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Flea Mason's avatar

Yup I've been watching the guy Ammon Hillman and listening to what he has to say and it makes a lot of sense. That Greek is just superior because of it's descriptive word count being so high.

Looks like they just used the England language to cast spells on us with legalese.

Richard Seager's avatar

Olde Englishe is a completely different language. Modern English is kind of Norman influenced and due to Empire I guess has grown to a million words which is not too bad at all by modern standards. A lot of European languages are a lot smaller. ClaudeAI told me today that the cyrillic alphabet was superior to the Roman one. Eta pravda!

mary-lou's avatar

hear, hear

Flea Mason's avatar

Modern English is set up with so many trap words.

For example: Person.

Richard Seager's avatar

Yes can be useful though.

Flea Mason's avatar

Useful if you know what these legalese meanings are, yet we all got fooled. Gawd damn it.

Richard Seager's avatar

But yes Greek for the win. No doubts whatsoever. Even the Romans spoke Greek at home.

mary-lou's avatar

earliest Christian texts in Greek too, no...?

Richard Seager's avatar

And Jewish texts. Although historians try and pretend otherwise.

Flea Mason's avatar

If my model is correct, imagine what is lost in them there hills Richard, imagine what's lost!! It's mind boggling.

Richard Seager's avatar

I hope that you are referring to mud Flea. As my name is not Agamemnon.

mary-lou's avatar

LOL

Flea Mason's avatar

How do the get the date for an item like that there Richard?

Richard Seager's avatar

It is in the accepted dating. I don't have another dating system but figure the Dark Ages were dark for a pretty good reason so nor do I believe in the accepted dating system either. The Ancient Greeks seem to have been smarter than us and into the bargain we have lost a few hundred ccs of brain matter in the last 10k years.

Flea Mason's avatar

I always wonder how these accepted dating, dating apps work Richard, I'm sure these people kinda get paid to date. And then they form a consensus of daters all dating each other and then the give us a date and we stick with it.

All for money.

But you are so right, Greek being the mother language must be from the motherboard. And the mother board was the electric circuit board called Earth.

And it's probably TV that dumbed the place down the most I reckon, and school. And watching schools on TV.

Richard Seager's avatar

Yep Greek has something like five million words. English has a few hundred thousand in use and a million or so that exist. Maori was lucky if it had 10k. Nowadays it has 20k or so but a lot of those words are bastardised English, Spanish or Portuguese, many of them output by Pakeha academics in the last 30 years. That's the reason Maori adopted English at the beginning of the 20th C. Because it made sense rather than due to the liberal left assumption of racism. (updated on quick research)

Richard Seager's avatar

And it would make more sense for us all to adopt Greek as our native language. A lot more sense.

Amaterasu Solar's avatar

I'm a bit confused. LOL! I have heard of sigma, but stigma? When I look up the definition, I get:

The meaning of STIGMA is a set of negative and unfair beliefs that a society or group of people have about something.

And it's not clear where this letter is that You are indicating. Can You put a circle around it? LOL!

Richard Seager's avatar

Have updated the post. It should be clear now what I am referring to and how strange it is that it was a stigma so long ago.

Amaterasu Solar's avatar

Ahhhh. Thanks! Looks vaguely like a swastika. I ponder if there is an image of it that is clear and undistorted by angle...

So it was called a "stigma?" And that is where We get the word, "stigma?" Or You called it that because there is a stigma about it? Or...?

mary-lou's avatar

not at all like a swastika, but Ʃ

(almost a capital M on its side)

Richard Seager's avatar

Yes it's strange that there was a stigma attached to the letter stigma before 1933.

Richard Seager's avatar

These designs were common in Ancient Greece. As was the Star of David albeit it was not called a Star of David initially (don't ask me what it was called I have long forgotten). It's a long time since I looked at this issue but I believe that they were often associated with each other. Also Egyptian Mosques are full of Star of Davids (personal visits). And Japan and India full of this thing that was called a swastika after Hitler came to power. Were the Germans into ancient Athenian history?

mary-lou's avatar

Hindu symbol, found on historic Hindu remnants (temples) all over SE Asia as well. derived from Sanskrit: svastika.

who wants ancient Athenian when one can go ancient Hindu ;-)

although... there have been cultural and other contacts between ancient India (Hindu) and the Greco-Roman world dating back to the 1st-2ndC, notably via maritime trade routes - https://www.worldhistory.org/uploads/images/9102.png?v=1617873302