Anyone else mining this? Seems to check a lot of boxes but released last week and /biz/ didn't notice
Zerocoin protocol, masternodes, one coin = one vote, no ICO, no premine, SmartDeposit interest per month. Potential
Mining
Japan used to be an ally of Britain and America, but the united states continuous humiliations and rejection of the japanese people led to the alienation of Japan from the other Great Powers and increased nationalism leading up to World War II.
- The Naturalization Act of 1790 restricted naturalized U.S. citizenship to "free white persons", which excluded the japanese immigrants from citizenship. As a result, the japanes americans were unable to vote and faced additional restrictions such as the inability to own land under many state laws.
- 1906: The San Francisco Board of Education successfully implements segregation for Asian students in public schools
- 1907: Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907 between United States and Japan results in Japan ending the issuance passports for new laborers.
- 1913: The California Alien Land Law of 1913 bans Japanese from purchasing land; whites threatened by Japanese success in independent farming ventures.
- 1919 at the Paris Peace Conference, Japan proposed the "RACIAL EQUALTY CLAUSE" in the Covenant of the League of Nations. It did not become part of the Treaty of Versailles, largely because of the opposition of Australia and the United States.
- 1924: The federal Immigration Act of 1924 banned immigration from Japan.
Significant Japanese immigration did not occur again until the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 ended 40 years of bans against immigration from Japan and other countries.
>With the goals of Postmodernism in giving a fuller, more sociological and pluralistic account of history, academic art has been brought back into history books and discussion. Nevertheless, since the early 1990s, academic art has experienced a limited resurgence through the Classical Realist atelier movement.[1] Still, the art is gaining a broader appreciation by the public at large, and whereas academic paintings once would only fetch a few hundreds of dollars in auctions, some now fetch millions.
Wtf I love postmodernism now
>history
>academia
Absolute cancer
Any images instances of WW1 troops utilizing hand carried shields on assaults?
>>3137170
I think its Polish riot police during interbellum period.
>″Beginning our research with inscriptions in Linear A carved on offering tables found in the many peak sanctuaries on the mountains of Crete, we recognise a clear relationship between Linear A and Sanskrit, the ancient language of India. There is also a connection to Hittite and Armenian. This relationship allows us to place the Minoan language among the so-called Indo-European languages, a vast family that includes modern Greek and the Latin of Ancient Rome. The Minoan and Greek languages are considered to be different branches of Indo-European. The Minoans probably moved from Anatolia to the island of Crete about 10,000 years ago. There were similar population movements to Greece. The relative isolation of the population which settled in Crete resulted in the development of its own language, Minoan, which is considered different to Mycenaean. In the Minoan language (Linear A), there are no purely Greek words, as is the case in Mycenaean Linear B; it contains only words also found in Greek, Sanskrit and Latin, i.e. sharing the same Indo-European origin."
>The Minoan and Greek languages are considered to be different branches of Indo-European. The Minoans probably moved from Anatolia to the island of Crete about 10,000 years ago.
How can anyone seriously posit that the Indo-Europeans were anywhere near Anatolia 12,000 years ago?
Sorry 10,000
Bullshit, eteocretan is a language isolate and Linear A which is still undeciphered probably conveyed that
>>3137124
If you look up the explanations for Linear-A almost all of them involve an Indo-European Connection for some reason. Only one guy says no.
What are some men who got w bad rep just because some of their followers were dicks?
He just tried to use the knowledge of his day to determine how stuff works, it's not his fault people turned him into a saint. If anything it teaches us no scienfitic theory shpuld be undisputed.
>>3136915
>implying modern science has, or is even in principle capable of disproving his metaphysics
im lmaoing at u right now op
>>3136915
Because some people are just retards and take ad hominem as a true argument.
If there is a God, I am convinced "He" only wants us to suffer and "His" will for man to find a partner and be fruitful and multiply is neither what's going to help our planet at this point or even applies to people that we could genuinely use more of.
Am I wrong?
>>3136810
>thinking you know better than god
Nothing wrong
>>3136737
Made the right decision at the time. Still is probably a good decision because a Soviet Germany would likely lead to an even bigger and bloodier world war against the USSR
How can this be? They had copper tools 6000 years ago in northern united states? at the same time as other people in the old world.
Were these some late eurasian migrants that brought metalwork?
The most conclusive evidence suggests that native copper was utilized to produce a wide variety of tools beginning in the Middle Archaic period circa 4,000 BC. The vast majority of this evidence comes from dense concentrations of Old Copper Culture finds in eastern Wisconsin. Old Copper Culture is a term used for ancient Native North American societies known to have been heavily involved in the utilization of copper for weaponry and tools.
making copper tools is not particularly hard, and with copper being super-abundant there's no reason not to.
>>3136722
this
>The metal would have been found in nature without need for smelting techniques and shaped into the desired form using heat and cold hammering techniques without chemically altering it by alloying it.
I like to think that hheaven is real and that I'll get in. And when I've died, I'll arrive. I'll see a face shrouded in long, silky brown hair. As the light dims and ai move toward the face, a large chin and pair of lips are reveiled. It's Charles II of Spain. He says to me "DURRRR DUHHJ DURRT I MAT A STINKY I LIK CATS DURRR DEEE".
What impact would Stephen Douglas winning in 1860 have on the Civil War?
>>3136497
Bump
>>3136497
What was his stance on slavery? What kind of man was he? Was he principled? Did he believe in the United States of America?
Does the stereotype of Chinese constantly dying keep true to most of its history? I tend to see a lot of over exaggeration in this so I wasn't sure
they had a few centuries of peace followed by an apocalypse
>>3136456
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11gc9uBUxCk
>>3136485
mildly entertaining, but this video doesn't add to the discussion in any meaningful way, as it is just cherry picking footage clips of neardeaths.
Das Land der Dichter und Denker
All Germans deserve a slow and painful death, preferably involving some sort of ironic gas chambers.
>>3136391
>le victorious war criminal face
>>3136391
this
>tfw no World War III
Just found out a lot of the most quoted parts of the New Testament and Qur'an are lifted straight out of various Rabbinical shitposts. Who are the greatest Rabbis of all time? Hillel the Elder is kind of nice, Jesus was clearly inspired by him