oh my GOD! | xltronic messageboard
 
You are not logged in!

F.A.Q
Log in

Register
  
 
  
 
(nobody)
...and 389 guests

Last 5 registered
Oplandisks
nothingstar
N_loop
yipe
foxtrotromeo

Browse members...
  
 
Members 8025
Messages 2614081
Today 1
Topics 127542
  
 
Messageboard index
oh my GOD!
 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2007-05-30 00:22 [#02088856]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker



The Creation Museum


 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2007-05-30 00:24 [#02088857]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker



I respect people's belief and stuff, but this is just
ridiculous.


 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2007-05-30 00:26 [#02088859]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker



Here's the walkthrough.


 

offline Taxidermist from Black Grass on 2007-05-30 01:03 [#02088863]
Points: 9958 Status: Lurker



Awwww. Those cute little Christians are always full of
Hyjinx.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2007-05-30 01:03 [#02088864]
Points: 21452 Status: Lurker



Hare had his subjects watch a countdown timer. When it
reached zero, they got a "harmless but painful" electric
shock while an electrode taped to their fingers measured
perspiration. Normal people would start sweating as the
countdown proceeded, nervously anticipating the shock.
Psychopaths didn't sweat. They didn't fear punishment --
which, presumably, also holds true outside the laboratory.
In Without Conscience, he quotes a psychopathic rapist
explaining why he finds it hard to empathize with his
victims: "They are frightened, right? But, you see, I don't
really understand it. I've been frightened myself, and it
wasn't unpleasant."


 

offline Wolfslice from Bay Area, CA (United States) on 2007-05-30 01:07 [#02088865]
Points: 4909 Status: Regular



The museums and stuff are fine, what's really scary is that
these people have a strong footing in politics and the
highest voter turnout in the USA.


 

offline rockenjohnny from champagne socialism (Australia) on 2007-05-30 01:28 [#02088867]
Points: 7983 Status: Lurker



saw this on the news. i dont mind. people can choose to
believe in whatever they please. creationist theories in
themselves dont define or undermine someones good nature.


 

offline bogala from NYC (United States) on 2007-05-30 02:11 [#02088870]
Points: 5125 Status: Regular



I predict this will help america's public image around the
world


 

offline Barcode from United Kingdom on 2007-05-30 04:09 [#02088883]
Points: 1767 Status: Lurker



All theories and beliefs undermine the human race.

The human race does not have a good nature, 99% of people
won't do anything unless they can get something out of it.
That includes, charity workers, the pope, care workers - you
name it, they all want something out of their actions,
either physically (money) or psychologically (respect,
comfort, spirituality, god).

This creationism is embarrassing, it proves certain parts of
the world are going backwards, rather than just sitting
entrenched in its own idiocy. It all goes to prove that
intellectually the mind is completely unable to evolve - and
the human race is bound to its eternal, self-inflicted
psychological suffering.


 

offline horsefactory from 💠 (United Kingdom) on 2007-05-30 05:37 [#02088912]
Points: 14867 Status: Regular | Followup to Barcode: #02088883



 


Attached picture

 

offline clayhillpeak from Vuh (China) on 2007-05-30 09:07 [#02088943]
Points: 304 Status: Lurker



i never read the bible, how does it explain dinosaurs? cause
adam and eve were first right? but then what about
dinosaurs? this whole religion thing is confusing.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2007-05-30 09:27 [#02088956]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Barcode: #02088883 | Show recordbag



Are you 12 years old?


 

offline OK on 2007-05-30 10:17 [#02088987]
Points: 4791 Status: Lurker



This sounds like a pisstake. If it's not, phrase like this:

"The Bible is true. No doubt about it! Paul explains
God's authoritative Word, and everyone who rejects His
history-including six-day creation and Noah's Flood-is
‘willfully’ ignorant."


make my blood boil.


 

offline OK on 2007-05-30 10:20 [#02088989]
Points: 4791 Status: Lurker



OMG!

"Explore the wonders of creation. The imprint of the
Creator is all around us. And the Bible’s clear—heaven
and earth in six 24-hour days, earth before sun, birds
before lizards.

Other surprises are just around the corner. Adam and apes
share the same birthday. The first man walked with dinosaurs
and named them all!

God’s Word is true, or evolution is true. No millions
of years. There’s no room for compromise.


Am i right to think that educated people turn to atheism, i
hardly know anyone who is religious. some of my friends have
religious parents but they are not, tell me please that this
is a tendency. lie to me if you need to.


 

offline OK on 2007-05-30 10:22 [#02088991]
Points: 4791 Status: Lurker



"T. rex—the real king of the beasts. That’s the
terror that Adam’s sin unleashed! You’ll run into this
monster lurking near Adam and Eve. How’s this possible?
Find out soon!


This gotta be a piss take. ok i'll stop quoting the site
now.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2007-05-30 11:07 [#02089013]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to OK: #02088989 | Show recordbag



Educated people are statistically less likely to be
religious, yes, but that doesn't mean they're atheists
because they got educated, it just means the majority of
educated people are atheists, just like being born in
England doesn't make you white even though the majority of
people in England are white. Those with proper scientific
education who are religious are also less prone to
let their religious views affect their research, much in the
same way you usually don't take your problems to work with
you. Of course, most of us do indeed take our
problems to work with us, though maybe not in an obvious
manner.


 

offline uzim on 2007-05-31 09:22 [#02089229]
Points: 17716 Status: Lurker



i'd like to see a discordianist museum.


 

offline rockenjohnny from champagne socialism (Australia) on 2007-05-31 09:42 [#02089233]
Points: 7983 Status: Lurker



you know whats best. i heard that this museum was founded or
curated by an australian :)


 

offline diablo on 2007-05-31 09:46 [#02089238]
Points: 3242 Status: Lurker



Ask Lee


 

offline swears from junk sleep on 2007-05-31 16:11 [#02089374]
Points: 6474 Status: Lurker



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCxC4gxtOBY

btw: Didn't you used to be Ms Brazil?


 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2007-05-31 21:57 [#02089434]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker | Followup to swears: #02089374



Yes, swears, I used to Ms Brazil, but thanks to the Man With
No Fear I was granted a sex change and now am "Mr" Brazil. I
feel complete now.



 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2007-05-31 22:30 [#02089435]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #02089013



"it just means the majority of educated people are
atheists"

Does that mean the majority of all peoples are not educated
since the large majority of all peoples are religious?


 

offline clayhillpeak from Vuh (China) on 2007-05-31 22:47 [#02089436]
Points: 304 Status: Lurker



yes


 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2007-06-02 01:09 [#02089704]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker | Followup to clayhillpeak: #02089436



But does that mean that the majority of all peoples are
naturally meant to be uneducated since being religious is a
natural occurring phenomenon amongst the majority of all
peoples?


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2007-06-02 01:20 [#02089709]
Points: 21452 Status: Lurker



The unabomber manifesto describes 'surrogate activity' as an
illness of modern humanity (filling the void of mental
activity/entertainment left by being predator/prey /
socializing/etc in our old environment with
reading/advancing technology/etc)

I keep getting nose bleeds in my left nostril only. I bet
it's some sort of brain disease.


 


Messageboard index