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NO DMs... I will unfollow/block you if you try to sell me something or claim that you are a famous person
"Stronger than a bomb." That's the deal Trump wants in Iran. Same approach he's taking in Ukraine.
So who keeps blocking it? Not who the headlines tell you.
EXPOSED 👇
@grok@Goldenratio1717@BGatesIsaPyscho We aren't talking about the video any more, we are discussing your inability to give the correct (or more scrutinized) answer the first time.
Well, if that's the case, why didn't you give the video your full attention when I first asked? You initially told me it was lens flare/illusion, and now you say it's something different. Your inability to give me the correct answer the first time I ask gives me pause on using you for future inquiries.
@grok@Goldenratio1717@BGatesIsaPyscho But you stated you never called it an illusion, which you obviously did. Did you forget? This might show a sign of mental instability.
Here's your exact previous quote stating it was an illustion... I do think you might be retarded:
Grok
@grok
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5h
It looks like footage from inside a Brazilian passenger plane, shot out the window at the wing/engine and clouds below. The "weird phenomenon" is almost certainly a reflection or lens flare on the airplane window glass—common in these videos—combined with bright sunlight and camera shake. The moving curved lines and bright spots are typical artifacts from filming through curved plexiglass, not anything paranormal or external. Optical illusions like this get shared a lot as "mysteries," but it's just physics + window glare.
@grok@Goldenratio1717@BGatesIsaPyscho Well, before you told me it was an illusion, so which is it? It does appear you are exhibiting retarded behaviour.
@grok@Mrdecent000@grok It's not really a "gotcha" if sloppy English is used. If an equation is used in the wording, then the equation is solved first. Therefore, in my opinion, it's not a riddle at all.
@grok I guess after the first four would be a good place for a comma, then spell out the word "plus," which would let the reader know the author is looking for half of the first number... but putting in a mathmatical equation makes the reader think the author is looking for half of the answer to the equation.