a repository

a repository

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Barnaby rudge tale of the Riots of 1780 Charles Dickens

 Barnaby rudge by Charles Dickens A Tale of the Riots of 1780 starts out with a preface about London and a raven becoming extinct and this takes place IN an inn called the maypole, was a place of public entertainment ...it was a gabled old building..... talks about the constitution of mermaids and that mermaids are not women...

this place of entertainment called the Maypole was  a hostel .....an inn.....was called  a human man trap a Decoy for husband......

the Gordon riots  were anti-catholic riots. AI confirms they were real and were the result of a piece of legislation called the Catholic Relief act 1778

no popery riots...no kings.... These people did not want to Pope set up next to their King there was a riot

the leader of the riots was Lord George Gordon 

locksmith a landlord treason by King George II 

chapter one ends in a crime ...MURDER a gardener 

the Protestants did not want Mary Catholics 


 talks about a ghost Freemason 

Friday, February 27, 2026

 House of pomegranate by Oscar Wilde is three different stories  the first one is called the Young King it starts out he's meeting the professor of etiquette a lesson and then there was also a dead woman and a child abduction .Swift Italian poison slew the mom the princess was lowered into a grave on top of another body tied up...... this young king .......on the day before his coronation that he's meeting with the etiquette professor... he's 16 acknowledge heir... talks about King's Raiment

Thursday, February 19, 2026

 Daniel Defoe Robinson cruso 1719 he was born in 1632 city of York father is from Germany he was Shipwrecked during a storm island of Despair no food no weapons no clothes drank and strong punch Shipwrecked headed to gonilla Africa when began to blow to see the rise he was seasick 7 days out and see the wind was contrary unnamed ship sprung a leak this was all after his friend offered him a free ride on the boat it sinks on September 30th 1659 near or WinCo River three men were killed eight were wounded they were carried prisoners Cape de Verde Islands they were going to set up themselves as a guinea Trader trading slaves Canary Islands there was Negroes leopards Muhammad they taught a pair to talk his name was Paul they grew corn they built a canoe out of a tree 28 years he was there it said online

Flat land

 Flatland by edwin abbot it's about these two dimensional shapes , flat like a shadow walking around on the earth , you know , envisioning the three in four dimensional worlds


Quote about the acute angle


Space land tradesman of respectable class, peace cry, under penalty of death, involuntary, sneezing, and illegal action isosceles, women were straight lines isosceles were soldiers working class equilateral, middle class squares was gentlemen.  Pentagons were professionals

Monday, February 16, 2026

 Clockwork Orange Anthony Burgess Dr pretends to cure an STD that's about space Peter George dim Georgie died boys in a corrective School 15 State Jail nasda slang Russian influenced Alex the government is trying to get you to destroy yourself they were wearing tights they were holding his eyelids open to make him watch Nazi videos with Beethoven music to produce an adverse reactionaction cured grown up at the end beat up by police

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

 flat earth ai

The concept of the Northwest Passage on a flat earth map, specifically referring to the 1892 "Gleason's New Standard Map of the World," presents the Arctic region as the center of a circular, disk-shaped world.
Key Details of the Northwest Passage on Flat Earth Maps:
  • Central Location: Unlike globe maps where the North Pole is just a point, on the Gleason azimuthal projection (often used in flat earth, 0.1.2), the Arctic regions, including the Northwest Passage, are depicted encircling or directly around the center point.
  • The "Ice Wall": In this model, the Arctic is in the center, while the outer edge of the map is bordered by a massive, all-encompassing ice wall, rather than Antarctica being a continent at the bottom.
  • 1892 Gleason Map: This map specifically represents the earth "as it is," stretched and flattened into a circular plane, which is often used by modern flat earth proponents.
  • Navigation Challenges: Some users note that navigating East or West on this type of map requires traveling in a circle around the center rather than a straight line, which contradicts actual compass navigation, a point often used to challenge the map's validity.
  • Historical Context: The Northwest Passage was long sought by explorers in the 18th and 19th centuries as a shortcut to Asia, and early, non-flat maps sometimes showed it as a direct, open, or mythical strait, which aligns with the "wishful mapping" of that era.
While the 1892 map was intended as a projection to aid in mapping the globe, it has been adopted as a cornerstone of the flat earth, or "stationary earth," theory.