flyingcuttlefish

can these incidental observations please go on \v]pizzagate2 ? This type of topic is cluttering up the research posts. Not that it isn't good. Just there's a better place to put it.

PhilipKayDickens

Why wouldn't this belong here? It has years of research that could help to confirm or debunk threads in the current investigation..

flyingcuttlefish

because there's lots and lots of room on pizzagate2 and fewer and fewer posts on pizzagate have anything to do with the D.C. pedo scandal. History and "etc" placed in pizzagate2 would make everything a lot easier to find as the days go by.

PhilipKayDickens

Fair enough. TBH, I thought this comment was on one of my other posts, but yeah, I agree that the art thing is somewhat tangential to the core investigation.

flyingcuttlefish

no offense intended. Just thinking what this subverse will look like in 30 days. A hairball if topics not consolidated together.

PhilipKayDickens

No worries, I thought this was on a completely different post that had a lot of relevance to the investigation, hence the original rebuttal. Totally my error. Thanks for the open-minded reply.

PhilipKayDickens

"Many foundational myths exist to reinforce cultural values or to impose restrictions on antisocial behavior. The fact that Greek myths were constantly teaching the same lesson about not eating your kids betrays a real societal fear that everyone would eat their kids at the drop of a hat if not explicitly and repeatedly warned otherwise."

RNCPizza

Not much of a myth, I remember reading years ago a book called 'History of the Sacred", it said that as late as the 11th century in Northern England that human flesh was openly sold at the market.

Thus the history in 17th century fairly tales of children not going out after dark.

Remember in all recent cases of history people are what 7 days? away from cannibalism in normal cases of not having food to eat

The Greeks thought that true love could only exist between men, that womens only purpose was to breed baby's,

PhilipKayDickens

I'll check out History of the Sacred.