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originally posted by: nomad4chr1st
a reply to: MerricksInsight
I have tried.. i know what you are talking about- but the images just load as blank on a computer. weird
originally posted by: misfit312
Has anyone seen this one yet?On this guy's FB
originally posted by: sodero
originally posted by: misfit312
Has anyone seen this one yet?On this guy's FB
Oddly enough, after I started following Mr. teeth on Facebook from reading about him on here.. That guy you just linked to added me as a friend. He had some stuff on his Facebook wall about the "badselfeater" topic and the "beast bills", like that image you just posted. So I wrote him a message asking how he knew about it all and what he knew or if there was anything I should do. His reply to me that I got this morning was this: "Tell your loved ones how you feel about them" I have no idea what to think about all this, if it's a huge joke, a marketing campaign, or an actual plan for something to happen tonight... But his reply to my question is certainly creepy to say the least.
originally posted by: misfit312
Has anyone seen this one yet?On this guy's FB
originally posted by: Wynaeri
a reply to: Triskadecaphobic
It could be a 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse reference. White, red, black, and pale. The pale is thought to be a mistranslation depending on where you look, and could actually be pale green according to Islam.
originally posted by: misfit312
Has anyone seen this one yet?On this guy's FB
originally posted by: MarcusCooper
a reply to: seentoomuch
"Weaving Spiders Come Not Here" is the motto of the Bohemian Club.
Membership[edit]
A number of past membership lists are in public domain,[9] but modern club membership lists are private. Some prominent figures have been given honorary membership, such as Richard Nixon and William Randolph Hearst. Members have included some U.S. presidents (usually before they are elected to office), many cabinet officials, and CEOs of large corporations, including major financial institutions. Major military contractors, oil companies, banks (including the Federal Reserve), utilities, and national media have high-ranking officials as club members or guests. Many members are, or have been, on the board of directors of several of these corporations; however, artists and lovers of art are among the most active members. The club's bylaws require ten percent of the membership be accomplished artists of all types (composers, musicians, singers, actors, lighting artists, painters, authors, etc.). During the first half of the 20th century membership in the club was especially valued by painters and sculptors, who exhibited their work on the premises, in both permanent displays and special exhibitions, and did not pay any commissions on sales to members.[14] Many of the club’s artists were nationally recognized figures, such as William Keith, Arthur Frank Mathews, Xavier Martinez, Edwin Deakin, William Ritschel, Jo Mora, and Arthur Putnam.
The club motto is "Weaving Spiders Come Not Here", a line taken from Act 2, Scene 2, of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. The club motto implies that outside concerns and business deals are to be left outside. When gathered in groups, Bohemians usually adhere to the injunction, though discussion of business often occurs between pairs of members.[15]
Source: en.wikipedia.org...