Search results for "90504c18e8a5d4420847460fd9ca5284" in md5 (8)

/pol/ - EPSTEIN FILES
Anonymous Argentina No.513971138
SCOTUS says these alphabet agencies have no power absent a clear congressional mandate.

Palantir / DOGE is erecting US.GOV 2.0.

Tree of liberty is thirsty.
/pol/ - Silly Propaganda #1
Barnaby Argentina No.513420629
Manly P. Hall’s voice, deep and deliberate, fills the room, narrating the scene. He speaks of Atlantis as a civilization of unmatched wisdom, but his tone shifts as he invokes Plato’s warning. “Plato, in his dialogues,” Hall intones, “described Atlantis not as mere myth, but as a cautionary tale—a society that rose to divine heights, only to be consumed by its own arrogance.” The hologram mirrors his words, showing the city’s splendor giving way to chaos: towers crumble, and a monstrous wave swallows the land. Hall explains Plato’s message, drawn from the Timaeus and Critias: Atlantis fell because its people, gifted with knowledge and power, succumbed to greed and hubris, defying the natural order. “Their fate,” he warns, “is a mirror for any civilization that believes itself above the laws of balance.”
The words hit hard. Plato’s warning, as Hall recounts it, feels alive, relevant—a reminder that unchecked ambition can topple even the greatest societies. The hologram’s light dances across your face, and you glance at nearby visitors, their eyes fixed on the scene, some nodding thoughtfully. Hall continues, linking Plato’s account to esoteric traditions, suggesting Atlantis’s story challenges us to question our own path. The exhibit’s placard notes the fusion of modern holography with Hall’s archival lectures, a bridge between past and present that makes the warning feel urgent.
You stand there, the image of Atlantis’s fall burned into your mind, Plato’s lesson echoing through Hall’s voice: progress without humility invites ruin.
/pol/ - Thread 513083198
Anonymous Argentina No.513084210
Roll a joint for the snowbunnies
/pol/ - Fuentes vs Green, Fight!
Anonymous Argentina No.512654439
Here’s a short Fuentes clip. They don’t call him “Nick the Knife” for nothing.

https://youtube.com/shorts/DS1eJZMxMZk
/pol/ - Illusion of Choice
Mode Argentina No.512350259
>>512349555

I really am writing anons. It may be a little too “antisemitic ” but I hope that’s okay.
/pol/ - Thread 512316940
Anonymous Argentina No.512320595
Ask Grok:

The alleged connection between Jeffrey Epstein and Mossad, Israel’s national intelligence agency, is a topic steeped in speculation, fueled by various claims, but lacks definitive evidence. Here’s a breakdown based on available information:
Claims of Epstein’s Mossad Connection
• Ari Ben-Menashe’s Allegations: Former Israeli intelligence officer Ari Ben-Menashe claimed in the book Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales that Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell were Israeli spies running a “honey-trap” operation to blackmail prominent figures for Israeli intelligence. He alleged that Robert Maxwell, Ghislaine’s father, introduced Epstein to Mossad. These claims are unsubstantiated and rely heavily on Ben-Menashe’s narrative, which has been questioned for credibility.
• Ghislaine Maxwell’s Father: Robert Maxwell, a media mogul who died in 1991 under mysterious circumstances, was rumored to have had ties to Mossad. Some speculate Epstein’s association with Ghislaine linked him to Israeli intelligence, but this remains speculative.
….

Grok can list more and more connections but then denies its credibility. Okay maybe that’s not fair. Ask another Q.
/lit/ - Thread 24611666
Anonymous No.24612662
Jesus or his character has a nice message for a perfect world. Maybe not a perfect world. OP has a good question and I believe it might be deeper than we may think.

There are first of all so many denominations of Christianity that it is possible that one of those hold the belief in his message but not the miracles. Or to be more generous that the miracles tell stories of how his message affected those who heard it. So yes it’s possible IMO.

I’m not exactly agreeing with OP so as to insult the beliefs of Christians who believe in the miracles. His words were miraculous. So yes I can imagine a Christian like OP describes.

Consider the Beattitudes. I think Alan Watts either transmits or relates the idea that Jesus was funnier than the Bible makes him seem. He used reductio ad absurdum to criticize the pharisee’s idea of the fulfillment of the law. “You must be more righteous than them to enter the kingdom of heaven.” So who are the Pharisees today? Would it be that hard to be more righteous than them?
/pol/ - Y’all pussies listen to mumble rap
Mode Argentina No.512029471
https://youtu.be/2H5uWRjFsGc