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Post by cheeesfreeex on Jul 16, 2019 19:24:41 GMT
View AttachmentDid you know that ancient sites like Easter Island, Nazca, Ollantaytambo, Paratoari, Tassili n’Ajjer and the Pyramids of Giza are all aligned on a single great circle? There is a mind-boggling connection among ancient structures that is indicative of a far greater meaning than we were aware of. Too much evidence to dismiss such alignments as coincidence, pareidolia, simulacrum, chance, happenstance or whatever.. There's plenty of evidence of ancient accurate, intercontinental connections and surveying. {With the inference that this required an aerial perspective.} Unless these sites were constructed during a Pangea? Interestingly the map you shared looks similar to a Mercator/Gleason {UN Flag} Flat Earth projection. My particular theory/line of enquiry is that 'man' placed these monuments on pre-existing geographical anomalies {including hills, rock formations, springs etc} that these are created by the nodes of energy lines. In effect, they are aligned, but those alignments are the consequence of the direction of the energy lines {like an Earth Grid} and their intersections {nodes}. There's a popular theory that states that the places you mention lie on significant energy lines, known as Dragon Lines. {All connected to myth, ancient depictions of dragons/winged serpents etc in all cultures around the world.} And furthermore there seems to evidence that the celestial bodies are mirrored in the landscape, especially evident at these nodes. The Pyramids at Giza appear to be aligned to Orion's Belt for instance. I've been reading articles that link the River Boyne in Ireland directly to the Milky Way, with many allusions to Cygnus {The Swan}, and dairy farming, but also it's shape and course. And of course there are many megalithic 'observatories' {NewGrange in Ireland}, and celestial 'calendars' {Stonehenge?}. They no doubt relied on such things for agriculture, but they do appear to have taken on extra significance. Many pilgrim paths and ancient trackways follow solstice {rising and setting} alignments. Interestingly many more modern buildings have also {presumably} consciously been placed on these ley alignments. {The Vatican, all of Washington's official buildings, most British Stately homes, all Cathedrals, most Churches etc etc.} These energy nodes are often colloquuilised as 'Sacred Sites'. I'm also fascinated by the Australian aboriginal concept of songlines, where man interacts and sustains these lines. It's fascinating stuff, the power of the internet can bring these exotic locations and exotic theorising into ones living room, but there's a lot of photoshopping and chaff to sort through. Pays to remain open minded, even science through the Quantum is now embracing the paranormal.
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Jul 16, 2019 19:28:49 GMT
Pareidolia (/pærɪˈdoʊliə/ parr-i-DOH-lee-ə) is the tendency to interpret a vague stimulus as something known to the observer, such as seeing shapes in clouds, seeing faces in inanimate objects or abstract patterns, or hearing hidden messages in music. I used to have an open mind about things like this but I stopped habitual cannabis use and it all went away: connection? 🤔 No doubting that explains some of the phenomena. But not all. It's that which I'm most interested in. Not so arsed about rocks that look like cocks etc. Though I am in a fb group 'things with faces'. It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle.
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Post by wizzardofdribble on Jul 16, 2019 19:40:57 GMT
View AttachmentDid you know that ancient sites like Easter Island, Nazca, Ollantaytambo, Paratoari, Tassili n’Ajjer and the Pyramids of Giza are all aligned on a single great circle? There is a mind-boggling connection among ancient structures that is indicative of a far greater meaning than we were aware of. Too much evidence to dismiss such alignments as coincidence, pareidolia, simulacrum, chance, happenstance or whatever.. There's plenty of evidence of ancient accurate, intercontinental connections and surveying. {With the inference that this required an aerial perspective.} Unless these sites were constructed during a Pangea? Interestingly the map you shared looks similar to a Mercator/Gleason {UN Flag} Flat Earth projection. My particular theory/line of enquiry is that 'man' placed these monuments on pre-existing geographical anomalies {including hills, rock formations, springs etc} that these are created by the nodes of energy lines. In effect, they are aligned, but those alignments are the consequence of the direction of the energy lines {like an Earth Grid} and their intersections {nodes}. There's a popular theory that states that the places you mention lie on significant energy lines, known as Dragon Lines. {All connected to myth, ancient depictions of dragons/winged serpents etc in all cultures around the world.} And furthermore there seems to evidence that the celestial bodies are mirrored in the landscape, especially evident at these nodes. The Pyramids at Giza appear to be aligned to Orion's Belt for instance. I've been reading articles that link the River Boyne in Ireland directly to the Milky Way, with many allusions to Cygnus {The Swan}, and dairy farming, but also it's shape and course. And of course there are many megalithic 'observatories' {NewGrange in Ireland}, and celestial 'calendars' {Stonehenge?}. They no doubt relied on such things for agriculture, but they do appear to have taken on extra significance. Many pilgrim paths and ancient trackways follow solstice {rising and setting} alignments. Interestingly many more modern buildings have also {presumably} consciously been placed on these ley alignments. {The Vatican, all of Washington's official buildings, most British Stately homes, all Cathedrals, most Churches etc etc.} These energy nodes are often colloquuilised as 'Sacred Sites'. I'm also fascinated by the Australian aboriginal concept of songlines, where man interacts and sustains these lines. It's fascinating stuff, the power of the internet can bring these exotic locations and exotic theorising into ones living room, but there's a lot of photoshopping and chaff to sort through. Pays to remain open minded, even science through the Quantum is now embracing the paranormal. Although I'm not an astronomer I'm fairly certain that Vale Park is aligned with Uranus.
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Jul 16, 2019 20:17:07 GMT
It's a fantastic exercise in Ramsey Theory..... Aaron? Soz, I wiki'd it, not sure I fully got the gist of the Ramsey Theory's relevance is... is it about presuming a whole, from a bit? yeah maybe a bit. The same answer as above, so below. It doesn't explain everything connected to Earth Energy etc.
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Post by bathstoke on Jul 16, 2019 21:09:33 GMT
What in the flying fuck is this thread? ??? ??? It’s basically the solipsistic machinations of Cheeses inner workings. I’m still non the wiser about his Lay of the Land explanation.
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Jul 16, 2019 22:02:59 GMT
What in the flying fuck is this thread? ??? ??? It’s basically the solipsistic machinations of Cheeses inner workings. I’m still non the wiser about his Lay of the Land explanation. I like the word solipsistic, {had to google} might be true of the EEFC thread, but this acknowledges a far bigger and more complex reality, way beyond {but also entangled with} the notion of self and the world of cheees. I'm also musing the possibility of a collective consciousness/Akashic record type thing and such. The opposite of egocentrism.
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Post by Goonie on Jul 17, 2019 6:02:07 GMT
Pareidolia (/pærɪˈdoʊliə/ parr-i-DOH-lee-ə) is the tendency to interpret a vague stimulus as something known to the observer, such as seeing shapes in clouds, seeing faces in inanimate objects or abstract patterns, or hearing hidden messages in music. I used to have an open mind about things like this but I stopped habitual cannabis use and it all went away: connection? 🤔 No doubting that explains some of the phenomena. But not all. It's that which I'm most interested in. Not so arsed about rocks that look like cocks etc. Though I am in a fb group 'things with faces'. It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle. "It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle." Now that I'd like to see!👍
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Jul 17, 2019 6:05:49 GMT
No doubting that explains some of the phenomena. But not all. It's that which I'm most interested in. Not so arsed about rocks that look like cocks etc. Though I am in a fb group 'things with faces'. It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle. "It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle." Now that I'd like to see!👍
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Post by Goonie on Jul 17, 2019 6:11:54 GMT
"It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle." Now that I'd like to see!👍 That's brilliant! 😁
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teddytunstall
Academy Starlet
Author of The Perdix Project
Posts: 114
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Post by teddytunstall on Jul 30, 2019 15:22:07 GMT
If you are interested in ley lines and other similar properties of the planet, then you will definitely like "The Perdix Project" by Stoke author Teddy Tunstall. I can't say too much, or that would give away the secret that gets revealed near the end, but it is about mysterious properties of planet Earth. Due to the huge amount of scientific research I did, it took three years to write and the fictional science is very plausible and realistic. Set mainly in England and Scotland, but with three chapters set in the USA, it has mystery, tension, danger, logical deduction, light wit, a light romantic touch, lots of real science, a dash of fictional science and an action-packed ending. The clues eventually lead to a delightful and charming village full of pretty stone cottages, a village pub, a 14th Century church and, of course, a village green. With a very English feel, a bit like Midsomer Murders – country lanes, tractors, horses, the village shop – it is a cosy setting, but a sense of mystery underlies every scene and it is hard to believe that this village holds the answer to a mystery that NASA is trying to keep hushed up. Q. How does it get from NASA to Dovelow in the Derbyshire Peak District? While on temporary secondment at NASA, Nigel Bretby hears rumours about a problem with the International Space Station. On his return to England, he comes across other odd things going on :– – strange events at a Hampshire golf club; – in the Atlantic ocean, a Royal Navy missile test goes unexpectedly wrong; – there are anomalies with the gold bars in the Bank of England's gold vault; – a huge crash causes the abandonment of a Formula One race meeting; – the weights recorded at a boxing match weigh-in are disputed; – wild rumours are spreading on the social media pages of weight-loss groups. It is with a great sense of disbelief that Nigel slowly begins to realise that these events are all connected to the sudden, and unannounced, shift in the orbit of the International Space Station and to worldwide GPS problems. With hardly a clue to be seen, he needs every ounce of his ingenuity as he tracks down the secret that lies behind this mystery, and when he makes the shocking discovery that this, ultimately, presents a threat to the global order, the urgency makes him take drastic action. Nigel feels a great sense of disbelief as he finds himself caving under the Peak District on the hunt for the cause of the shift in the orbit of the International Space Station and he discovers an unknown force that was missed by Faraday, Maxwell and Einstein. The Perdix Projext - www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07SJNP9S4Please note that Teddy Tunstall is NOT on Facebook. Any Facebook user called Teddy Tunstall is not the author, Teddy Tunstall. Regards to all, Teddy.
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teddytunstall
Academy Starlet
Author of The Perdix Project
Posts: 114
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Post by teddytunstall on Jul 30, 2019 15:29:32 GMT
If you are interested in ley lines and othe similar properties of the planet, then you will like "The Perdix Project" by Stoke author Teddy Tunstall. I can't say too much, or that would give away the secret that gets revealed near the end, but it is about mysterious properties of planet Earth. Due to the huge amount of scientific research I did, it took three years to write and the fictional science is very plausible and realistic. Set mainly in England and Scotland, but with three chapters set in the USA, it has mystery, tension, danger, logical deduction, light wit, a light romantic touch, lots of real science, a dash of fictional science and an action-packed ending. The clues eventually lead to a delightful and charming village full of pretty stone cottages, a village pub, a 14th Century church and, of course, a village green. With a very English feel, a bit like Midsomer Murders – country lanes, tractors, horses, the village shop – it is a cosy setting, but a sense of mystery underlies every scene and it is hard to believe that this village holds the answer to a mystery that NASA is trying to keep hushed up. Q. How does it get from NASA to Dovelow in the Derbyshire Peak District? While on temporary secondment at NASA, Nigel Bretby hears rumours about a problem with the International Space Station. On his return to England, he comes across other odd things going on :– – strange events at a Hampshire golf club; – in the Atlantic ocean, a Royal Navy missile test goes unexpectedly wrong; – there are anomalies with the gold bars in the Bank of England's gold vault; – a huge crash causes the abandonment of a Formula One race meeting; – the weights recorded at a boxing match weigh-in are disputed; – wild rumours are spreading on the social media pages of weight-loss groups. It is with a great sense of disbelief that Nigel slowly begins to realise that these events are all connected to the sudden, and unannounced, shift in the orbit of the International Space Station and to worldwide GPS problems. With hardly a clue to be seen, he needs every ounce of his ingenuity as he tracks down the secret that lies behind this mystery, and when he makes the shocking discovery that this, ultimately, presents a threat to the global order, the urgency makes him take drastic action. Nigel feels a great sense of disbelief as he finds himself caving under the Peak District on the hunt for the cause of the shift in the orbit of the International Space Station and he discovers an unknown force that was missed by Faraday, Maxwell and Einstein. The Perdix Projext - www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07SJNP9S4Please note that Teddy Tunstall is NOT on Facebook. Any Facebook user called Teddy Tunstall is not the author, Teddy Tunstall. Regards to all, Teddy.
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teddytunstall
Academy Starlet
Author of The Perdix Project
Posts: 114
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Post by teddytunstall on Jul 30, 2019 15:31:26 GMT
Sorry about the multiple posting - I didn't realise this thread went on beyond page one so i was wondering why my post didn't appear.
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teddytunstall
Academy Starlet
Author of The Perdix Project
Posts: 114
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Post by teddytunstall on Jul 30, 2019 15:32:13 GMT
Ley lines and such like in a very nice 1970s TV series -
Children of the Stones 1977 Episode 01 - Into The Circle
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Aug 4, 2019 19:55:59 GMT
History contained within the mystery. For us to help to unravel maybe.
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Post by bathstoke on Aug 5, 2019 11:21:05 GMT
History contained within the mystery. For us to help to unravel maybe. After the Battle of the Beanfield Circ 1985, the crusties left Wilts(well you would wouldn’t you, with an army of coppers battering you) & they relocated to Cannock Chase, just by Shugborough. I lived in Little Haywood at the time & spent a lot of time on the crusty camp, until my father made me get a job 😔
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Aug 5, 2019 11:37:19 GMT
History contained within the mystery. For us to help to unravel maybe. After the Battle of the Beanfield Circ 1985, the crusties left Wilts(well you would wouldn’t you, with an army of coppers battering you) & they relocated to Cannock Chase, just by Shugborough. I lived in Little Haywood at the time & spent a lot of time on the crusty camp, until my father made me get a job 😔 Et in Arcadia Ego?
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Post by bathstoke on Aug 5, 2019 12:05:36 GMT
After the Battle of the Beanfield Circ 1985, the crusties left Wilts(well you would wouldn’t you, with an army of coppers battering you) & they relocated to Cannock Chase, just by Shugborough. I lived in Little Haywood at the time & spent a lot of time on the crusty camp, until my father made me get a job 😔 Et in Arcadia Ego? That’s posh. Did you go Newcastle High!?!
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Aug 5, 2019 12:09:40 GMT
That’s posh. Did you go Newcastle High!?! No mate. It's the mysterious inscription on the 'Shepherd' frieze at Shug. Linked in with Templar lore, Oak Island, America etc.
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Post by Roland the Thompson Gunner on Aug 5, 2019 13:34:49 GMT
I cannot believe that there is actually a thread about this nonsense. The biggest load of unscientific, unsupported, unmitigated bollocks that there has ever been committed to paper. I read 'The Old Straight Track' many years ago and instantly showed to my own satisfaction that it was the usual human trait of apophenia (finding connections and meaning in unrelated phenomena). As one of the posts above says, you can find straight lines joining 3 or more apparently significant points all over the place. We also have the amusing spectacle of people using small scale maps of the UK and drawing 'straight lines' between various points. We live on a spheroid. folks, those lines aren't straight on the ground.
A lot of this shit comes from people calling earlier populations 'The Ancients', which gives the impression that they were somehow old civilisations steeped in millenia of wisdom when, in fact, they were people pretty much like us, just without the benefit of the last thousand years of scientific study and progress. In other words, they knew fuck all about the universe, so they made up shit to account for whatever they didn't understand.
The exceptions to their ignorance are areas where simple observation and arithmetic, performed over many generations, may have led them to be able to predict some astronomical events to an impressive degree of accuracy. Like I say, they were like us, not stupid, just ignorant and desperately trying to understand their universe.
I really struggle with the widespread attitude today that seems to believe any kind of New Age, evidence-free bullshit and yet refuses to believe evidence-founded, scientific fact.
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teddytunstall
Academy Starlet
Author of The Perdix Project
Posts: 114
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Post by teddytunstall on Aug 5, 2019 15:30:37 GMT
I cannot believe that there is actually a thread about this nonsense. The biggest load of unscientific, unsupported, unmitigated bollocks that there has ever been committed to paper. I read 'The Old Straight Track' many years ago and instantly showed to my own satisfaction that it was the usual human trait of apophenia (finding connections and meaning in unrelated phenomena). As one of the posts above says, you can find straight lines joining 3 or more apparently significant points all over the place. We also have the amusing spectacle of people using small scale maps of the UK and drawing 'straight lines' between various points. We live on a spheroid. folks, those lines aren't straight on the ground. A lot of this shit comes from people calling earlier populations 'The Ancients', which gives the impression that they were somehow old civilisations steeped in millenia of wisdom when, in fact, they were people pretty much like us, just without the benefit of the last thousand years of scientific study and progress. In other words, they knew fuck all about the universe, so they made up shit to account for whatever they didn't understand. The exceptions to their ignorance are areas where simple observation and arithmetic, performed over many generations, may have led them to be able to predict some astronomical events to an impressive degree of accuracy. Like I say, they were like us, not stupid, just ignorant and desperately trying to understand their universe. I really struggle with the widespread attitude today that seems to believe any kind of New Age, evidence-free bullshit and yet refuses to believe evidence-founded, scientific fact. Hi Roland the Thompson Gunner, I tend be of the same frame of mind as you in thinking that science explains everything and I was sceptical about this sort of thing, but what about dowsing \ divining? Years ago I worked with civil engineers and I was surprised to learn that the utility companies do use dowsing to detect underground pipes and cables. It is real. I think lots of things that science cannot currently explain, and at which people scoff, will soon be explained by science. Have you followed the advances in quantum entanglement? Even Albert Einstein scoffed at it (he aiad he didn't beleive in spooky action at a distance), but it must be real. The Chinese have built a global satellite communications sytem (called QUESS, see the links below) that uses quantum entanglement, so I presume it is real and if there is this mysterious force that connects particles, what else is there that might be real? Regards, Teddy. "Chinese satellite is one giant step for the quantum internet" www.nature.com/news/chinese-satellite-is-one-giant-step-for-the-quantum-internet-1.20329"China's quantum communication satellite to extend working lifetime by two yrs" www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-02/15/c_137825303.htm
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Post by bathstoke on Aug 5, 2019 16:15:50 GMT
I cannot believe that there is actually a thread about this nonsense. The biggest load of unscientific, unsupported, unmitigated bollocks that there has ever been committed to paper. I read 'The Old Straight Track' many years ago and instantly showed to my own satisfaction that it was the usual human trait of apophenia (finding connections and meaning in unrelated phenomena). As one of the posts above says, you can find straight lines joining 3 or more apparently significant points all over the place. We also have the amusing spectacle of people using small scale maps of the UK and drawing 'straight lines' between various points. We live on a spheroid. folks, those lines aren't straight on the ground. A lot of this shit comes from people calling earlier populations 'The Ancients', which gives the impression that they were somehow old civilisations steeped in millenia of wisdom when, in fact, they were people pretty much like us, just without the benefit of the last thousand years of scientific study and progress. In other words, they knew fuck all about the universe, so they made up shit to account for whatever they didn't understand. The exceptions to their ignorance are areas where simple observation and arithmetic, performed over many generations, may have led them to be able to predict some astronomical events to an impressive degree of accuracy. Like I say, they were like us, not stupid, just ignorant and desperately trying to understand their universe. I really struggle with the widespread attitude today that seems to believe any kind of New Age, evidence-free bullshit and yet refuses to believe evidence-founded, scientific fact. Yeah, but did you vote Leave or Remain...
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Post by Roland the Thompson Gunner on Aug 5, 2019 16:39:00 GMT
I remain a Remainer, living in hope that the process gets so fucked up that we don't leave at all.
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Post by musik on Aug 5, 2019 16:40:54 GMT
Yeah, but did you vote Leave or Remain... 😄👍 (funny irony there ...) Myself a believer in acupuncture and zone therapy above all. I like the reasoning they present regarding lines of the body. I had a thought way back, if there are body lines, there might as well be Earth lines as well, since that is a kind of body also.
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Post by bathstoke on Aug 5, 2019 20:36:46 GMT
Yeah, but did you vote Leave or Remain... 😄👍 (funny irony there ...) Myself a believer in acupuncture and zone therapy above all. I like the reasoning they present regarding lines of the body. I had a thought way back, if there are body lines, there might as well be Earth lines as well, since that is a kind of body also. Truth is Musik, I thought he’d be Remain, because his argument was from a position of logic. I was just dangling a worm🎣 That’s no disrespect, as I’m also Remain. Not out of any ideological stance. I just think it’s best option.
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Aug 5, 2019 21:16:09 GMT
Yeah, but did you vote Leave or Remain... 😄👍 (funny irony there ...) Myself a believer in acupuncture and zone therapy above all. I like the reasoning they present regarding lines of the body. I had a thought way back, if there are body lines, there might as well be Earth lines as well, since that is a kind of body also. Yes mate. I agree with your conclusion that the Earth {and Cosmos} has enegy 'chakras' etc.
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Post by Roland the Thompson Gunner on Aug 13, 2019 16:46:54 GMT
😄👍 (funny irony there ...) Myself a believer in acupuncture and zone therapy above all. I like the reasoning they present regarding lines of the body. I had a thought way back, if there are body lines, there might as well be Earth lines as well, since that is a kind of body also. Yes mate. I agree with your conclusion that the Earth {and Cosmos} has enegy 'chakras' etc. Oh dear, I haven't been on for a while and I find we have even more air-headed fuckwittery. Why do people find it so easy to believe fantasy based nonsense? Too many menhir huggers on here.
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Post by bathstoke on Aug 13, 2019 16:57:03 GMT
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Aug 14, 2019 20:58:23 GMT
No doubting that explains some of the phenomena. But not all. It's that which I'm most interested in. Not so arsed about rocks that look like cocks etc. Though I am in a fb group 'things with faces'. It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle. "It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle." Now that I'd like to see!👍 Current fave....
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Post by bathstoke on Aug 14, 2019 21:10:03 GMT
"It's mainly a battered armchair that looks like Bungle." Now that I'd like to see!👍 Current fave.... Reminds me of the cyborg off Red Dwarf, but it’s a bit freaky at the same time...
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Post by cheeesfreeex on Aug 14, 2019 21:24:20 GMT
Current fave.... Reminds me of the cyborg off Red Dwarf, but it’s a bit freaky at the same time... It's the reincarnation of Thomas The Tank Engine. TT.
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