altarr
9.5K posts


@DylanSm51212448 @ActionNetworkHQ might want to check yourself, the o/u is based on the final score.
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@ActionNetworkHQ Yall are stupid, if game ends in shootout the goal is not added to the total over/under. Which is why players don’t receive points for shootout goals
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@LEOwife122 @DanDicksPFT clearly the fact you cannot tell you are in a cult means that education failed you.
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@altarr @DanDicksPFT Don't be. I'm highly educated. I went to school before they turned into stupid factories.
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@DanDicksPFT This is why I don't travel during these years of chaos. Things can jump off too quickly in other countries. I am aware it can (and probably will) happen here in the USA too. But, I am home if it does. With my supplies and my pewpews. You know what I mean?
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@JPeeven1 @spittinchiclets How the fuck is this miracle on ice. Jesus fucking Czech Republic almost beat Canada. And Finland too. USA has 8X the population of Canada
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@llewhinkes Hi there! Would you be interested in speaking with us?Fox 5 DC and other Fox affiliated entities would like to use your video on all of our platforms until further notice. Is that ok?
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I suspected the garbagemen were actively sabotaging our garbage and now i have proof of it. Cc @DCDPW @charlesallen @PoPville
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@EricRueb Hello, My name is Meg Felling. I am a video producer at The New York Times. I hope you are safe. Did you film this video in Pawtucket today?
If so, may we use the footage under these terms - nyti.ms/36WdFOZ - with a credit to you? Thank you for your consideration.
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Hi, I’m Gillian from MS Now. I Hope you are safe and Im so sorry to be reaching out under these circumstances. We’re interested in featuring your vide in our news coverage, potentially on TV, digital platforms, and social media. Would you grant us permission to use it with credit to you?
If so, please confirm you shot the photo and will you irrevocably grant Versant Media non-exclusive permission for unlimited use by all partners, platforms and media, worldwide, in perpetuity.
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@luvhandle @EricRueb Fuck you and your right wing ideology. You enable this.
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@EricRueb Hi Eric, I hope you and your loved ones are safe. Did you shoot this video? If so, NewsNation would like to use it on all platforms, in perpetuity with credit to you. May we?
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@144sent @PodcastDang @Te_Ponui @JamieBonkiewicz You understand counter programming halftime shows have been around for a long time right?
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Agreed. I give them credit for having the balls to do it. Was it awesome, no. But with a proven concept now, more money will flow to those willing to do it. I would expect the next iteration to be legit.
I think what they did is cool. It made the NFL realize they aren’t untouchable. Which should yield a better NFL product.
They should not be in the business of politics anything. Never made sense. And hopefully they learn.
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@wwwPurityOrg @archeohistories Had to sort through a crazy number of racist responses to find the real one.
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The Moors were a group of North Africans who conquered and ruled Spain for nearly 781 years, from 711-1492 CE. They entered the Iberian Peninsula, Spain, after crossing the Strait of Gibraltar, passing through Morocco...
African Moors were known for their exceptional architecture and engineering skills, and they built numerous impressive structures, such as universities and mosques in Spain, which still stand to this day. They made significant contributions in various fields, including math, medicine, chemistry, philosophy, astronomy, botany, bricklaying and history.
The African Moors were the first to introduce the use of Arabic numbers in Europe, which are still used today. They also made significant advances in medicine, developed treatments for various diseases and created medical textbooks that were widely used.
In addition, the African Moors were skillful astronomers and developed advanced techniques to measure time and determine the position of celestial bodies. They also made important contributions to botany, introducing new plants in Spain and creating gardens admired by many.
African Moors were also known for their expertise in bricklaying and built numerous impressive structures, such as Granada's Alhambra, considered one of the most beautiful and impressive buildings in the world. Finally, they also wrote extensively about their history, creating numerous historical texts that are still being studied today.
📷 : a painting of a figure often associated with the "Moorish" period or culture, particularly in the context of European orientalist art. This style of art, popular in the late 1800s, often depicted North African or Middle Eastern figures in elaborate attire, sometimes with a romanticized or exoticized view.
The term "Moor" in English usage historically referred to inhabitants of Roman province of Mauretania, and later, to the Muslim population of al-Andalus (Spain and Portugal), who were of mixed Arab, Spanish, and Amazigh (Berber) origins. The figure in the painting is dressed in a green head covering, a gold-colored garment, and carries weaponry, including a sword and a pistol, along with a staff.
Such depictions, sometimes referred to as "Blackamoors" in popular European decorative arts, represented African males in exotic attire in various art forms like paintings, statues, and jewelry.
#archaeohistories

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@LadyMoo470 @histories_arch No, that's just an iron ring. One piece, no rivets or bolts.
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Roman slave collar with tag inscribed: “I have fled, seize me and return me to Zoninus for 1 gold coin.” The only known example discovered with its tag still attached....
This iron collar was meant for slaves in the Roman Empire. It has a bronze tag with an inscription that reads: “Fugi. Tene me. Cum revocaveris me, dabis solidum unum Zonino.” Translated, it means: “I have fled. Seize me. If you return me, you will receive one gold coin from Zoninus.” The tag served both as an identification marker and a bounty notice, ensuring that any attempt at escape was met with constant risk of capture.
Slavery was central to Roman society, with enslaved people working in households, workshops, fields, and mines. Collars like this, sometimes called vincula servorum (“chains of slaves”), were a brutal tool of control and dehumanization. They reduced a person’s identity to property, publicly displaying both their enslaved status and their owner’s authority.
What makes this artifact extraordinary is its survival in complete form, with both the iron collar and bronze tag still together. It offers rare, tangible evidence of the realities of slavery in the ancient world, beyond the accounts left by Roman writers.
#archaeohistories

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