Danny R Hill

58 posts

Danny R Hill

Danny R Hill

@DannyRHill1

Katılım Kasım 2020
21 Takip Edilen1 Takipçiler
Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@RosemaryOConne6 @archeohistories You may not like what I have to say, but, you ma'am sound like the people you incorrectly described in history. Dumb? No. Uneducated fits much better. This applies to you also,for making uneducated comments.
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Rosemary O'Connell
Rosemary O'Connell@RosemaryOConne6·
@archeohistories People were stupid then. If they looked at animals, animals menstruate. The people didn’t even look at the animals. They were dumb. Society didn’t have the knowledge we have today. What knowledge there is, some wicked people still want u to be dumb **today**.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
For centuries, when harvests failed and hunger set in, societies looked for someone to blame—and too often, they chose women. Not in metaphor, but in flesh. In a world without climate science, where droughts or crop disease couldn’t be explained, fear demanded a scapegoat. And women—especially those who bled, aged, gave birth, or simply lived outside the bounds of obedience—were cast as the cause. In early modern Europe, during times of environmental collapse like the Little Ice Age, this fear sharpened. Crops withered, winters dragged on, and instead of facing nature’s chaos, communities turned inward. Widows, midwives, healers, or women who simply spoke too much were accused of tampering with the natural world. A failed harvest wasn’t random—it was a sign of moral failure. And hunger demanded someone to punish. Witch trials didn’t erupt in times of abundance—they followed famine, plague, and crisis. Women were blamed for ruining crops, killing livestock, even causing bad weather. Their “crimes” were often just being too visible, too sexual, too old, too independent. In some courts, a dream about a woman’s spirit damaging crops was enough to convict her. Her actual presence wasn’t even required. Menstruation became a powerful symbol of this fear. Across cultures, menstrual blood was seen as poison—thought to ruin seeds, spoil wine, blight gardens. Farming manuals warned women not to touch plants during their cycle. Religious texts framed them as impure. Over time, this wasn’t just superstition—it became a system of control. The cruelest irony? Women were blamed for what they couldn’t control, then pushed out of the very work that sustained their communities. If they helped in the fields, they were punished. If they didn’t, they were called lazy. The logic trapped them either way. At its core, this wasn’t about crops—it was about power. Regulating women’s bodies became a way to manage fear. And even though the witch trials ended, the logic behind them didn’t vanish. We still see it today, when women are blamed for decline, disorder, or change. #archaeohistories
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@cosmic_marvel What's the safe word if Doomsday sucks? You, know , so we can leave the theater with Flair.
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@archeohistories This is a silly perspective. Can't time travel, past stays the same. We can only change the now, what's going on at the moment.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
On the day of Albert Einstein’s death, instead of going to Princeton hospital like other reporters, a photographer named Ralph Morse went to Einstein’s office and bribed the superintendent with a fifth of scotch to let him in. He then took these photos of Einstein’s desk mere hours after he died. Albert Einstein died on April 18, 1955, at the age of 76. As news spread, journalists and photographers hurried to the Princeton Hospital where he had spent his final hours. But Life magazine photographer Ralph Morse thought differently. Rather than joining the crowd, he realized that Einstein’s office at Princeton University might hold a more meaningful glimpse into the scientist’s life. With a quick bribe of a bottle of scotch to the building’s superintendent, Morse gained entry and captured hauntingly intimate photographs of Einstein’s cluttered desk, shelves, and chalkboard, frozen in time only hours after the physicist’s death. The desk was piled high with papers, journals, and notes, an image of a mind still at work. The blackboard, filled with equations, showed Einstein wrestling with his final problems. These photos became iconic not only for their historical significance but also for their poignancy, reminding the world that genius itself is often born from chaos. Einstein once said, “If a cluttered desk is a sign of a cluttered mind, of what, then, is an empty desk a sign?” making this photograph of his workspace all the more fitting as his final portrait. © Historical Photos #archaeohistories
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@RealAlexJones We need to stop being cowards and call it what it is. This looks like a racist hate crime in my opinion. Execute this miscreant. I AM TIRED OF THE KID GLOVES DEPENDING ON HOW SHADED ONE IS.
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@RealAlexJones This calls for a public execution of this miscreant to show what we will do to you if you pull this kind of evil.
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Collin Rugg
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg·
@realDonaldTrump She is now apparently lecturing about astrology. She may need to get another cognitive test.
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@Breaking911 Deportation doesn't work. they come right back through the American Custom's turn style. We should legalize the Purge. We could do it every 4th sunday starting this week.
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Breaking911
Breaking911@Breaking911·
SHOCK VIDEO: Elderly woman sucker-punched while walking dog near NYC migrant shelter
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@Breaking911 This rotten mother F**^er needs to be beaten within an inch of life then unceremoniously dropped on a deserted island. (climate of the island isn't a derailer).
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@itsALLrisky I sure would. An extremely successful businessman leading us, easy choice.
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Mark Ruffalo
Mark Ruffalo@MarkRuffalo·
If you put all this in a movie they would say you had jumped the shark. Cops who stand down because they are afraid of being shot while Ted Cruz preaches more guns. The unbelievable shame and sham of the whole MAGA movement played out in a week. huffpost.com/entry/texas-po…
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@MarkRuffalo News flash: Dr. Banner hit by car while flashing peace sign. 45 injured.
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Mark Ruffalo
Mark Ruffalo@MarkRuffalo·
Rolling into the weekend like 🚲✌🏼
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Danny R Hill
Danny R Hill@DannyRHill1·
@irreductible_Em My Dad couldn't make my Highschool graduation as he was sick. He was a diabetic war vet. This was back in 1989. Its easy to resent a person, its harder to understand and show concern for them when you feel slighted.
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Em
Em@irreductible_Em·
My own mother just told me she doesn’t want to come to my last and only graduation in April… I’m devastated … why can mother be so toxic and why the need to be so hurtful… I just don’t get it.. there’s no excuses
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