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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:07 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:08 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:08 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:08 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:08 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:08 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:08 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 2:18 pm
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Franz Werfel in Star Of The Unborn depicts a far future in which science and theology have been unified by Ursler's Fundamental Paradoxes. The Principle of the Infinitely Mobile Central Point of All Conceivable Orbits has established that the Earth really IS, in some way, the center of the universe, and the official Uranographer moves the stars around every night to spell out the day's news. This actually makes some sense in that statements like "the earth goes around the sun", or vice versa, imply that there is some absolute frame of reference. The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster claims that "gravity" is actually the Flying Spaghetti Monster gently pushing us down with his noodly appendages. This theory is supported by the fact that people are taller now than during the stone age, and also more numerous: Clearly there is less gravity for each of us these days, and thus we grow taller. Invoked by Charles Darwin in an essay 1842: What would the Astronomer say to the doctrine that the planets moved (not) according to the law of gravitation, but from the Creator having willed each separate planet to move in its particular orbit? In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slapstick, the protagonist and his sister theorize that gravity was once variable, which is how the Pyramids in Egypt were built. This turns out to be true when their theory is used by the Chinese to change gravity back to how it used to be. From that point on it varies daily. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy holds that learning to fly is a fairly simple manner. All one has to do is throw oneself at the ground... and miss, at which point physics will happily ignore what you're doing as long as you yourself don't think about it too hard. Several characters successfully achieve flight in this manner. It's pointed out in analysis that, From a Certain Point of View, this is actually true: being in orbit is literally a case of moving so quickly horizontally that you keep missing the ground while falling. 1984: As O'Brien puts it, "I could be floating in front of you right now if I wish it. Right now I do not wish it, because it does not suit the Party." Live Action TV Music Stand-Up Comedy Tabletop Games Web Comics Web Original Western Animation Real Life "Only a theory", other theories than gravity and evolution Literature Music Video Games Web Comics Real Life Feedback Video Example(s): Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes The Amazing Atheist does a Take That! to Josh Feuerstein and his reasoning against evolution in "Gravity Disproved In 2 Minutes", where his character Josh Moronstein uses the same line of logic as Feuerstein to "disprove" that gravity is real using a helium-filled balloon.
Alternative Title(s): Intelligent Falling Previous Index Next For Science! Anti-Intellectualism I Don't Pay You to Think Gravity Is a Harsh Mistress Gravity Tropes Gravity Is Purple Good and Evil for Your Convenience Philosophy Tropes Heteronormative Crusader Go to Your Room! Stock Phrases Grudging "Thank You" Cruel and Unusual Death Sandbox/No Real Life Crowner Candidates Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks Tropes on Science and Unscience Hard on Soft Science Grave Robbing WeAreNotAlone/Tropes E to L Greaser Delinquents Grass Is Greener TruthInTelevision/G to I Gray Rain of Depression The Amazing Atheist VideoSource/Internet "I Am Great!" Song Gravity Is A Harsh Seamstress Comedy Tropes Greeting Gesture Confusion Full-Circle Revolution ImageSource/Comic Books I Lied
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