Underbudgetguy

986 posts

Underbudgetguy

Underbudgetguy

@Underbudgetguy

Not a LARPer, but a tourist

Katılım Ocak 2025
40 Takip Edilen28 Takipçiler
AkaRai
AkaRai@HoneyBearington·
@TheGamingBoa6 @DelusionPosting The account is suspended so I can't check, but it fits with how Muslims portray about themselves. "It's okay to rape and lie to non-muslims." "You must die if you don't convert to my religion." "Even in someone else's country, they must adhere to MY customs."
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Underbudgetguy
Underbudgetguy@Underbudgetguy·
@Kaito_Da_Wolf I guess bro. Also unrelated question can u pls tell what the hell all the flags mean
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L0rdskywarp
L0rdskywarp@L0rdskywarppp·
@Underbudgetguy @braincel_bitch @Willowfoxxo the boys is openly pro abortion, pro LGBTQ, pro immigration, anti religious nationalism, anti maga/trump, I genuinely don’t understand how you can not see it as a left wing show
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Zack D. Films
Zack D. Films@zackdfilms1·
He Turned His Cat Into A Flying Drone 🤨
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𐚁@Kaylavosss·
𐚁 tweet media
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Cornucopiac
Cornucopiac@TerraSave8085·
@VarrenHeid This is the first time this guy has made a joke that isnt about pedophilia, racism, or dancing around the n word
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FarestR06
FarestR06@FarestR06·
@GTA6jhao @_GirlSay The “satanic” stuff is required for kindness, so is that satanic too? Pretty sure Jesus encouraged kindness so you aren’t making much sense right now…
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xAI
xAI@xai·
Introducing Grok Voice Think Fast 1.0 A state-of-the-art voice model built for complex, multi-step workflows with snappy responses and high accuracy. It takes the top spot on the Tau Voice Bench and handles real-world messiness like noise, accents, and interruptions better than any other model in the world. x.ai/news/grok-voic…
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Possum Reviews
Possum Reviews@ReviewsPossum·
Okay, so, I'm not going to say the Tower of Babel was a real thing that existed, but this is ignoring the point of the mythological story. Nimrod believed in God, but considered himself to be his equal. He built the Tower of Babel so he could challenge God. By compelling people to participate in its construction, Nimrod was essentially making people turn away from God to trust in their own strength, and defy his command to spread around the world and multiply. God responded by confounding their languages and forcing them to scatter, and destroyed the tower to humble them. It wasn't that they were trying to reach the heavens. It's why they did it. A bunch of bronze age savages thought they could do the impossible. Thousands of years later, after the advent of Newtonian physics, and a World War which showed mankind why they needed to quit acting like apes fighting over a banana tree, Man was ready to reach the heavens. Not to prove he was better than God, but to better understand His creation. I'm not even a Bible-thumping Christian and I know this. Even if you don't take the story literally as an actual historical event, there's a lesson and warning against the folly of unchecked ambition and people concerting toward impossible goals doomed to disaster. Reaching the heavens is possible, but not before you're ready. Cautionary tales against trying to do things before you're ready are common in mythology. The story of Bellerophon trying to fly on Pegasus to Mount Olympus is one such story.
The Skeptic@TheSkepticWiz

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