Anonymous · April 11, 2020 Yes! It was one of the most evil empires, same as the Nazi Germany (it was much worse). I am from Bulgaria and we are taught about Ottomans in our school. In terms of their religious practice, they were akin to ISIS.
Here are some reasons:
Ottoman rulers were uncivilized, backward mongrel (most were descendant of Genghis Khan) and their economy was driven by slavery, kidnapping young boys, women. Most of the sultans were known for their fond of young men. Mehmed II (the conqueror) enjoyed raping young boys. As was Suleiman (the so-called “Magnificent”), raped young boys and women.
Ottomans went to every Balkan nations (Greece, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Albania etc.) and forced people at the point of sword to convert to Islam or die.
They would kill the men of their conquered territories, rape most of the women, and kidnap the most beautiful women were taken into the sultans harem.
Beheading was a regular occurence in the Ottomans. Jews, Christians and Moslems (that were deemed as as not good enough) were regularly beheaded.
Ottomans ruled for 500 years and today there’s nothing good that came, No contribution to humanity. The Balkans would constantly fight these uncivilized barbaric Turks.
The Albanians and Bosnians sold their soul to Ottoman masters but the rest of the Balkans were strong enough to hold on to Christian faith.
•To clarify. I didn’t write this. I found this on quora and I don’t necessarily agree with this, but I do however think it’s hilarious.•
submitted by So, I've been sitting on something for a couple of months, unsure of how to proceed. But first, some background. Let's talk about the Golden, Brass and other metal plates as described by Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon.
A popular FAIRMormon trope is that the plates are an example of a onetime anachronism that has since been vindicated. This is typically used to further the narrative that "
the list of anachronisms in the Book of Mormon is growing shorter." However, the gold plates continue to be anachronistic for at least 4 different reasons:
- No ancient codex of metal plates has ever been discovered anywhere in the world, ever
- Codex anything had not been invented yet in 600 BC. The codex is an innovation that happened around the beginning of the Christian era.
- The codex form did not exist in pre-Columbian America. The closest thing you'll find there is parchment folded accordion style.
- Writing books on metal plates, likewise, was unknown in ancient America. You'll occasionally find labeled pictures engraved in metal, but that's about the extent of it.
Really, the only part that has been "vindicated" is that occasionally
something would be written on metal in the ancient near east - however, this has never been in dispute, is described in both the Bible and the apocrypha, and can be traced to the early 19th century. So there is no vindication on this point.
Occasionally, people will try to buttress this point with archaeological finds of engraved metal. These finds pretty much always are from the Old World, not the New World, and
are not in the codex style.
However, there has been one possible exception: the Etruscan Gold Book. This comes up every once in a while on apologetic sites like
Book of Mormon Central.
I was extremely skeptical that it was another
Jordan Lead Codices situation (ie, fake), for a few reasons: despite what a few websites say regarding authentication, it doesn't seem that any actual experts in Etruscan have examined it. The museum that has it claims it was authenticated by professor
Vladimir Georgiev, but he died in 1986, long before this artifact became public (see
this quora comment by an Etruscan student). Further complicating this discovery is that it was not archaeologically excavated, and instead has a murky and opaque history on the antiquities market. In fact, I haven't been able to find a single academic paper anywhere that describes it, analyzes it or translates it. Perhaps the museum just wants first crack at it? Maybe, but it's been 17 years now. I also find it unusual that neither the
Etruscan Studies Journal nor the flagship newsletter on Etruscan archaeology the
Etruscan News from NYU's Institute for Etruscan and Italian Studies, which has been continually published since 2002, ever mention it,
except in one letter to the Editor from a Jeff Hill from the University of New South Wales:
I hope that Richard Daniel De Puma will write an article concerning Etruscan forgeries, and make mention of the (fraudulent?) Etruscan Golden Book conserved in the Bulgarian National History Museum: (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/2939362.stm)
What I've been sitting on
I have something I've been mulling over, and I want to divulge this information without betraying any confidences. I saw the Etruscan Gold Book mentioned on the faithful sub today, and decided I should share what I know. On August 16, 2019 I emailed the then Editor of the Etruscan News, Professor Larissa Bonfante, and asked about this artifact:
Hi Professor Bonfante,
Someone recently alerted me to a bbc article from 2003 claiming a gold codex with Etruscan writing is housed in Bulgaria's national history museum. I was surprised by this (since I was under the impression the codex form was invented much later and typically used papyrus), so I searched through some old catalogs of Etruscan News, and couldn't find any discussion of this artifact, other than a letter to the Editor that suggests it's fraudulent.
It's been 16 years now, and I still can't find anything about it. Is this an authentic artifact? Has it been studied?
Thanks for you time, I'm just a curious bystander.
She replied the same day:
Thank you for your leter. WE will answer in the next Eruscan NEws.
best wishes
The Etruscan News is typically published once a year in Winter, so I bided my time until January, and then checked to see if there was a new issue. When I didn't see one, I did a little googling and learned that Professor Bonfante
passed away just a week after our correspondence (I should probably stop emailing people - Grant Palmer passed away just a little over a week after I corresponded with him).
I have since followed up with another prominent Etruscan Scholar, asking if someone would be interested in publishing something on the subject. They wrote me back on March 11, 2020:
I'm sorry to take so long to answer your query, but emails get buried quickly in an election year in [location redacted]
[Names of 3 prominent Etruscan scholars redacted] conferred about the gold book and concluded that it was a fake. They hesitated to write an article exposing it -- I guess they did not want to offend the Bulgarians. If you think there would be interest in the subject, I could ask them to write a short article... Larissa's response to you (replete with her characteristic typos) suggests that she intended to do that.
I waited, but the most recent edition of Etruscan News did not include anything on the artifact (most of it is an in memoriam for Professor Bonfante). From this, I gather that they don't want to offend the Bulgarian Museum, and for that reason I have redacted any identifying information. I have sent a copy of the email to
fuzzy_thoughts since we already know each others irl identities. Since I know authentication is important to this group, I would be willing to forward this email to someone else, preferably a believer with an established reputation, who I feel confident would not betray any confidences - both my identity, and that of the scholars who wish to not offend.
At any rate, apologists should stop using the Etruscan book as vindication for the Book of Mormon, since it's been concluded by the relevant scholars not to be an authentic artifact. I also think this is an instructive example on epistemology - apologists fall for fakes like the Jordan Lead Codices and the Etruscan Gold Book because it confirms their priors and they are working backwards from a conclusion. Using a more straightforward analysis, and basing my opinions on mainstream consensus scholarship, I was able to make a correct prediction (that the book was a fake) without any specialized knowledge of Etruscan or Archaeology. I think that should be the true takeaway.
Please don't all rush to email the most obvious Etruscan scholars. I appreciate the need to authenticate, and perhaps we can choose someone to do so, but the last thing we need is to sic an army of internet Mormons and ex-Mormons on unsuspecting scholars, for whom Mormonism is the last thing on their minds.
Thanks
/mormon!
submitted by Weird Wings statistics
Rationale
From the very start of my attendance to this sub I was contemplating on a simple question -- how do you choose weirdness -- which itself distilled into several questions:
- which airplane is the weirdest?
- how do I stop myself from posting duplicates
- how to find unique aircraft that has never ever been posted or even do I really have to hold back on that?
Regarding that last question, jost look at that
Edgley Optica from 4th of July 2020. It has been posted here
fifteen times already! But it is still equally weird and beautiful (you guys need to frequent
prettywings more often) and the OP gave us a bit of a new information
Edgley Optica spotted this morning in Tampa, FL.
If you haven't figured that out yet, yes please, do post duplicates :) Regarding load, neither mods nor users wont have any trouble combing thru them. And the latter might just sit back and enjoy them. Look here:
Average posts per day
Year | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 |
Count | 2 | 3 | 4 | 8 | 9 |
Methodology
Back to the subject at hand. The data originates from
pushift.io where you have to tinker on different variables to get all the posts from
weirdwings. The default reddit website UX allows you to get only the last 1k posts from reddit. Only if you know what to search for, you can get to, say, the very first post here:
To get us all started, let's have this... The result will be JSON formatted data, some 6933 entries -- I've got the data from the sub's inception untill D-Day this year, so any newer entries from that time forward will be missing in my stats. Here's some stats to get you started:
Post type statistics (general)
entries | count | ratio |
meta (mod infos, announcements) | 19 | 2.74‰ |
spam (spam, sexposting, advertizing) | 35 | 5.05‰ |
shitpost (shitposts, lostredditors) | 68 | 9.81‰ |
aircraft (useful data) | 6811 | 98.24% |
total | 6933 | 100% |
This part of stats is basically a firm salute to all of you weirdos who frequent this sub. The math speaks of itself.
Let us focus on useful data where I've had a fairly easy job sorting some 60% of entries, with some minor fiddling on variations like
Blohm und Voss,
Bolhm un Voss, and then some
F-16/F16/F 16 models where you just cannot be sure, right? The rest of the entries was a bitch to sort, especially when all you have in your JSON is a title that starts with
There are more aircraft in the oceans than submarines in the sky or with
[request] what is this plane?. Yeah, thanks, I've had to open some 2k links to see what the OP was up to. And it took me a whole month to do it (avg 2-6 hrs/day). What you'd do while in isolation?
Just to make sure, I'm not complaining.
I've learned a million on planes while looking for some amazing and obscure sources to corroborate some entries. This is what I've found:
Post type statistics (useful data)
entries | count | ratio |
recognized (real aircraft) | 6572 | 94.79% |
unrecognized (unknown, many planes) | 239 | 3.45% |
flared entry | 2894 | 41.74% |
total | 6811 | 100% |
"Unrecognized" entry is basically an unsorted entry that has several types of reasons:
- crossposting to other plane-related subs where model was also imprecisely described (yup, I've checked those)
- many planes in one picture (think Dryden class photos with 5+ birds in one place)
- links on various articles on unrealized/future prototype concepts
- fake aircrafts (April fools, photoshop abominations/beauties)
- fictional movie/cartoon/game aircraft
- fuselages or wings used in architecture
- DIY modifications like Beetle-Cessna or Learmousine road vehicles
- drone+assault rifles scaring the bejesus of everyone etc.
These were interesting enough for you to post it
more than once (and were/are flying at some point) so I've accounted them as well.
What I've ignored? Mainly 2 things, deleted posts, and the posts with zero upvotes. This basic filter allowed me to finally get the "real" data.
What's the weirdest bird out there?
Behold the list of aircraft that have more than 10 duplicated entries. According to user submission, the weirdest thing that flew over this realm is polish
PZL M-15 Belphegor Top 10 aircraft models (10+ entries)
Count | Model | Designer, Manufaturer | Country |
19 | PZL M-15 Belphegor | PZL Mielec | Poland |
17 | MD-160 Lun-class Ekranoplan (NATO: Duck) | Alekseyev | Russia |
| Bv 141 | Blohm & Voss | Germany |
| Do 31 | Dornier | Germany |
| GA-466 Inflatoplane | Goodyear Aircraft | USA |
| Model 35 Skew Wing (NASA/AMES AD-1 OWRA) | Rutan Aircraft Factory, NASA, Ames | USA |
16 | Gannet | Fairey | UK |
| Martin XB-51 | Glenn L. Martin | USA |
| XF-85 Goblin | McDonnell | USA |
15 | F2Y Sea Dart | Convair | USA |
| EA-7 Optica | Edgley | UK |
| P.180 Avanti | Piaggio Aero | Italy |
| V-173 Flying Pancake | Vought | USA |
14 | Bartini VVA-14 Ekranoplan | Beriev | Russia |
| Ca.60 Noviplano | Caproni | Italy |
| XFY Pogo | Convair | USA |
| XB-70 Valkyrie | North American Aviation | USA |
| T-4 | Sukhoi | Russia |
13 | X-32 | Boeing | USA |
| XP-82, F-82 Twin Mustang | North American Aviation | USA |
| XFV-12 | Rockwell | USA |
12 | X-14 VTOL | Bell | USA |
| YFM-1 Airacuda | Bell | USA |
| YC-14 | Boeing | USA |
| Stipa-Caproni | Caproni | Italy |
| XB-42 Mixmaster | Douglas | USA |
| VM-T Atlant | Myasishchev | Russia |
| Tacit Blue | Northrop | USA |
| XP-56 Black Bullet | Northrop | USA |
11 | KM Korabl Maket (Caspian Sea Monster) | Alekseyev | Russia |
| Rotodyne | Fairey | UK |
| F-16XL Fighting Falcon | General Dynamics | USA |
| XP-67 Moonbat | McDonnell | USA |
| Cri-Cri | Michel Colomban | France |
| XP-79 Flying Ram | Northrop | USA |
| VZ-3 Vertiplane | Ryan Aeronautical | USA |
| SR.45 Princess | Saunders-Roe | UK |
| S.55 | Savoia Marchetti | Italy |
10 | B-377-SG/SGT Super Guppy | Aero Spacelines, NASA | USA |
| Meteor F.8 WK935 Prone Pilot | Armstrong-Whitworth, Gloster | UK |
| VZ-9 Avrocar | Avro Canada | Canada |
| JB-17G Testbed | Boeing | USA |
| Do 335 Pfeil (Arrow) | Dornier | Germany |
| He 111Z Zwilling (Twin) | Heinkel | Germany |
| J7W1 Shinden (Magnificent Lightning) | Kyūshū Hikōki K.K. | Japan |
| XF-84H Thunderscreech | Republic | USA |
| C.450 Coléoptère (Beetle) | SNECMA, Nord | France |
| S-72 | Sikorsky | USA |
| Wellington | Vickers-Armstrongs | UK |
For full disclosure, american P-51 Mustang was, in almost every concievable form possible, mentioned 39 times, and that includes the
Dart-Stang as well. Spitfires were either
pink or
black, or
german but they never came close the Cadillac of the sky.
The company (designemanufacturer) was a bitch to sort out because of various different bankruptcies, mergers, buyouts and cooperations. This list is far from precise, but here you go: Boeing birds are 50% more posted than second placed Lockheed...
Top 10 companies
Count | by company | Count | by country |
313 | Boeing (USA) | 313 | Boeing (USA) |
176 | Lockheed (USA) | 87 | Tupolev (Russia) |
132 | Convair (USA) | 71 | Dornier (Germany) |
131 | Northrop (USA) | 73 | Antonov (Ukraine) |
112 | North American Aviation (USA) | 57 | Short Brothers (UK) |
92 | Douglas (USA) | 47 | Caproni (Italy) |
87 | Tupolev (Russia) | 39 | Bréguet (France) |
80 | Grumman (USA) | 37 | Saab (Sweden) |
73 | Antonov (Ukraine) | 33 | PZL Mielec (Poland) |
71 | Dornier (Germany) | 18 | Canadair (Canada) |
Sorting countries was even worse -- in the dawn of aviation Russia was a tzarist empire, then it was USSR, and after the fall of the wall became the Russian federation. The same thing happened to Austria-Hungary, then Yugoslavia, then Czechoslovakia... the old continent was, and still is, politically rather turbulent place for aviation. I took the easy way and attributed most of the planes to Russia instead of more precise federative states. The same road was taken with KuK monarchy and the Balkan states. But, the list is here -- whenever you feel stuck, or temporary uninspired, browse thru your local continent and try finding some obscure and interesting contraption near by:
Countries by continent
count | Europe | count | Americas | count | Asia | count | Africa |
1 | Denmark | 1 | Peru | 1 | Indonesia | 1 | Nigeria |
1 | Lithuania | 9 | Brasil | 1 | Vietnam | 3 | Egypt |
2 | Norway | 30 | Argentina | 2 | UAE | 4 | Ghana |
2 | Slovakia | 84 | Canada | 3 | Mongolia | 9 | South Africa |
3 | Austria | 3123 | USA | 4 | New Zealand | | |
3 | Bulgaria | | | 4 | South Korea | | |
3 | Hungary | | | 5 | Taiwan | | |
4 | Romania | | | 5 | Thailand | | |
4 | Slovenia | | | 8 | India | | |
5 | Belarus | | | 13 | Iran | | |
5 | Finland | | | 23 | Israel | | |
8 | Belgium | | | 24 | China | | |
12 | Spain | | | 37 | Australia | | |
14 | Austria-Hungary | | | 89 | Japan | | |
15 | Czechoslovakia | | | | | | |
17 | Yugoslavia | | | | | | |
34 | Netherlands | | | | | | |
41 | Sweden | | | | | | |
43 | Switzerland | | | | | | |
55 | Poland | | | | | | |
76 | Ukraine | | | | | | |
167 | Italy | | | | | | |
462 | France | | | | | | |
587 | Germany | | | | | | |
636 | Russia | | | | | | |
768 | UK | | | | | | |
Frequency data
There are total of
3207 unique aircraft posted in
weirdwings. The following table shows the distribution of duplicates. No worries, you've posted so far only 46% uniques, and 60% of those (1948) are mentioned only once -- there's plenty of room for improvement :D
No. of duplicates | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
Frequency | 1948 | 570 | 263 | 152 | 78 | 60 | 36 | 30 | 21 | 11 | 9 | 8 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 0 | 1 |
It took me a better part of the day to write this up (daily life you know). If the occasion arise, I'll either update this post or provide further explanations in comments.
EDIT: 1) If you're on mobile, scroll right when you get to the tables because some of them are wide. 2) frequency table added
submitted by I've been thinking about this for a while: Another triple A world war 1 shooter by Dice.
Now look, I love BF1, but its far from perfect. This game however could learn from the mistakes of BF1. Plus, it could have a bigger range of:
Locations: Ypres, Vimy Ridge, Tannenberg (Which an austrian references in one of the brusilov offensive after round speeches), Isonzo river valley, Africa, Liege (Part of the Schlieffen Plan), Sambre (which was one of the final battles of ww1) (
Link here for more info about the end of WW1), etc.
Guns: Chauchat m1918, MG08/15 (For the support class this time), Lewis assault phase rifle, Carcano (full rifle), the sawed off Slme, etc.
Factions: Bulgaria, Serbia, New Zealand, Canada, Japan (which we thought was teased for BF1), etc.
Vehicles: Whippet, Little willie, Fiat 2000, Czar tank, Mark 1 gun carrier, etc.
And more! But anyway, tell me what you think.
submitted by ... "as humankind may be the primer by which Gaia will reproduce" ... we are being used) "... the nature of life on Earth is not at all like Gaia. If we were to choose a mythical mother figure to characterise the biosphere, it would more accurately be Medea, the murderous wife of Jason of the Argonauts. She was a sorceress, a princess – and a killer of her own children."
Source Like most dualities, a Gaia/Medea sister hegemony covers more territory than either hypothesis alone.
Strong
Telos of my Gaia/Medea Hypothesis Some subtle traits found in nature induced Homo Sapiens to rise from small scattered nomadic hunter-gatherer bands into large complex sedentary societies with advanced technology. One might easily interpret these hidden (until recently) traits were a deterministic feature of a supernaturally created world.
Weak Telos of my Gaia/Medea Hypothesis The rise of advanced machines and computers appear to be destined to replace humans. These super-AI machines would be capable of interstellar travel, and most likely are the only viable mechanism to transport memories of Earth outside our Solar System. One might easily interpret this hidden agenda of exporting Systems-Earth onward as Gaia/Medea's intention to reproduce. She
is Alive!
Do we, as Dr. Pangloss suggested, live in the best of all possible worlds? Is the Universe Fine-Tuned for Life? How many fundamental constants does it take to define our Universe? Subtle Traits in Nature Some of the controversy opposing the Gaia Theory is political.
Globalist Power Brokers want to establish fear in the populations so they can extract carbon taxes. Climate change is not cooperating with their dire predictions of increasing heat, just the opposite.
solar activity and clouds Most subtle of all are opiates hidden in agriculture-sourced foods milk and cereal grains. Without addiction, there was no practical reason to abandon ancient habits of hunting-gathering nature's bounty. Primitive agriculture was long hours of grinding hard labor, security problems, new diseases, organizational problems, and more. Humans persevered against these obstacles to have their "daily bread", with "milk and honey" until advanced cultures evolved via group competition.
The
evidence presented in this key link suggests the following interpretation. "The ingestion of cereals and milk, activates reward centres in the brain. Foods that were common in the diet before agriculture (fruits and so on) do not have this pharmacological property. The effects of exorphins are qualitatively the same as those produced by other opioid and/or dopaminergic drugs ... perhaps even addiction."
Going on, "... celiac disease (should) be viewed not as a rare 'genetically-determined' disorder, but as an extreme example of our body communicating to us a once universal, species-specific affliction: severe intolerance to wheat... If wheat really is more like a drug than a food, anesthetizing us to its ill effects on our body, it will be difficult for us to understand its grasp upon us unless and until we eliminate it from our diet.
Source, Dr Schwartz endorphins and exorphins Food opioids - addiction to constipation (LOL)
www.ibsgroup.org/forums/topic/177625-food-opioids-addiction-to-constipation/ Gluten is the main structural protein complex of wheat consisting of glutenins and gliadins... which can be further degraded to a collection of opioid-like polypeptides called exorphins in the gastrointestinal tract...
Opioid effects of gluten exorphins (technical report) | BioMed A secondary effect of capsaicin, an irritant, is the body's reaction to it, namely to induce formation of endocrine "endorphins".
Other Addictive common foods Some Subtle Traits of cultural selection This section moved to
Understanding the road to Domestication, a biologic two-way street "... unless we get off the planet." Or, move to isolated parts of this world. The Future of Evolution: What Will We Become? | LIVESCIENCE
Whales Save Humans 4 min.
Wrapping it up
James Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis (a compendium of articles) | new scientist
Gaia Hypothesis
Why haven't we found aliens yet? Maybe they're all dead... Gaian Bottleneck hypothesis
USaving our planet begins with U (2.3m views, 31k likes, 2 wks) 14 min. | Riddle
Bill Whittle the Science Guy: "The Earth knows how to save itself." 10 min.
Trends in Human Evolution
Homo aquaticus? in SpeculativeEvolution
7.2-Million-Year-Old Pre-Human Remains Found in Bulgaria, Greece Show First Pre-Humans Developed in Balkans, Not Africa | ScienceDaily
Review of The Human Era, new timescale begins at Göbekli Tepe | Kurzgesagt 8 min.
Who Built Gobekli Tepe? New theory!
Genetic Engineering Will Change Everything Forever – CRISPR | Kurzgesagt 16 min.
Forever Young (a fun animated short, an esoteric fantasy on aging) 4 min.
Cultural Marxist SJWs, and Leftist editorial writers rant opposition to genetic engineering or modification because it can help rich people improve their family health, while poor people can't... leading to evolution of Homo simpleton.
Improbable events that resulted in humans (natural history) 17 min. | prof. Marc Defant TEDxUSF
update Dec.10.2020 Is the Earth an organism? (our biosphere is evolving)
submitted by In 2001 Bulgaria’s former King Simeon II made a comeback by winning the country's parliamentary election. As a foreigner I've lived in Bulgaria for a few years now. Overall I'm very happy here. It has its challenges like anywhere else in the world. I'll outline the pros & cons below. Before I lived here I seen the Bulgarian people described as outrage... Quora is one of our highest-quality channels. Organic traffic coming from Quora has the highest visit-to-subscription conversion rate of any of our acquisition channels, and leads from Quora ads convert at 4-5x our other social channels. Bulgaria, since both its ancient and modern beginnings, has been invariably a multiethnic, mainly Slavic and Turkic, polity. School textbooks in Bulgaria lavish much attention on the ancient Bulgars, who in the Middle Ages founded several Bulgarias from the Volga to Italy, including the surviving one in the Balkans. Bulgaria is by far the most unhappy country in the EU, a newly-released survey has found. The former communist country, which joined the European Quora is a place to gain and share knowledge. It's a platform to ask questions and connect with people who contribute unique insights and quality answers. This empowers people to learn from each other and to better understand the world. Rent in Bulgaria on average is 74.06% lower than in the UK. Cost of living in Bulgaria is 48.12% lower than in the United Kingdom. Alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages cost on average 65% less, and clothing costs are 75% less than the European Union average. Naturally enough a low cost of living is a massive draw. You can unsubscribe from Quora marketing emails at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link in the email. Our team is here to help you grow your business on Quora.
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