“Leave the World Behind” movie about a grid down cyber apocalypse was ominously produced by Barack and Michelle Obama
“Leave the World Behind” movie about a grid down cyber apocalypse was ominously produced by Barack and Michelle Obama03/28/2024 // S.D. Wells // 520 Views Tags: apocalypse, big government, chaos, China, Collapse, communism, communist China,…
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Cover story is North Korean sanctions enforcement....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nr5YPYRyiLQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgyB6lwE8E0
Some words are in need of common use interpretations...Meaning the same for one, as the other...Sometimes, even English gets swayed by certain uses it is put to, by certain quarters...that may confuse other quarters..
But you must understand that I always tell pple not to used words in such a way as to cause ambiguity. I have wrote here over and over against:
1.) Using 'energy' to mean 'spirit'
2.)Using 'love' to mean 'God'
3.)Using 'heart' to mean 'part of the brain'
4.)Using 'left brain' to mean 'logical'
5.)Using 'logics' to mean 'science'
6.)Using 'Newtonian physics' to mean 'classic physics'
7.)Using 'fear' to mean 'hatred'
8.)Using 'dark' to mean 'evil'
9.)Using 'nature' to mean 'not man made'
The list is endless!!
I am always for using exact words and I discourage metaphors as they cause confusions. There is nothing special about using 'black magics' to mean 'evil magics'. As you should see it joins a long list of incongruous usage of words that I always rail against!
Yes indeed. Of course, none of our commentary had race in mind. I did clarify to Roaring Lovely, why I use the term "Black Magician" and he appears to have removed his question. Actually I like questions, as he puts them, because they enable clarifications...Also, the term "dark continent," was used by European pioneers and globe sailing navigators, from various nations, including England, to describe a continent (Africa) who's vast interior had not been mapped and explored...The coastline had been recorded. But the interior unknown, so in darkness, in the shade, eclipsed....It simply meant, an unknown continent...No racial suggestions.
Likewise, Antarctica was largely unknown by explorers, for centuries. Only waling ships ventured near it's vast coastline, seeing glaciers, snow and ice...In such circumstances, a description of "dark" would have seemed inappropriate, for that alternative unknown...As it is stark white in appearance...So they chose to call it the "frozen continent."
BUT, they chose to call Africa "dark," for reasons described...innocent ones..