@MagaMag02534602@CamilloLangone Un ubriaco é una persona che ha tempi di reazione allungati, un'attenzione molto minore e puó perdere conoscenza improvvisamente
Ergo non dovrebbe mettersi al volante in quelle condizioni
@MagaMag02534602@CamilloLangone Non penso che 'tutti' gli islamici vogliano investire le persone o fare atti terroristici
Poi se ci sono segnali di pericolo é bene agire
@SimonSimplicio Many exorcists are not evaluated for their role, but chosen between priests that are interested in occult, demonology, liberation prayers etc.
And many times they are weirdos that love attention
Back in 2016 a jihadist nanny beheaded a four year old Russian child under her care and carried the severed head through the streets of Moscow while chanting “Allahu Akbar.”
The Russian state under Putin forced every Russian television station to cover up the story. The news was completely buried.
In fact I only found out about this incident a few days ago because @Babygravy9 posted about it.
@hasdeclined@CatholicArena animals were the nuns who run the House https://t.co/OVAfNLHQ0K
That inspector described infants living in the nursery as emaciated, with open abscesses and bloated stomachs.
Islam's anti-Pauline stance only emerges in Iraq in the late-8th century; it's borrowed from a Jewish anti-Christian polemic called the Toledot Yeshu, which depicts Paul as a double agent who schemes to separate Jesus' followers from the Israelites.
If you wonder why everything seems bleak and sad and terrible you should know that it's because Mani was the last true prophet of God sent to Earth but his followers failed to secure State support so God forsook us.
@joaosilveiraaa@Ckmmrreb Every priest could take a stipend for an intention in a concelebrated Mass, so it is not so correct to say 'it is One Mass'
Also the Divine Grace it is not like a cake, that could be divided in a finite number of parts
A lot of people have no idea the kind of wildlife America had before Europeans arrived. At one time you couldn’t throw a rock without hitting one of these. Real shame
@Robin_C_Douglas@b0rtcask1 have treated them with velvet gloves.
Roman Catholic Women Priest is trying to create a parallel hierarchy with parishes, but they do not have enough resources and coordination (and many radical feminists fight this endeavour)
@Robin_C_Douglas@b0rtcask1 Base Communities in Brazil were a sort of 'parallel parochial catholicism' with academies to support them but never tried to create a parallel hierarchy, and it was one of the reasons they were repressed so easily. If they started to ordain bishops probably mr. Ratzinger would
1/ Hidden in Paris for over 200 years: a high-fertility religious community known as “La Famille.”
Marrying exclusively within their own sect, with ~4,000 members divided amongst only 8 surnames.
A history so unusual that one of their prophets even appears in Les Misérables.
This rabbit was supposed to be dinner. In 1919 a French farmer found one in his barn with patchy, balding fur, figured it was a sick runt, and tossed it in with the meat rabbits headed for the local priest. The priest took one look at the soft, velvety coat and pulled it out of the meat pile.
The farmer's name was Désiré Caillon. The priest, Abbé Gillet, knew nothing about genetics. He could just tell that the fur on this little animal felt different from every other rabbit in the French countryside. So he bought a second one with the same coat from Caillon and started breeding them.
By 1924, Gillet had about 150 of them. He sold his first batch (one male and two regular females) for 6,000 francs, which was roughly $1,000 at the time. He called the breed Castorrex, mashing together the French word for beaver (the fur looked like beaver pelts) and the Latin word for king.
That same year, the rabbit went on display at the Paris International Rabbit Show. Two American breeders, John Fehr and Alfred Zimmerman, bought a pair and shipped them home. By 1929, the breed was officially recognized in the US.
The velvet coat comes from a single missing letter of DNA, tucked inside a gene called LIPH. LIPH makes a chemical the body needs to grow normal rabbit hair. Take that one letter out, and the long stiff outer hairs (the ones that stick up on a regular rabbit) shrink down until they are the same length as the soft fluffy hairs underneath. Every hair on the animal ends up the same height. That is what makes the coat feel like velvet when you run a hand over it.
The same mutation also packs the hairs much closer together. The best Rex coats fit 15,000 to 38,000 individual hairs into a single thumbnail-sized patch of skin, roughly the same density as chinchilla fur.
The black-and-tan look in the photo comes from a completely separate gene. Breeders call it the otter pattern. It paints the back, head, and ears solid black, then turns the belly, the rims of the eyes, and the insides of the ears a soft cream color, with a reddish line where the two halves meet. The same kind of markings you see on a Doberman.
The fur industry still treats Rex pelts as the closest substitute for beaver, seal, and chinchilla. The whole breed exists because a village priest a hundred years ago looked at a runt nobody wanted and saw something worth keeping.
I keep coming back to the "Doorman fallacy" when I hear about how Harvard has hired McKinsey to help it fire up to 25% of its staff without asking anyone what they actually do.
@SimonSimplicio Entire nuns communities were (and are) full of problematic people and barely kept together by discipline
Easy job to crack them if you have a basic knowledge on how the brain works