Virtual Ministry Archive











 

go to bed at 9 am and wake at 5 pm (my morning lol)- i listen to the frieking greatest techno on the planet


 


 




 

Guru z3n8 is an Epic Ethical Art Hacker ::: This.. ladies & gentle freaks is -> FUCKTALK, on Ha.ck.er N3ws: Migrating Dillo from GitHub https://ift.tt/2bDTv16


New moaning and creaming orgasmic story on Hack3r News: Migrating Dillo from GitHub https://ift.tt/j0vrySd


 


 


 

Xiaofang loves grampas with a bit of sugar !!! bro has lived through all the world wars lmao nice seasoned cock


 

The warning did not arrive from an economist or a policy report. It came from the CEO of McDonald’s, who admitted that lower and middle income Americans have stopped coming in. A fast food chain reporting a double digit drop in visits should not feel ominous, but it does. It sounds like the kind of quiet detail future historians highlight when they write about the moment a society finally saw the truth of its own decline. When people cannot afford the cheapest meal in the country, the story is not about food. It is about the collapse of financial dignity for millions. For most of the twentieth century, the promise of America rested on a simple idea. If workers earned enough, the country would grow. The middle class bought homes, cars, appliances, and the occasional bag of fast food. Their spending powered the economy. Their stability was the country’s infrastructure as surely as roads and bridges. But over fifty years, the ground shifted beneath them. The numbers explain what happened more clearly than any political speech. Productivity rose more than 60 percent since the late 1970s, yet typical wages barely kept pace with inflation. CEO pay increased more than 1,200 percent. The top one percent now holds more wealth than the entire bottom ninety percent. Rent devours paychecks. Credit card debt has reached historic highs. And for the first time in modern history, younger generations are projected to be poorer than the ones before them. This is not an income gap. It is a widening fault line. The McDonald’s data is a grim milestone because fast food is often the last thing people hold on to when budgets tighten. When even that slips out of reach, households have nowhere else to cut. A country in that position is not healthy. It is exhausted. And there is a bleak irony in watching corporations express concern about the very economic pain they helped create. For decades, many of the largest companies in America kept wages low, fought unions, consolidated markets, and relied on taxpayers to subsidize their workers through food stamps and Medicaid. They kept prices attractive by keeping paychecks stagnant. They created an economy that asked workers to support a system that would not support them in return. That system was never sustainable. Economies do not thrive when workers can barely afford the goods they produce. We have seen the early stages of this before. In the 1920s, wealth pooled at the top while families across the country relied on credit to maintain a basic standard of living. Consumption looked steady until it was exposed as debt fueled illusion. When the bubble burst, the Great Depression followed. Economists have noted for years how closely the modern United States resembles that earlier era: concentrated wealth, political capture, weakened labor power, and the steady erosion of the middle. The unsettling truth is that none of this happened by accident. Policy choices favored the wealthy. Taxes shifted away from capital. Antitrust enforcement faded. The minimum wage lost value every single year it went unchanged. Union membership collapsed. All of it pushed power upward. All of it hollowed out the center of the country. And all of it led to the moment when a fast food chain could quietly reveal that millions of Americans can no longer afford a burger. We are told the stock market is strong. We are told unemployment is low. We are told the economy is healthy. Meanwhile, families are rationing groceries and skipping meals. Meanwhile, wages cannot cover basic costs. Meanwhile, parents who work full time cannot afford child care. These realities are not compatible. They cannot coexist forever. The McDonald’s warning is not a blip. It is a symptom of a society that has drained its middle class to keep its upper class afloat. It is a sign of a country running on the last reserve tank of its promise. And it is a sign of what happens when generations are told to work harder for less while being blamed for struggling inside a system designed to keep them there. If the most affordable food in the country is slipping out of reach, the question is no longer whether the economy is in danger. The question is how much longer the center can hold before it gives way entirely. And when that moment comes, who will still believe this was the best we could do?


 


 

give me about a month or so to get my finances more in order I want to take on several projects with the ministry like audio discourses on mixcloud and a digital occult library so gonna take those on in the new year hahaha should be super fun


 


 

might start working with a topic then do an audio dhamma discourse and post here try and do around 10 min to 30 min ish maybe I can drone on for hours we will see it will be interesting I just find I am good writing the updates and really liked speaking dhamma as a discourse because it allows a type of connection that is indescribable and I used to live in homes where it was not ideal due to other people living and squacking around including small parrots so yeah I find I have a lot of isolation in my current abode and its fun so yeah it will be interesting I just dreaded like writing about a philosophical topic for some reason I just wonder if I will be an alan watts in like 30 years wise old stoner that everyone likes :)


 Watch out for royal sexual interference clowns always touching you erotically  and being strange at all times !! and really freaking you out especially if they are the opposite gender

The human body is incredible. 206 bones, 7 trillion nerves, and 60,000 miles of vessels – all running 24/7. Start with your vascular system: an estimated 60,000 miles (96,560 km) of arteries, veins, and capillaries snake through you right now. That’s enough to circle Earth more than twice. Your heart pumps blood through this entire network every minute of every day – delivering oxygen, nutrients, hormones, and carrying away waste. Then there’s your nervous system – a full-body electrical grid. It contains about 7 trillion nerves, constantly transmitting signals from your brain to your body and back again. These messages move at speeds up to 268 miles per hour (431 km/h). Every blink, every heartbeat, every moment of memory or movement depends on them. Holding it all together is your skeletal system, made of 206 bones. Far from just scaffolding, your bones protect organs, store calcium, produce blood cells, and anchor every muscle. Without them, there’s no movement, no structure – not even a place to keep your brain safe. What’s even more amazing is they’re talking to each other constantly. Blood feeds nerves. Nerves fire muscles. Bones respond to pressure and repair themselves when fractured. Your systems form an intelligent network, adapting to everything from hunger to danger to joy.


 

For 1,900 years, two massive Roman ships lay hidden beneath an Italian lake. When Mussolini drained the water in 1932, the world saw floating palaces with marble floors, heating systems, and ball bearings—technology thought invented 1,800 years later. Then the Nazis burned them. In October 1928, Benito Mussolini stood at the edge of Lake Nemi, 19 miles south of Rome, and ordered the water drained. Fishermen had known for centuries that something massive lay beneath the surface. Local legends spoke of Emperor Caligula's sunken pleasure barges—enormous ships built between 37-41 AD for a lake only 3.5 miles around. But no one had ever seen them whole. Mussolini wanted them. For fascist Italy, recovering Caligula's ships would prove that Roman greatness could be reclaimed. That Italian engineering could accomplish what had been impossible for 1,900 years. So they reactivated an ancient Roman drainage tunnel, connected it to massive electric pumps, and began lowering the lake. On March 28, 1929, the stern of the first ship broke the surface. The crowd cheered. Archaeologists wept. Journalists scrambled to photograph what emerged from the mud. It wasn't just a ship. It was a floating palace. The prima nave measured 230 feet long and 66 feet wide—the size of a modern naval destroyer. The seconda nave was even larger: 240 feet by 79 feet. But size wasn't what stunned the world. It was what was inside. Marble columns. Mosaic floors depicting gods and mythical creatures. Lead plumbing with bronze stopcocks delivering hot and cold running water. Heating systems. Baths with heated floors. Rotating statue platforms mounted on ball bearings—a technology historians believed wasn't invented until the 19th century. The ships featured anchors thought to be medieval innovations. Bilge pumps working like modern bucket dredges. Three layers of lead sheeting protecting the hulls. Decorative bronze fittings—wolf heads, lion heads, panther heads—holding massive 37-foot oars. This wasn't supposed to be possible. Roman engineering was advanced, but this? This looked like something from 1,000 years in the future. Emperor Caligula, who ruled Rome from 37-41 AD, had commissioned these ships at age 25. History remembers him as mad—demanding to be worshipped as a god, allegedly making his horse a consul, murdered by his own guards at 28. But history forgot he was also a visionary shipbuilder. The Roman biographer Suetonius described Caligula's ships as having "ten banks of oars...poops blazing with jewels...filled with ample baths, galleries and saloons, supplied with a great variety of vines and fruit trees." Everyone thought Suetonius exaggerated. Ancient writers always did. The Nemi ships proved he didn't. Caligula had built these vessels on Lake Nemi—sacred to the goddess Diana—possibly as floating temples, possibly as pleasure barges. The lake was called "Diana's Mirror" because the moon's reflection centered perfectly on its surface in summer. Why build 240-foot palace ships on a tiny volcanic crater lake? Because Caligula could. One year after the ships launched, Caligula was assassinated. The ships were stripped of precious objects, overloaded with stones, and deliberately sunk—hidden from whoever came next. They stayed hidden for 1,854 years. The recovery took four years and consumed 40 million cubic meters of water. Workers lowered the lake level by 66 feet. On August 21, 1931, the weight reduction caused a massive mudslide—500,000 cubic meters of mud erupted from the lake floor. Work stopped. The government debated abandoning the project. The lake began refilling, damaging the partially dried seconda nave. But in 1932, Mussolini ordered them to continue. The Navy Ministry took over. By October 1932, both ships were recovered. They were housed in a purpose-built museum—the Museo delle Navi Romane—inaugurated in 1940. For four years, the ships were displayed. Scholars studied them. Artists sketched them. Photographers documented every detail. The Nemi ships proved that Romans could build vessels as large as ancient sources claimed. They settled century-old debates about Roman anchors, lead pipes, waterproofing techniques. They revealed engineering sophistication historians had never imagined. Then came May 31, 1944. World War II was in its final year. Allied forces were pushing north through Italy. German forces were retreating through the Alban Hills near Lake Nemi. Around 8:00 PM, American artillery hit a German battery near the museum. The shells caused minimal damage, forcing German troops to relocate. Two hours later, smoke rose from the museum. By the time Italian staff arrived, both ships were engulfed in flames. The preservatives that had protected the ancient wood—pine tar, linseed oil, turpentine—made the fires burn impossibly hot. The wooden ships, saturated with flammable chemicals, incinerated completely. By morning, Caligula's floating palaces were ash. Who started the fire remains disputed 80 years later. An Italian commission blamed retreating German soldiers, claiming they deliberately burned the ships out of spite. German sources blamed American artillery. Recent investigations suggest the fire started simultaneously in both exhibition halls—too coordinated to be accidental. The truth died with those who were there. What survived: bronze fittings. Lead pipes. Marble fragments. A few decorative pieces now displayed in Rome's Palazzo Massimo. Photographs. Naval survey drawings. Archaeological measurements. But the ships themselves—1,900 years of preserved Roman engineering genius—were gone. The Museum of Roman Ships reopened in 1953, displaying one-fifth scale models built in Naples naval dockyards. The models, constructed from the detailed surveys, show what was lost. Today, visitors to Lake Nemi see replicas. They see bronze lion heads that held oars. They see fragments of the marble floors. They see photographs of what once was. And they imagine. Imagine Caligula, age 25, commissioning engineers to build the impossible. Imagine craftsmen creating ball bearings 1,800 years before the Industrial Revolution. Imagine marble columns and mosaic floors floating on a sacred lake. Imagine these ships surviving Rome's fall, the Dark Ages, the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, two World Wars—only to burn in a single night. The Nemi ships taught historians humility. Before 1932, scholars ridiculed ancient sources that described massive Roman vessels. They dismissed accounts of Roman grain ships as exaggerations. They debated whether Romans even used certain anchor designs. The Nemi ships proved the ancient sources right. Romans weren't primitive. They were engineers who understood ball bearings, hydraulic systems, waterproof concrete, lead plumbing. They built ships that wouldn't be matched in size or luxury for over a millennium. And then, for 1,900 years, those ships lay hidden in mud—preserving secrets about what ancient civilizations actually achieved. Mussolini wanted to showcase Italian greatness by recovering them. The Nazis destroyed them while retreating. History gave us four years to study 1,900 years of preserved genius. Then history took it back. The tragedy of the Nemi ships isn't just that they burned. It's that they showed us how much we didn't know—how much ancient people accomplished that we forgot or dismissed—and then disappeared before we could fully understand. Lake Nemi still reflects the moon perfectly in summer, just as it did when Caligula's floating palaces glided across its surface. But now, only the ghosts remain.


 

every single workplace is a pseudo secret society of invite only members


 











 











 

Guru z3n8 is an Epic Ethical Art Hacker ::: This.. ladies & gentle freaks is -> FUCKTALK, on Ha.ck.er N3ws: A Love Letter to FreeBSD https://ift.tt/FjU2Z6E


New moaning and creaming orgasmic story on Hack3r News: A Love Letter to FreeBSD https://ift.tt/56Y82q4

oh she seems nice!


 

systemic racism is the same as OVERT personal racism like DJT might as well just walk around in a KKK wizards outfit all day like wtf why do we not perceive him as a known racist? (and overt serial killer)