Call Me Stormy

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Archive for the tag “apes”

The Parade Of The Retards

America has done it again. Gavin Newsom accidentally speed-runs racial condescension, and the State of the Union turns into peak reality TV thanks to a cameraman with perfect comedic timing.

Ilhan Omar is not amused, Democrats sit on their hands, Trump spends the night airing everyone out like it’s an open-mic roast and ChatGPT has a full philosophical meltdown over whether humans are apes. Absolute chaos – chef’s kiss.

LET’S GO!! Here’s more from Bearing.

Shock the Monkeys

Democrats make fools of themselves as Potus manifests the Golden Age. Are they all Third World apes?

Here’s more on the State of the Union and the Democrats’ buffoonery from McAllister TV

Humanity’s Origin

In this vintage 1998 video, E’Asha A. Arhayas explains what was then and still is today a controversial history of humanity’s origin.

Arhayas explains that we live in a 15-dimensional matrix, composed of five harmonic universes, all connected to the Yunasai, or God source, comprised of energy and an intelligent identity source. She says we live in the first of the five universes, called the Tauren time cycle, the slowest moving and pulsating  of the five harmonic universes.

“Our origins are very different than what science, at this time, has formulated there is around,” she says. “We did not come out of the apes, they came out of us. The early man, some of them were connected to us, others were completely independent races that evolved at different times with us.”  Here’s her fascinating report. As always, do your own research and use discernment when watching the video.

Beasts of the Ice Age

From giant apes and saber-toothed cats to massive mammoths and mastodons, these are the largest creatures of the Ice Age. Epic Wildlife counts down 16 of these amazing beasts.

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When Apes Conquered Europe

It wasn’t quite Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, but between 23 million and 5 million years ago in the Miocene Epoch, apes occupied all of Europe. The massive migration was the direct result of Africa’s climate becoming drier and experiencing more seasonal variations. Today, the apes live only in small pockets of Asia and Africa. So what happened to the apes in Europe? PBS Eons gives us the answers.

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