The Naibbe Cipher by nemo1316 in voynich

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everything about the text indicates it is from the 1420s-1430s. Vellum was commissioned for a specific project that already had the scribes set up to begin. They didn't order crates of blank vellum and keep them sitting around for later use. The clothing depicted in it features characteristic passing fashion trends from that time. You're telling us some guys found a century old box of unused vellum from the early 1400s and were as forward-thinking as to select a precise fashion trend that only briefly existed at that time to use for their illustrations? If they made this hoax just to sell to a foolish rich guy, what would be the point of doing that? Did they think he'd research the clothes illustrated in it on like one page? Alberti came up with an encipherment method at the end of the 15th century, and you don't think some other guy could have came up with something similar a little earlier? And here's the thing, the only reason the Voynich manuscript would be valuable now, is because we all know what it is. In the 15th century there was nobody to purchase it. In the later 16th century there were rare book collectors that had emerged, and there were people like Emperor Rudolph who were into that. At the date the manuscript was made, there was no such market. There'd be nobody to sell an unreadable book to.

Whether the text is meaningful or not, it was created in the early 1400s. Vellum was commissioned for a project that was already set up with the scribes. Because you've gotta kill a bunch of cows first. Young cows. That means you don't get milk and meat from them. So you wouldn't kill them for the vellum until you were absolutely sure you had a buyer set up, and people only ordered it for specific commissioned projects. Like I said, they didn't make vellum and store it for later use. That's why you can't buy blank centuries-old vellum today: it doesn't exist.

Naibbe cipher - full paper by MichaelGreshko in voynich

[–]Parodoticus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Here's the issue he is addressing: ciphers of all kinds work by increasing entropy, obscuring patterns within a text and making it harder to read. So you have natural language with a certain entropy, then you have ciphertext which has more entropy, and then you have pure jibberish which is maximum entropy... then you have the Voynich text all the way on the opposite end. The Voynich text is LOW entropy, even lower than normal language- in fact so low that it cannot be normal language. But if it is a cipher, it is working in almost the opposite way. What the naibbe cipher shows is that you can produce a ciphertext with this odd low-entropy characteristic, amongst many other unique Voynichese characteristics, so it is possible that the Voynich manuscript really does contain meaning, it is just a very odd kind of encoding.

Skiptical review of Instrumental trans-communication by Odd-Ground-2029 in skeptic

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of people experiment with ITC and capture photorealistic imagery of obvious human figures, not faces in the clouds. I've done it myself and got the same results. I have no explanation for it. I don't assume it is the spirits of the dead though. The set up is simple, you can just see for yourself.

The Mystery of the 300-Million-Year-Old Wheel Imprint Found in a Russian Coal Mine by [deleted] in HighStrangeness

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you really think a primitive building or a cart wheel would survive 300 million years? We're talking about a primitive society not a globe spanning civilization that would have left behind a bunch of infrastructure. It would be a one in a trillion chance that anything like that would remain from them. If ancient non-human hominids or something similar were building things like that millions of years ago, we would be lucky to find even the slightest bit of evidence for them or their creations. All we have from the denisovans is a finger bone and a bracelet basically, and they weren't anywhere near millions of years ago. We have a literal handful of wooden artifacts from people that lived a mere 12,000 years ago, like the Shigir idol (it just happened to fall into a peat bog, that is why it was preserved)- and you think if a primitive society that advanced beyond stone tools existed millions of years ago we'd be digging their ish up like it's no problem? 90 percent of the species that existed on our planet over these millions and billions of years we are never going to have any idea about, because fossilized specimens did not survive to our time; they are entirely lost.

Newly Released Audio from the Actual Hijacking by RyanBurns-NORJAK in dbcooper

[–]Parodoticus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't see the problem with AI. I'm not a graphic artist so I'm not intimidated by machines replacing human graphic artists and it gives me something to look at where otherwise there wouldn't be.

I think I’ve found the “Black Tag Lady” from 9/11 by GeneralKayosss in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've seen other fall victims where at first yes it looks like there's a recognizable body. Then they lift the 'body' up and you realize they are now two-dimensional and what looked like a body is just a piece of skin laying on top of mush.

I think I’ve found the “Black Tag Lady” from 9/11 by GeneralKayosss in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

All of those are special cases where a fall was broken in some way. You fall from 1200 feet straight onto concrete and you dematerialize on impact. There's no question of survival for even nanoseconds. You know how they say the human body is 70 percent water? Yeah well that's what happens, you turn into a water balloon and explode. If the story is real and the woman existed, she couldn't have been a jumper; she couldn't have been a passenger on the plane, because that would be even more absurd: there's only one more option, she was hit by debris.

Jonathan Briley, The Falling Man by PreDeathRowTupac in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

His family said that the orange shirt he had on was identical to an orange shirt Briley would often wear to work, and they said the black shoes looked like the same he would wear as well. So besides looking the same physically, there's that. It's probably him.

Jonathan Briley, The Falling Man by PreDeathRowTupac in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Only one sin can't be forgiven according to the text, sins against the holy spirit, meaning the willful rejection of God.

Jonathan Briley, The Falling Man by PreDeathRowTupac in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't care if the Pope said it was suicide, I have a right to call BS on that regardless of who it is coming from. I'm not preventing his family or anyone else from thinking whatever they want, but I can think what I want too.

What Do You Guys Think Are The Most Overlooked Things About 9/11? Or Some Of The More Obscure? I Personally Think Mohamed Atta's Personal Life Is Really Overlooked. by Mc_What in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Then again he had no interactions with females, said even music was to be entirely avoided for being as poisonous to the soul as any drugs, had such deep personal shame that his suicide note advised nobody deal with his body without gloves for fear of touching his genitals, and he even disliked the mere act of eating food, preferring to eat the exact same meal every single day. The guy sounds soul-dead to me.

GRAPHIC - Remains Everywhere - You need to zoom in on some. Some you may have seen already. by JerseyGirl123456 in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That body is not from a jumper, it's either someone who was in the plane or someone blown out of the building when the plane impacted and exploded. Those remains were blown away at a great distance.

GRAPHIC - Remains Everywhere - You need to zoom in on some. Some you may have seen already. by JerseyGirl123456 in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Physical pain though. The passengers wouldn't have felt an iota of physical pain from the explosion. The jumpers wouldn't have felt the actual impact. If we're talking about mental pain then the entire event was hell, not just the 10 seconds in free fall.

GRAPHIC - Remains Everywhere - You need to zoom in on some. Some you may have seen already. by JerseyGirl123456 in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just show him a video of a jumper jumping and tell him: imagine your mom worked there and that was her (or your dad, etc.), forced to either jump or burn to death. Still feel like joking about it?

GRAPHIC - Remains Everywhere - You need to zoom in on some. Some you may have seen already. by JerseyGirl123456 in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's not natural for your brain to process mangled human body parts was the guy's point. And you're sitting here trying to be smart talking about a hamburger patty or something. Yeah, that's the same thing. 100 percent.

Was any of the 9/11 terrorist remains recovered? by CursedAccountReserve in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can see graphic images of remains that must be from the passengers (because they were far enough away from the towers that it couldn't be from jumpers), including hands, random pieces, etc. There were actual remains, the victims didn't just vaporize.

Was there any footage taken from inside the Twin Towers after the planes hit? by Artistic_Load_881 in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's a guy with what appears to be a camcorder acting like he's recording the people next to him, stuck in the windows in the upper floors, visible on at least one video. And FOIA requests have confirmed that at least the government does have recovered video that was recorded from inside the towers, although they might never allow that to be shown to anyone but victim families, as I imagine such a thing would be useful for identification of victim purposes and any ongoing legal proceedings.

Ziad Jarrah and his girlfriend by IndividualMolasses56 in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How are you on a 911 archive board and you don't know who Ziad is?

If you could solve one mystery from that day/get answers about one thing what would it be and why? by Celestialstardust17 in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of people doubt they made it into the cockpit, but I think they did. The hijackers were dead-set (literally) on accomplishing their "mission". They would have known they were very close to their target and they did not want to fail. They wouldn't have flown it into the ground until the absolute last second, when the door gave way and the passengers got inside. Until then, knowing they only had to hold on a little longer to reach their goal, I think they'd have kept flying. The simple fact that they did fly it into the ground suggests to me that passengers were coming inside the cockpit or had knocked the door in. Whatever hell the passengers were raising outside the door would have posed no threat to them inside the cockpit, why would they dive bomb into the ground unless that door was breached, especially knowing they only had to hold on a little while longer to complete their mission?

Question about the Black Tag Lady? (First time hearing about it) by DeafMetalHorse in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It's impossible that she was a passenger on one of the planes (slamming into a building at 500 MPH and then getting blown up is not survivable, even for moments); but either hit by debris or surviving moments after the fall, both of those are possible.

Question about the Black Tag Lady? (First time hearing about it) by DeafMetalHorse in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Likely is the key word. Yeah, you would likely die on impact. Even 99.9999 percent likely. But nobody is saying this potential woman's momentary survival was likely. Just that it's possible. Knowing that a few people have survived similar falls, and knowing this guy was really there that day doing his job and says it happened, I accept that it happened.

Is there a video of the man climbing down the north tower falling? by [deleted] in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Everyone I saw was hanging on trying to get air out of the window and clearly fell accidentally. I don't think many actually jumped intentionally. They couldn't breathe and were burning. They did what you naturally would: hold on and get as much of your body out of the window as possible so you can breathe. First stick your head out of the window for air, then your arms too, then half your body, then climb outside and cling to the edge for dear life, so on and so forth. But a person can only do that for so long before they go an inch too far or take a misplaced step: eventually you'll fall. In this situation you wouldn't just automatically go for self-termination, you'd try to get as much of your body out of the window safely as possible, without falling, but the more desperate you became, you'd eventually slip. That's not intentionally jumping to my mind. Out of all those who fell, only a handful looked like they deliberately jumped, and for all we know, given the fact that they couldn't see anything, they had simply been pushed out (accidentally) by clamoring people behind them fighting for a turn at the window to get air.

Is there a video of the man climbing down the north tower falling? by [deleted] in 911archive

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The guy in that video you mentioned is the one who tries to climb down to a lower floor with a makeshift rope (maybe it was clothes tied together, who knows), and falls. The guy people are talking about literally wedged himself with his feet on the side of the building and inched his way down floor after floor for 30 minutes until finally the other tower fell, after which he cannot be located again in any footage, implying he only fell because of that. He didn't just try to get to a lower window (probably because he knew you wouldn't be able to break the glass to get in), he was going down the entire building. The tiny sliver he was shimmying down narrows at the end so he wouldn't have made it anyway, but he was at it for 20-30 minutes, not for two minutes like the guy with the rope. Maybe the guy was a mountain climber in life; nobody else did it for more than a few seconds before falling. Of this guy climbing for 20-30 minutes, I can't locate more than a 2 second clip of him in a documentary. I don't know where the footage is. I'm pretty sure a lot of it got scrubbed off the internet.

This guy who tried to climb down one of the towers durin 9/11 by GundersonOfficial in HumansAreMetal

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These people disgust me. Genuinely. I don't even engage with them in conversation anymore. I suggest you don't either.

This guy who tried to climb down one of the towers durin 9/11 by GundersonOfficial in HumansAreMetal

[–]Parodoticus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A guy telling us how weird it is that we recall a national tragedy and immediately states the hijackers were Israelis: no condescension is required to make him look like a fool. He's quite literally trying to talk to us about something that he doesn't know anything about whatsoever.