Firmly in favour of this.
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@Nickiquote@mstdn.social
I'm sort of sure homberg hats were made from beaver@calcius @Nickiquote "The Executive's Choice Since 1890"
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@MaierAmsden Nothing to do with the Judean People's Front, then? @spacemagick @Nickiquote
@BackFromTheDud @MaierAmsden @spacemagick @Nickiquote splitters!
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@Nickiquote
IIRC we used to have a wren on the 1/4d but not any other animals.
#coins@spacemagick @Nickiquote threepenny bit. Didn't that have a heraldic lion or something?
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I liked the Irish coins with animals on them. Apparently one priest strongly objected:
“If these pagan symbols once get a hold, then is the thin edge of the wedge of Freemasonry sunk into the very life of our Catholicity, for the sole object of having these pagan symbols instead of religious emblems on our coins is to wipe out all traces of religion from our minds, to forget the ‘land of saints,’ and beget a land of devil-worshippers, where evil may reign supreme”
Irish Creatures on Irish Coins - wash your language
It’s true – your children really can open your world a little wider. A treasure, to them, is often something you just never noticed before. One recent Sunday, at a local Dublin market that has barely changed in decades, my daughter and I wandered into a bric-a-brac stand. Just the place where a 10-year-old might […]
wash your language (washyourlanguage.com)
@Nickiquote so, let me get this straight - creatures created by the almighty are <checks notes> pagan symbols and gateways to diabolism?
Religion: not even once, my dudes.
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I liked the Irish coins with animals on them. Apparently one priest strongly objected:
“If these pagan symbols once get a hold, then is the thin edge of the wedge of Freemasonry sunk into the very life of our Catholicity, for the sole object of having these pagan symbols instead of religious emblems on our coins is to wipe out all traces of religion from our minds, to forget the ‘land of saints,’ and beget a land of devil-worshippers, where evil may reign supreme”
Irish Creatures on Irish Coins - wash your language
It’s true – your children really can open your world a little wider. A treasure, to them, is often something you just never noticed before. One recent Sunday, at a local Dublin market that has barely changed in decades, my daughter and I wandered into a bric-a-brac stand. Just the place where a 10-year-old might […]
wash your language (washyourlanguage.com)
@Nickiquote
Love these coins -
I liked the Irish coins with animals on them. Apparently one priest strongly objected:
“If these pagan symbols once get a hold, then is the thin edge of the wedge of Freemasonry sunk into the very life of our Catholicity, for the sole object of having these pagan symbols instead of religious emblems on our coins is to wipe out all traces of religion from our minds, to forget the ‘land of saints,’ and beget a land of devil-worshippers, where evil may reign supreme”
Irish Creatures on Irish Coins - wash your language
It’s true – your children really can open your world a little wider. A treasure, to them, is often something you just never noticed before. One recent Sunday, at a local Dublin market that has barely changed in decades, my daughter and I wandered into a bric-a-brac stand. Just the place where a 10-year-old might […]
wash your language (washyourlanguage.com)
@Nickiquote Well he's no fun...
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I liked the Irish coins with animals on them. Apparently one priest strongly objected:
“If these pagan symbols once get a hold, then is the thin edge of the wedge of Freemasonry sunk into the very life of our Catholicity, for the sole object of having these pagan symbols instead of religious emblems on our coins is to wipe out all traces of religion from our minds, to forget the ‘land of saints,’ and beget a land of devil-worshippers, where evil may reign supreme”
Irish Creatures on Irish Coins - wash your language
It’s true – your children really can open your world a little wider. A treasure, to them, is often something you just never noticed before. One recent Sunday, at a local Dublin market that has barely changed in decades, my daughter and I wandered into a bric-a-brac stand. Just the place where a 10-year-old might […]
wash your language (washyourlanguage.com)
@Nickiquote “*our* Catholicity”? Speak for yourself, Father.
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I liked the Irish coins with animals on them. Apparently one priest strongly objected:
“If these pagan symbols once get a hold, then is the thin edge of the wedge of Freemasonry sunk into the very life of our Catholicity, for the sole object of having these pagan symbols instead of religious emblems on our coins is to wipe out all traces of religion from our minds, to forget the ‘land of saints,’ and beget a land of devil-worshippers, where evil may reign supreme”
Irish Creatures on Irish Coins - wash your language
It’s true – your children really can open your world a little wider. A treasure, to them, is often something you just never noticed before. One recent Sunday, at a local Dublin market that has barely changed in decades, my daughter and I wandered into a bric-a-brac stand. Just the place where a 10-year-old might […]
wash your language (washyourlanguage.com)
@Nickiquote
And after this he raped a kid and condemned a unmarried pregnant women into slavery. -
@MaierAmsden Nothing to do with the Judean People's Front, then? @spacemagick @Nickiquote
@BackFromTheDud @spacemagick @Nickiquote Maybe - depends. What's Rome ever done for them?
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I liked the Irish coins with animals on them. Apparently one priest strongly objected:
“If these pagan symbols once get a hold, then is the thin edge of the wedge of Freemasonry sunk into the very life of our Catholicity, for the sole object of having these pagan symbols instead of religious emblems on our coins is to wipe out all traces of religion from our minds, to forget the ‘land of saints,’ and beget a land of devil-worshippers, where evil may reign supreme”
Irish Creatures on Irish Coins - wash your language
It’s true – your children really can open your world a little wider. A treasure, to them, is often something you just never noticed before. One recent Sunday, at a local Dublin market that has barely changed in decades, my daughter and I wandered into a bric-a-brac stand. Just the place where a 10-year-old might […]
wash your language (washyourlanguage.com)
@Nickiquote When do we stop calling this an opinion and start considering it a mental illness?
...because it sounds a lot like a type of schizophrenia, where people are likely to interpret their hallucinations as being locked in a battle between good and evil.
And charismatic religious types (who may have similar or different problems) are likely to abuse people with these issues.
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R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic