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  1. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    Contrary to a lot of false teachings, the soul isn't actually separate from the body. The words the bible uses conflate soul with breathing, when breathing stops, the soul is dead. The idea of soul as a separate, immortal spirit that can leave the body is based on pagan Greek philosophy and is...
  2. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    It's worth noting, the bible itself indicates animals have souls. https://www.biblehub.com/leviticus/17-11.htm#lexicon At Leviticus 17:11 there's a rather poetic verse which explains that blood is to be poured out on the altar for atonement, because the animal's Nephesh, its soul, is in the...
  3. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    Er, barns are also used to house animals. They aren't just feed storage the way silos are. Certain strains of wheat are fed to some dairy cattle (milk production takes a lot more feed than beef so dairy cattle usually get less grass and a lot more grain) but those won't cook off readily...
  4. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    We don't know for a certainty that it was one dumb penny pincher, that's a theory I floated that fits what we know. I don't want my guesses to be claimed as facts. As far as why you'd want to dry the manure, it makes it much lighter and easier to transport for later sale. Manure tends to be...
  5. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    They were using a honey badger manure bedding dryer. It overheated and, well, using one without removing the manure promptly means a huge amount of dusty dried manure everywhere that basically turns into an FAE bomb when the dryer cooks off. Dimes to dollars says some idiot suit with more...
  6. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    Soon... Steely Eyed Missile Man: Alright, the goats we sent up ate the flight computer so we're going to have to figure out how to get that rocket to land on manual.
  7. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    They've already got that covered. They're aiming at Bugs have less protein and nutrition, and that's a good thing: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/eating-too-much-protein-makes-pee-a-problem-pollutant-in-the-u-s/
  8. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    Yes, most insects are unable to process B Vitamins and contain only micro-amounts of them. A kilo of mealworms a day has about enough B-Vitamins to sustain... a rat. And they're probably not keen on you eating a full two pounds of the bugs either. Calcium is also notoriously low, and even the...
  9. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    WEF agenda in full force: Hundreds of schools in The Netherlands have started a campaign introducing 10-12 y/o kids to mealworms & insects as a ‘sustainable’ meat substitute. The goal is to bring about “behavioral changes through unprejudiced children”
  10. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    The eating bugs thing is so odd to me. Spirulina Algae has roughly the same amount of protein as insects and 85% digestibility (Bugs are about 65% so you're getting way less actual usable protein from them), is a much more "green" option since it actively removes carbon from the atmosphere...
  11. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    It certainly looks that way, but the heavyweight champion of the world with cancer is still the heavyweight champion of the world and until the cancer actually takes him down you probably don't want to get in a fistfight with him.
  12. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    China is South America's biggest trading partner and has tremendous economic clout. Many South American nations that used to be food-independent aren't anymore, because they replaced their croplands with more profitable soybeans for export to China. All it would take is China declaring a...
  13. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    Yes, it would be quite easy to destroy such a ship or two but then there's every probability that China then proceeds to ruin your everything, and under current political realities the US is quite likely to stand by and do nothing while it happens given how hard it kowtows to China.
  14. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    This I'll agree with. There's very little functional difference between a hostile fleet stripping a sovereign nation's fisheries and a hostile army looting that nation's stockpiles or boarding and stealing their cargo ships.
  15. Bear Ribs

    Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

    Not as profitable. A hold full of just fins is worth a heck of a lot more than a hold full of entire sharks so they go for fins only.
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