throwaway1305

2.9K posts

throwaway1305

throwaway1305

@throwaway1305

Katılım Kasım 2019
492 Takip Edilen35 Takipçiler
Hernan Cortes
Hernan Cortes@CyberPunkCortes·
Does anyone know why the Danish Frogman Corps uniform had to go so hard?
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@leolougas @gettingleanbro @Pickuptruckdude Yours, yes I agree. What was stupid about stating a fact, it's very common that it's a crime to remove or kill or interfere with bats, in the western world I'm talking about, you have to contact whatever body is applicable in your country and they usually relocate them.
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Combat Casuals
Combat Casuals@Combat_Casuals·
Carlos prates cutting 10lbs in 2 hours to make weight for his fight with Jack Della Maddalena 😳
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@johncarewlegend @marifefighter I agree with you at the end but violence is no way to solve these things, it should be a last resort not the first, civilised people deal with other civilised people in civilised ways, uncivilised is another matter.
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John Carew.
John Carew.@johncarewlegend·
@marifefighter If this was my kid. This guy would be getting hung via that net he's decided to break from the highest thing I can see. What a fucking cunt.
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@ezizen @Mappy6984 I don't know much about tattoos but I do have an eye for art in general, the 10k one is obviously better but that chasm between 10000 and 500 lol. It's not that much better
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ezizen
ezizen@ezizen·
@Mappy6984 I’m paying the $500… I have a few sh!t looking tattoos and some expensive masterpieces. Not everyone can afford 10 bands… I like the copy tat even if it isn’t perfect… people want perfection will be having robots tatting soon. Then you’ll be begging to do it for $500
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NRM84
NRM84@Mappy6984·
500 bucks vs 10k.... looks like i got 9.5k left for vacation. Your not winning this argument bro
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𝕐o̴g̴
𝕐o̴g̴@Yoda4ever·
Baby lambs are so cute..🐑😍
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🫥
🫥@freetheboyyy·
Spinning seesaw ride turns SPLASHY for fun loving lady as she gets dunked in the water 😂
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@caelus_nox @fandompulse Just ask the only midget that will be cast ever, all other dwarves have been excluded from casting because of that bearded prick.
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caelus_nox
caelus_nox@caelus_nox·
@fandompulse inclusive is actually excluding people they are intended for...... ok so theres not many dwarf roles, but then you say... lets be inclusive and make the 7 dwarves all 7 foot african americans.... now you have lost jobs and spaces for people with dwarfism.
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Fandom Pulse
Fandom Pulse@fandompulse·
House of the Dragon showrunner Ryan Condal claims the race swaps he made are in reaction to the world being "different" than when Lord of the Rings was made: "The world is very different now than it was 10 years ago when Game of Thrones all started. It's different than 20 years ago when Peter Jackson made The Lord of the Rings. These types of stories need to be more inclusive than they traditionally have been. It was very important for Miguel [Sapochnik] and I to create a show that was not another bunch of white people on the screen, just to put it very bluntly." What is different about the world now?
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@kittydemon__ There's a lot of that on Reddit, very sick actually, quite funny how they allow that but ban other things which are no where near as harmful.
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kittydemon 🇬🇧🇪🇺
kittydemon 🇬🇧🇪🇺@kittydemon__·
Slim, fit guy with abs just totally ruined his body and his health, probably irreparably; it was hideous, and all the comments were encouraging it and jerking off over it. Made me very sad to see
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kittydemon 🇬🇧🇪🇺
kittydemon 🇬🇧🇪🇺@kittydemon__·
Essentially I saw this post where a guy showed a before and after of himself, from handsome young dude to morbidly obese whale and the comments were all like 'yes so much better this way 😵‍💫', 'disgusting fat pig 👿' and he responded like 'yes tee hee but i can always eat more :3'
kittydemon 🇬🇧🇪🇺@kittydemon__

just got accidentally introduced to the most horrendous disgusting fetish by the timeline and now I feel like I need a stiff drink and a lie down

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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@rulingchaos @ClownWorld I was wondering that, he is talking like a black guy, very put on and cringe as later on he is speaking more normally.
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Give A Shit About Nature
Give A Shit About Nature@giveashitnature·
@rascal113646 Great question! Red Creeping Thyme typically blooms from June through July but it can bloom a second time in late summer depending on the length of your growing season.
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Give A Shit About Nature
Give A Shit About Nature@giveashitnature·
If you're going to have a lawn, make it red creeping thyme. It barely needs water after the first year. It tops out around 2 to 3 inches and never needs mowing. It produces a carpet of magenta flowers in summer that bees and butterflies cover like a feeding station. It smells like thyme when you walk on it, because it is thyme. It's the same genus as the culinary kind, and edible. Deer won't eat it. Rabbits won't eat it. Grass is crowded out by it. It's hardy in most of the US (zones 4 through 9), tolerates poor soil, and handles moderate foot traffic. Honest caveat: creeping thyme isn't native to North America. But neither is your lawn. Kentucky bluegrass is European. Bermuda grass is African. Every square foot of creeping thyme replacing turfgrass is net positive for pollinators, soil, and water use. If you want a fully native ground cover, look into Pennsylvania sedge for shade, pussytoes or wild strawberry for sun, and moss phlox for rocky spots. But if you're going to have a lawn, make it one that does something.
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David Belenky
David Belenky@BelenkyDavid·
@CasuallyGreg Why is that funny? It's a callous and cruel and untrue thing to say about her. People have zero decency.
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𝐆𝐫𝐞𝐠
𝐆𝐫𝐞𝐠@CasuallyGreg·
They went for the jugular 🤣
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@johannesmkx @besimistic If you're talking about the battle of Tours you're thinking do Charlemagne's grandfather fyi, he was instrumental in keeping Islam out of Europe not really Charlemagne.
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Johannes M. Koenraadt
Johannes M. Koenraadt@johannesmkx·
@besimistic No, the West needs Catholicism. Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire successfully kept Islam out of Europe for a 1,000 years. This battle simply must continue.
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Johannes M. Koenraadt
Johannes M. Koenraadt@johannesmkx·
> it's only gay marriage, we're not letting them adopt kids > It's just adoption, they're not buying babies > they're buying babies from mothers who really need the money, but they're not raping the kids > they're raping the kids, but at least we're not making fake vaginas with tissue from your ass > we're doing vaginoplasty with tissue from your ass, but we're not transplanting wombs! > we're transplanting wombs, but we're not creating eggs from male skin cells > so what if we're making eggs from male skin cells, you're a bigot!
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IFA
IFA@obalola213·
@histories_arch @archeohistories This is very informative and mind-blowing. Histories like this shouldn't be left untaught because it showcases African architecture glory contrary to many beliefs that Africans built no meaningful civilization.
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ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
Great Zimbabwe stands as one of the most remarkable architectural achievements in African history. Beginning in the 11th century, the Shona people and their ancestors constructed a sprawling stone city in the hills of present-day Zimbabwe, covering more than 700 hectares. The defining feature of the site is its massive dry-stone walls, built entirely without mortar. The most impressive of these walls belong to the Great Enclosure, constructed during the 13th and 14th centuries, rising to 11 meters in height and stretching approximately 250 meters in length. Workers cut and stacked granite blocks with extraordinary precision, relying on the weight and careful fitting of stones alone to achieve walls that have stood for centuries. The Conical Tower, rising 9 meters high and measuring 5.5 meters in diameter, stands between the inner and outer walls of the Great Enclosure and remains one of the most iconic structures on the continent. The skill behind these walls was not accidental but reflected generations of knowledge passed down through a civilization that controlled trade routes connecting the gold-rich interior of southern Africa to Swahili coastal ports and, through them, to merchants across the Indian Ocean world. The ruling elite used these thick stone walls to separate themselves from commoners and to project political and spiritual authority. At its peak, the city may have supported a population of up to 10,000 people, all sustained by agriculture, cattle, and long-distance commerce in gold and ivory. The walls of Great Zimbabwe left a legacy that extended far beyond the city itself. More than 400 similar mortarless stone enclosures have been identified across southern Africa, reflecting how the architectural and political traditions of Great Zimbabwe spread across the region. When European colonizers arrived centuries later, they refused to believe that indigenous Africans could have built such sophisticated structures, and the Rhodesian government actively suppressed archaeological evidence to the contrary, censoring researchers and textbooks for decades. The eventual confirmation of the site's African origins in the mid-20th century became a powerful symbol of precolonial African achievement. When Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980, the nation took its name directly from the site, and the iconic soapstone bird carvings found within the walls became the centerpiece of the national flag and coat of arms, transforming ancient stones into the foundation of a modern national identity. #archaeohistories
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@JoeMa_5 @creepydotorg To be fair the royals of Europe started undoing interbreeding when they found out that it categorically causes issues, not too long ago, like a century. Google inbreeding and flower and you'll find the research. Anyway it doesn't actually take that long to undo the damages
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Joe Ma
Joe Ma@JoeMa_5·
@creepydotorg Generations of “keeping it in the family”.
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Creepy.org
Creepy.org@creepydotorg·
How is this possible? 😳
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throwaway1305
throwaway1305@throwaway1305·
@TheUndertowCM @fandompulse I do yes, I understand why people may like it but I found it dull as dirt, it picks up a little bit after one of the worst intros to a book I've ever read and then has a boring ending. The philosophy etc isn't that deep, but I can tell by your username that you're a bigfanofender
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Fandom Pulse
Fandom Pulse@fandompulse·
Ender's Game author Orson Scott Card on the problems with how religion is portrayed in current fantasy and science fiction: "In our culture, intellectuals have become so uniformly a-religious or anti-religious that our fiction, with few exceptions, depicts religious people in only two ways: the followers are ignorant and stupid and easily fooled, and the leaders are exploitative and cynical, manipulating others' faith for their private benefit. I know some people who fit those descriptions. But they are in a tiny minority. Most religious people I know are smart, well-educated, independent-minded, stubborn, honest, and generous -- at least as much so as the average intellectual, and usually more. The hostility toward religion among American intellectuals arises, I think, from a clear awareness that it was against a publicly religious culture that their own culture rebelled. Now that rebellion is completely successful in terms of capturing control of all the public instruments of transmission of culture -- the universities, the media, and the literature and art -- but it has become such a shibboleth of intellectual life to snipe at religion that, like the aging "revolutionaries" of the old Soviet Union, they mindlessly continue to "rebel" in order to defend their tight grip on the establishment. Indeed, those intellectuals are the establishment. And what was once a daring and rebellious stance is now just another example of lockstep conformists mindlessly echoing ideas that they haven't examined. That's when contemporary fiction mentions religion at all. Most of the time, in and out of speculative fiction, religion simply doesn't exist. Characters don't believe in God or even think about believing in God. Nobody talks about religion. Nobody belongs to any kind of church. Religion simply doesn't exist. ... This is, I think, a serious lapse, a dishonesty in our contemporary literature. It is most seriously dishonest because in fact, even the supposedly a-religious intellectuals behave exactly as religious people always have. That is, the behavioral and cultural patterns that we have always associated with religions are indistinguishable, except by vocabulary, from the behavioral and cultural patterns of the a-religious intellectuals. They band together with fellow believers, feel sorry for or hostile toward unbelievers, immediately punish heretics -- intellectuals who, having once been accepted in the 'faith,' dare to question its premises -- anoint their priests and theologians (psychologists and therapists being their ministers, scientists and, more usually, science popularizers being their doctors of atheology), and insist on their absolute right to put forth their religious ideas with public funding and the authority of the state behind them, while doing their utmost to silence or marginalize the beliefs of others. Most fiction has become, in short, an instrument of propaganda for the established religion of our time, which differs from other religions only in the particular content of the faith and the vocabulary used to describe it. Naturally, the true believers are sure that the real difference is that their beliefs are objectively true. But then, true believers have always believed that. This is not what distinguishes them from other established religions, but rather what makes them fundamentally identical to them. The honest depicter of human life will include the religious aspect of that life. This is not to say that stories need to be about religion, any more than stories about our contemporary culture need to be about cars. But the cars need to be present, at least by implication, and if a character doesn't know how to drive, we'd need to know why." Is this why Hollywood stopped adapting his books into films?
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Simon
Simon@SBorkes7062·
@9mmsmg Leftist here. I like Homelander too. But not because of what he does in the show. He's a fucking sociopathic facist. It's because his character is so bizarre and well-written. Than I remember the leader of the free world is EXACTLY like him. A facist and a sociopath.
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9mmSMG
9mmSMG@9mmsmg·
The Boys is another example of the Hollywood left trying to villainize the right and make them look awful. Similar to what they attempted with the Starship Troopers movie. They have increasingly tried to make Homelander into Trump, with him flipping out over memes, comparing himself to Caesar, etc. Where they failed is that everyone still likes him. Regardless of what he does, he still has fans. I know it drives the producers insane. It's little things like that, that make me happy.
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