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Naga, Who is Lord Nergal ? - He is the 🤣knucklehead god of everything that cannot be bought 'OR' negotiated with, the misunderstood Lord of the Harsh Sun and the Underworld — By General NobuNaGa

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  NERGAL: The Misunderstood Lord of the Harsh Sun and the Underworld For thousands of years, Nergal stood as one of Mesopotamia’s most formidable deities — a god who embodied the violent, destructive, and feverish forces of nature. Yet in modern discourse, he is often flattened into a “fallen angel,” a “demon,” or a character in occult fantasy. These labels say more about later religious politics than about Nergal himself. To understand him properly, we return to the ancient sources. 1. Who Nergal Actually Was in Mesopotamian Thought Nergal emerges from Sumerian and Akkadian traditions as a god of: The Underworld Death and plague War and destruction The scorching, deadly sun at its zenith He is not a passive custodian of the dead. He is the embodiment of the hard edge of existence — the sun that burns crops, the fever that sweeps through cities, the battlefield where life is torn apart. His Sumerian name, En-eri-gal , means “Lord of the Great City,” a euphemism for the Underworld...

In the Hebrew Bible, Prometheus would have been killed, drowned in the flood. The Bible Contains two opposing visions of Human Potential '' almost as if two factions (in ancient language: “heavenly hosts”) disagree about humanity’s future.

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  I. The Problem No One Wants to Admit If you read the Bible straight through, without inherited assumptions, you notice something strange: In the Old Testament , humans who reach for knowledge, power, or transcendence are punished. In the New Testament , Jesus gives knowledge, power, and transcendence freely. These aren't small differences. They're opposite philosophies about what humans are allowed to become. The tension is so sharp that many argue the Bible preserves two incompatible cosmologies — almost as if two factions (in ancient language: “heavenly hosts”) disagreed about humanity’s future. Not literally aliens with spaceships — but two ideological camps within the ancient imagination of the divine realm. II. The Old Testament Pattern: “Stay in Your Lane, Human.” Across the Hebrew Bible, the same rule repeats: When humans or divine beings cross boundaries, they die. Illicit Knowledge Adam and Eve eat from the tree of knowledge → exile. Illicit Technology Babel buil...

Open letter to ''Orion And The Galactic Federation Council'' If Indeed You Exist Beyond Dreams - Why fake white's supremacy is dangerous to earth.

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  To the emissaries who claim to have summoned millions of us to incarnate on this planet: I accepted the call. Many of us did. Yet I arrived here with no conscious memory of any pre‑Earth existence — only flashes of places I refuse to describe publicly, lest the small‑minded dismiss the message by pathologizing the messenger. My origin is irrelevant. The condition of this planet is the point. Earth is not a blank rock. It is an ancient archive. Civilizations have risen and fallen here long before humans learned to shape fire. And beyond Earth, the cosmos is littered with the ruins of species who lived, evolved, and perished before humanity was even a rumor in the universe’s imagination. The human belief that “space is empty” is a confession of their own blindness. And yet, this planet — this ancient, wounded world — is currently governed by a group who named themselves “white,” a political invention masquerading as biology. Since Constantine and the Nicaean architects coded the ea...

At first glance, the classic rat experiments of B. F. Skinner seem to contradict the Garcia Effect.

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  At first glance, the classic rat experiments of B. F. Skinner seem to contradict the Garcia Effect . One suggests that animals can learn almost any association through reinforcement; the other shows that some associations are learned instantly while others are nearly impossible. But this isn’t a contradiction. It’s a refinement. The classic rat experiments (Skinnerian conditioning) Skinner’s work using the Skinner box demonstrated how behavior can be shaped through consequences. Rats learn via operant conditioning: press a lever, get food; stop pressing, the reward disappears. Over time, behavior is strengthened or weakened depending on reinforcement or punishment. This learning is gradual, incremental, and depends heavily on timing—rewards need to follow actions closely to be effective. This framework maps neatly onto everyday human behavior: You check your phone more often because notifications reward you You work harder when bonuses or recognition follow performance...

The Classic Rat Experiment (What Actually Happened) .

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  The “Classic Rat Experiment” people usually refer to is the work of B.F. Skinner in the 1930s–1950s, often simplified in textbooks and online summaries. What actually happened is more precise—and more interesting—than the popular version. 🧪 The Real Experiment: Operant Conditioning Skinner developed a controlled setup called the Skinner Box . What was inside: A lever (or button) A food dispenser Sometimes a light or sound cue A rat (or pigeon) What happened: The rat was placed in the box with no prior knowledge. It moved around randomly (exploratory behavior). At some point, it accidentally pressed the lever. Food was delivered immediately. Over time, the rat learned to press the lever intentionally to get food. 🧠 What Skinner Was Demonstrating This wasn’t just about rats pressing buttons—it established a core principle in Behaviorism : Behavior is shaped by its consequences. This is called Operant Conditioning . Key mechanisms: Positive...

The Garcia Effect: How One Bad Experience Shapes Behaviour — in Rats, Humans. Humans Have Their Own Garcia Effects Humans don’t just learn from logic. We learn from emotion, pain, and survival instincts

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  When psychologist John Garcia discovered that rats could learn to avoid a food after just one nauseating experience, he wasn’t just uncovering a quirk of animal behaviour. He was revealing a deep evolutionary principle : the brain is built to protect us, even if it means learning fast, learning emotionally, and sometimes learning inaccurately. This principle — taste aversion learning — is now known as The Garcia Effect. And it doesn’t just apply to rats. It helps explain human memory, trauma, prejudice, consumer behaviour, political reactions, and even global economic patterns. What Garcia Found (and Why It Was Revolutionary) In Garcia’s experiments: Rats tasted a new food. Hours later, they were exposed to something that caused nausea. Despite the long delay, they formed a powerful association: “That taste = danger.” They avoided the food permanently. This broke the rules of classical conditioning, which said learning requires: immediate pairing repeated trials any stimulus can...

Did my subconscious basically assemble a legitimate research framework or Not ? CRM came to me in a dream. 🐺

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  My Question: GPT “CRM is a title that came to me in a dream. I remember it’s a topic, but I forgot the full meaning. CRM… Critical Resonance something? Could you suggest a full meaning if there’s a field or concept like that in human sciences, society, or academia?” GPT “CRM” already has several established meanings in academia and the social sciences, so before inventing something entirely new, it’s worth situating your “Critical Resonance …” intuition among real frameworks—and then extending it in a coherent way. 1. Existing, widely used meanings of CRM In human sciences and society-focused fields, CRM most commonly refers to: Customer Relationship Management (business, sociology of markets, data systems) Cultural Resource Management (anthropology, archaeology, heritage studies) Crisis Resource Management (healthcare systems, organizational behavior) None of these match your “resonance” intuition, which suggests something more theoretical—likely in critical theory...