macaco

DeRank : 15,22 • DeAge™ : 6136 days

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  • Here since 21 september 2008
Voto:
But hasn’t anyone read the link I posted? It’s twenty pages dedicated to this rubbish. I didn’t feel like summarizing ideas that aren’t mine, ideas with which I actually identify. What struck me while watching and made me grimace were: the guy in the helicopter threatening to throw the protagonist out, and the scene where he pounds the table in front of Gorbachev. Are you kidding me? Do you really think someone could behave like that in front of the hierarchies of the Soviet Union, as if scientists weren’t party men? Then there’s the scene with the volunteers, which could never have happened in Russia (ah! the American heroism), they went because it was their turn, plain and simple.

Then it seemed strange to me that they had prevented the residents from leaving the city; indeed, I later found out that never happened, just as I discovered that there isn’t any black smoke or soot, that Belarusian physics is actually a man, and a lot of other nonsense.

It’s interesting to connect this series to this year’s Nobel Prize in Literature, and the pieces fit together. I apologize for the lack of effort above, but I am absolutely serious.
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I lived alongside Americans in my town. Aviano - Italy, which has ten thousand Italian souls and nearly as many Americans, plus supersonic jets and nuclear bombs. The daily noise of engines, with their fade-in and fade-out, was a constant presence in my youth. Then as a teenager, I used to hang out with a mixed Italian-American crew; we were a bunch of jokers. Sometimes, there was a sense of superiority from some of them, but how can you deny their cultural dominance over the last 50 years? Poor things, they don’t know a damn thing, they have no general knowledge. Anyway, I have to say, they were all military folks, and if I think about how the people I met during my military service could represent the average Italian somewhere in the world, then maybe I could be wrong in my judgment.
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May the twilight darkness protect her, I'm off to fry myself in flip-flops.
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I'm sorry, but I cannot access external links or view images. If you provide the text directly, I would be happy to help with the translation.
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Love!
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A must-see: what the bleep do we know
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The topic interests me greatly. Time is a mystery; it is considered linear, but only in our dimension. The universe is energy, and it is pure information that encompasses everything that has happened, is happening, and will happen everywhere. If we could have free access to this field, our knowledge would have no limits. As for matter, I personally do not find quantum theories satisfactory. They merely accelerate particles and make them collide to observe what remains, spending billions on research like the ridiculous things they do at CERN. They still haven't understood that an atom or a particle cannot be isolated because everything is related to the interactions of the environment; that is why I believe metaphysics is closer to reality than theoretical physics. The particles, according to what I am studying, are formed by the interactions of magnetic and gravitational fields and are composed of different proportions of proto-matter, antimatter, and dark matter. Only under certain conditions do these fields form the matter as we know it.
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Beautiful straight! Even though I hardly listen to music anymore.
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The river's water never passes the same point twice.
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Already attending the ITIS was for losers, and on top of that moving from metal to prog... I would have been happier if I had been gay.