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Found 3 results for "811a7a7e0a4b9c986183ca3038d5a413" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous Germany /int/213007630#213007875
7/21/2025, 10:19:02 PM
Wusstet ihr eigentlich dass Schildkröten komplett Salmonellen verseucht sind aber selbst immun gegen Salmonellen sind und deshalb alle Katzen und Hunde die an Schildkröten schnuppern direkt nen Abgang machen weil die sich denken HOLY SHIT so ein Vieh aus Dinosaurier Zeiten was komplett versifft ist und Salmonellen hat !? Gar kein Bock

Ne ?

Jetzt wisst ihr es
Anonymous Germany /int/212857721#212859948
7/17/2025, 3:17:02 PM
Stellt euch vor es würde keine Menschen auf Planet Erde geben aber dafür 8 Milliarden Schildkröten.
Anonymous /lit/24502620#24502763
6/28/2025, 9:13:44 AM
>>24502620
The Western fixation on linear time fosters a deep-seated anxiety, framing history as either an ascent toward an idealized future or a descent into irreversible decline. This binary thinking breeds a restless urgency—an obsession with whether we stand at the dawn of something new or the twilight of something lost. Yet this view is a distortion, a product of cultural narcissism that insists on the singular importance of the present moment. In contrast, cyclical time, long understood in Eastern traditions and ancient Western thought, dissolves this illusion. It reveals history as neither a march of progress nor an unfolding catastrophe, but an eternal rhythm of rise, fall, and renewal. The Fourth Turning articulates this lost wisdom, exposing the modern illusion that we are somehow exempt from the patterns that have governed human civilization for millennia.

To see time as linear is to resist the natural order, clinging to the hubris that history must either culminate in us or collapse upon us. This blindness fuels the collective neurosis of modernity, where every crisis is framed as an unprecedented disaster rather than a necessary phase in an ongoing cycle. The fear of an "end" arises not from reality but from an inability to perceive renewal within destruction. True clarity comes not from seeking permanence but from recognizing that transformation is the only constant. By surrendering to the inevitability of cycles, we move beyond the fragile egoism of linear time and into a deeper, more intelligent acceptance of historical flow.