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Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Why hasn't there been a common man as president,
Originally posted by spoor
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Why hasn't there been a common man as president,
There has been, but you refuse to accept reality, prefering to have your silly conspiray theory...
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Originally posted by spoor
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Why hasn't there been a common man as president,
There has been, but you refuse to accept reality, prefering to have your silly conspiray theory...
Who is this "common man" who has been president?
What is his name?
I'm going to need to know his name so i can wikipedia him, and i'll present you the facts from his bio, on why he isn't.edit on 28-8-2011 by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by scoobdude
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Originally posted by spoor
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Why hasn't there been a common man as president,
There has been, but you refuse to accept reality, prefering to have your silly conspiray theory...
Who is this "common man" who has been president?
What is his name?
I'm going to need to know his name so i can wikipedia him, and i'll present you the facts from his bio, on why he isn't.edit on 28-8-2011 by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien because: (no reason given)
Please define common man so we can make sure that someone fits your definition of such....
the whole reptilian thing is just the normal conspiracy of shifting blame. in this case it is done to clean the blood of wars, greed and cruelty off of human hands and onto green scaly hands
it is all ours, we deserve it, and are capable of horrible things
as humans
Every person alive in Europe today is related by an unbroken maternal link to one of only seven original female settlers who once populated and later farmed the great plains of ice-age Europe.
That is the extraordinary claim made by Bryan Sykes, Professor of Human Genetics
at Oxford’s Institute of Molecular Medicine.....
in 1991, a man’s body was found in the Italian alps by some hikers. It appeared that the body, wearing very little and strange clothing, had lain there for some time. On closer inspection, the man was deemed to have lain there for thousands of years and once his DNA had been analysed, one of his descendents was traced here in Britain. So too with the skeleton of “Cheddar Man”, found in 1903 in Cheddar gorge, Somerset. Local residents were genetically screened and several were found to have an exact match to the Neanderthal’s sequence. Since these matches came from children their identities were protected, and it was an older man, though not an exact match, who took the headlines....
....the Basque people are, as they claim, a unique population within Europe. Rather than being the group that first settled Europe, as has sometimes been thought, it was found that they arrived much later, having not hunter-gatherer origins like six out of seven modern Europeans, but those of farmers from the Middle East. To these and other old arguments, Sykes applies his test-tubes and gene-machines and declares the cases closed. His evidence is simple and final: the power of genetics over the vagaries of archaeology to decide fundamental questions of our origins.... www.neurobiography.info...
Some 800 years ago, a fearsome, charismatic warrior named Temujin united the nomadic tribes of Mongolia. In 1206, he assumed the title Genghis Khan, often translated as emperor of emperors, and started invading surrounding territories. Massacring many of the people that he conquered, so as to leave no enemies and to strike fear in would-be foes, Genghis Khan ultimately controlled a massive empire ranging from today's Afghanistan across China. His male descendants continued the dynasty for many generations.
It appears that Genghis Khan left a mark on more than history: His influence may persist in the DNA of men today. According to an international team of geneticists, about 1 in 12 men in Asia--and therefore 1 in 200 men worldwide--carry a form of the Y chromosome that originated in Mongolia nearly 1,000 years ago. Today's unusual prevalence of this chromosomal variant is most likely the result of Genghis Khan's military success, the investigators say. Even more provocatively, the researchers suggest that Genghis Khan himself had this particular version of the Y..... findarticles.com...
...In America it [Brahmin] has been applied to the old, upper crust New England families of British Protestant origin that were extremely influential in the development and leadership of arts, culture, science, politics, trade, and academia. The term was certainly applied partly in jest to characterize the often erudite and pretentious nature of the New England gentry to outsiders. The nature of the Brahmins is summarized in the doggerel "Boston Toast" by Harvard alumnus John Collins Bossidy.
"And this is good old Boston,
The home of the bean and the cod,
Where the Lowells talk only to Cabots,
And the Cabots talk only to God."[1]
Boston's "Brahmin elite" developed a semi-aristocratic value system by the 1840s. Cultivated, urbane, and dignified, a Boston Brahmin was the very essence of enlightened aristocracy.[2][3] The ideal Brahmin was not only wealthy, but displayed suitable personal virtues and character traits. The term was coined in 1861 by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.[4] The Brahmin was expected to cultivate the arts, support charities such as hospitals and colleges, and assume the role of community leader. Although the ideal called on him to transcend commonplace business values, in practice many found the thrill of economic success quite attractive. The Brahmins warned each other against "avarice" and insisted upon "personal responsibility". Scandal and divorce were unacceptable. The total system was buttressed by the strong extended family ties present in Boston society. Young men attended the same prep schools and colleges,[5] and heirs married heiresses. Family not only served as an economic asset, but also as a means of moral restraint.... en.wikipedia.org...
Originally posted by audiopackrat
Does this sound like a man who is one of 'them'?
Does this look like a man who is one of 'them'?
I do not agree with everything Ron Paul says, but the important issues override anything else;
Less government and bloated bureaucracies/More liberty and individual freedoms. End the IRS/FED, and especially END the U.S. military occupations in the Middle East which are solely for the banksters and Israel - not for our 'freedom'.
Originally posted by LibertyCrazy
reply to post by Domo1
Looks like we all may be related to Kevin Bacon after all.
It's statistical, long trend, reversion to the mean. We could probably do the girl's study with any arbitrary person on the planet. Pretty cool though.
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
No how is it that everyone President in United States history has been related to each other NOT ONLY that but to the Queen of England, and the British Royal family...who aren't even human to begin with.
Thoughts?
Originally posted by something wicked
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
No how is it that everyone President in United States history has been related to each other NOT ONLY that but to the Queen of England, and the British Royal family...who aren't even human to begin with.
Thoughts?
Do you have even a remote piece of anything that would pass as evidence, proof or even a mildly interesting piece of information that would actually support that completely ridiculous comment? Please don't say people should keep an open mind, you've made a statement, it's up to you to prove it.
By the way, when are you back at school?
Originally posted by thektotheg
reply to post by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
OP: I read your post and was very interested. I just have to know what you think....
Is trolling so hard worth it?
Thanks. I'll await your answer.
I have another theory, too. I think you could be indirectly (and intentionally) trying to discredit David Icke. This tactic is tried time and again. There are 3 types of people when it comes to David Icke. People that hate him and think he's crazy comprise the first group. The second have read his research and appreciate the job he does, feeling as though he's awakened them in some way. The last group, which you belong to, have read his work just enough to imbelish it with even crazier theories/ideas, in turn discrediting him further.
^I don't know if that is a joke or not. I haven't been to bed yet and my tin foil hat is giving me a rash and the medicine I just took is making me paranoid. ha. In all seriousness, you're clearly a troll or clinically insane. In either case, you wasted my time tonight so I hope I'm wasting yours. ha ha. ho ho. I'd flag this, but if your ego got even the slightest bit healthier, it could start a "New Cure for Cancer" thread.