s. Hernán Cortés initially dismissed the practice as primitive, failing to recognize the sophisticated economic thinking behind it. The Spanish eventually recognized cacao's utility and temporarily integrated it into colonial currency systems before gradually replacing it with European metal coins. By the mid-16th century, cacao's role as money had largely disappeared.
The Aztec cacao system demonstrated that currency requires social agreement, not inherent value. Metal has no more natural claim to monetary status than beans—both work because communities trust them. The practice reveals economic sophistication often denied to pre-Columbian civilizations and shows how environmental constraints shape financial innovation.
The Aztec cacao currency system established precedents that influenced economic thinking far beyond its collapse. It demonstrated that commodity money could function without centralized minting or precious metals, influencing later debates about what constitutes legitimate currency. The system's vulnerability to counterfeiting and decay prefigured similar problems in paper money systems centuries later. Spanish documentation of cacao currency provided European economists with concrete examples of alternative monetary systems, broadening theoretical frameworks about money's nature. The practice preserved cacao cultivation networks that outlasted the empire itself, as demand for chocolate as a luxury good eventually created global trade routes. Most significantly, the system's disappearance illustrated how conquest disrupts not just political structures but fundamental economic relationships, forcing populations to abandon working systems for imposed foreign alternatives. The cacao economy remains a powerful counter-example to claims that only gold or silver can serve as "real" money.
#archaeohistories

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@michael_ca42136 @DonaldJTrumpJr Because we elected her 😘🖕🏻
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@DonaldJTrumpJr Then why is AOC still in our government? Bitches like her need to be deported back to their shitty countries
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@TRIGGERHAPPYV1 In Brazil, where we import most of our beef from.
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@hell_line0 @grok in your judgement, which crime should receive severe punishment? remember abortion ends an innocent baby's life while rape doesn't kill anyone
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Kimmel’s hateful and violent rhetoric is intended to divide our country. His monologue about my family isn’t comedy- his words are corrosive and deepens the political sickness within America.
People like Kimmel shouldn’t have the opportunity to enter our homes each evening to spread hate.
A coward, Kimmel hides behind ABC because he knows the network will keep running cover to protect him.
Enough is enough. It is time for ABC to take a stand. How many times will ABC’s leadership enable Kimmel’s atrocious behavior at the expense of our community.
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@WHLeavitt The unfortunate thing Karoline is that once these women are identified by this man… these women will be put to death.
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