Search Results
8/3/2025, 12:07:14 AM
>>512070488
You ever save something to try to decipher it? I certainly did, sometimes I could decipher, some times not, sometimes I found it was BS. But it all looked random af to the unlearned. Did you know the word Gibberish comes from Jabir, an alchemist, who wrote in code, but now his name has come to mean something else...
>The burden of proof (for real crime and actual damages) is upon the one making the claim, and then they need to demonstrate real damages. Proving innocence is a literal inversion of law.
You ever save something to try to decipher it? I certainly did, sometimes I could decipher, some times not, sometimes I found it was BS. But it all looked random af to the unlearned. Did you know the word Gibberish comes from Jabir, an alchemist, who wrote in code, but now his name has come to mean something else...
>The burden of proof (for real crime and actual damages) is upon the one making the claim, and then they need to demonstrate real damages. Proving innocence is a literal inversion of law.
8/3/2025, 12:07:14 AM
>>23042298
You ever save something to try to decipher it? I certainly did, sometimes I could decipher, some times not, sometimes I found it was BS. But it all looked random af to the unlearned. Did you know the word Gibberish comes from Jabir, an alchemist, who wrote in code, but now his name has come to mean something else...
>The burden of proof (for real crime and actual damages) is upon the one making the claim, and then they need to demonstrate real damages. Proving innocence is a literal inversion of law.
You ever save something to try to decipher it? I certainly did, sometimes I could decipher, some times not, sometimes I found it was BS. But it all looked random af to the unlearned. Did you know the word Gibberish comes from Jabir, an alchemist, who wrote in code, but now his name has come to mean something else...
>The burden of proof (for real crime and actual damages) is upon the one making the claim, and then they need to demonstrate real damages. Proving innocence is a literal inversion of law.
Page 1