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Pablo Díaz
4.3K posts

Pablo Díaz
@Pablo_cDaz
Hablo de Política internacional, Economía y Cripto. Cristo es Rey.
Katılım Şubat 2021
114 Takip Edilen190 Takipçiler

@Masamune_Axie @sternpinball Man im just saying your are being hypocrite, you work in the same environment you criticize, don't deliver shit, and try to attack the work of others.
You should stop interfering in other people's work and focus on your own.
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@Pablo_cDaz @sternpinball Have you ever said a movie was bad? If so, then I guess you must be a talented film director. Have you ever complained about food at a restaurant? If so, you must be quite a skilled chef too.
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@Hantao I think you are delusional.
The problem with web3 is that is full of scammers and low quality projects.
You expect players to come to an ecosystem that scam their audience and also just make mediocre NES games all the time.
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Pablo Díaz retweetledi

@Masamune_Axie @ZyoriTV Is exactly what he mean so you got it, now stop saying stupid things on twitter and do your job.
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Cute. Now do Axie.
Masamune@Masamune_Axie
@sternpinball It’s already 2026, and they’re still designing it like it’s 20 years ago—just slapping basic anime artwork onto a background as if it were made in PowerPoint. It feels lazy and uncreative. It would look so much better if they used early Sugimori-era artwork instead.
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@Masamune_Axie @sternpinball It’s already 2026, and web 3 devs still designing like it’s 40 years ago making games that can run on a NES.
Besides that, they have the nerve to come and criticize other companies and developers.
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@sternpinball It’s already 2026, and they’re still designing it like it’s 20 years ago—just slapping basic anime artwork onto a background as if it were made in PowerPoint. It feels lazy and uncreative. It would look so much better if they used early Sugimori-era artwork instead.
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@cagyjan1 They lack depth, graphics, gameplay, willing to make something good.
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Tengo 60 años y mi hijo tiene 33. Él todavía vive en mi casa, durmiendo en la misma habitación en la que creció y usando el mismo armario que le construí cuando tenía diez años. Come la comida que preparo para él todos los días. No trabaja, no estudia y no busca nada. Se despierta tarde, enciende el televisor o la computadora, y así pasa su día. Si no le sirvo el desayuno, se lo salta. Si no lavo su ropa, la deja amontonada en una silla hasta que no le queda nada limpio que ponerse.
Pero no siempre fue tan evidente. Empezó hace años, poco a poco, y yo permití que todo sucediera.
Cuando era niño, no lo dejaba hacer nada por sí mismo. Le ataba los zapatos hasta que tuvo doce años porque decía que le tomaba demasiado tiempo. Le hacía la tarea “para que no se estresara”. Si había un problema con un maestro en la escuela, yo iba a hablar en su nombre. Si discutía con un amigo, yo intervenía. Siempre me decía a mí misma: “Tendrá tiempo de sufrir cuando sea adulto”. Nunca lo dejé experimentar el malestar.
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Pablo Díaz retweetledi

Rep. Ana Paulina Luna posted this post referencing “The Book of Enoch” “a wheel within a wheel…” this eight pointed star sure looks convincing, and what’s with the trail it’s leaving behind?
#uap #ufo #disclosure #trending
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Pablo Díaz retweetledi

@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino Lol kid, you literally admited you used AI to make arguments some post ago.
"I suggest you ask AI for the view of biblical scholars for context vs making up your own modern nonsense. You’re just proving my point."
Dude even using AI, you are stupid.
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@Pablo_cDaz @AngelaBelcamino Address the arguments AI made if you can, resorting to ad hominem v me generally just shows you can’t address substance
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@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino You say you "read the bible and lots of philosophy, science and psychology, my views are fully informed thanks."
Yet you use AI to make arguments on X.
Good one.
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I’ve read the bible and lots of philosophy, science and psychology, my views are fully informed thanks. They are there god does not exist and the persistence of the set of beliefs is part sociological conformity and part psychological need to deal w fear of death and non existence. You don’t believe in Islam or Buddhist reincarnation so you’re also a skeptic but selectively,
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@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino They called them angels, yeah, you call them aliens because you are refusing to read a 5000 years old collection of books that explain almost everything about this matter.
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@Pablo_cDaz @AngelaBelcamino Aren’t they referring to angels?
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@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino Man, not even the goverment is calling them "aliens", you really need to read the Bible.
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@Pablo_cDaz @AngelaBelcamino Biblical angels are described as spiritual servants of God, not extraterrestrial organisms from another planet. Calling them ‘aliens’ is mostly a modern reinterpretation, not what the text itself is claiming.”
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@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino Sorry i dont care about scholars, im a human so i can make my own opinions.
You should try this, is important.
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@Pablo_cDaz @AngelaBelcamino I suggest you ask AI for the view of biblical scholars for context vs making up your own modern nonsense. You’re just proving my point.
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@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino Brother, you can use all the AI you want to try to win an argument, good for you, but it would be better if you create a personal opinion by actually reading the bible.
"Those who have eyes to see, let them see."
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Sorry try again..
No—most biblical scholars, historians, and theologians do not interpret Book of Ezekiel 1:5 as a reference to aliens.
The passage is part of a larger visionary scene in Book of Ezekiel chapter 1, where the prophet describes “four living creatures” with unusual appearances, wheels within wheels, shining metal, fire, and movement. In Jewish and Christian tradition, these are generally understood as symbolic heavenly beings—often identified with cherubim or angelic attendants of God’s throne—not extraterrestrials.
A few key points:
Ezekiel explicitly frames the experience as a vision:
“the heavens were opened and I saw visions of God” (Ezekiel 1:1)
The “living creatures” are later identified in Ezekiel 10 as cherubim, a known class of angelic beings in biblical imagery.
Ancient Near Eastern prophetic literature commonly uses symbolic, dramatic imagery to describe divine encounters.
The modern “ancient aliens” interpretation became popular largely through 20th-century writers such as Erich von Däniken and later TV shows like Ancient Aliens. These interpretations argue the imagery sounds technological—flying objects, glowing metal, mechanical movement—but this is considered speculative rather than academically supported.
Some people are drawn to the alien interpretation because:
the descriptions are visually strange,
Ezekiel uses comparisons (“like burning coals,” “like wheels”),
and the text predates modern technological language.
But from a historical and literary standpoint, the passage fits much more naturally within prophetic symbolism and apocalyptic religious imagery than as a report of spacecraft.
Here’s the verse itself in context:
“And from the midst thereof came the likeness of four living creatures. And this was their appearance; they had the likeness of a man.” — Ezekiel 1:5 (KJV)
So the mainstream interpretation is:
Traditional view: heavenly beings in a divine vision.
Ancient alien view: speculative modern reinterpretation.
Academic consensus: not evidence of extraterrestrials.
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@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino I can quote like 30 biblical passages talking about celestial creatures, just open your eyes and read it by yourself.
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@Clear_Eyed_Take @AngelaBelcamino Friend, i really suggest you to read the bible, i can understand your point ignoring Biblical facts, but this is bananas.
At least read this:
Ezekiel 1:4
Ezekiel 1:5
Ezekiel 1:10
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