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May 11, 2020 10:13:14   #
Radiance3
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Glad you are well Radiance...

God bless...


============
Thanks CD. You always rescue me when I am in troubled water.

Reply
May 11, 2020 11:00:19   #
Radiance3
 
Rose42 wrote:
Glad to see you are doing well Radiance!


================
Thank you Rose. I love what you have been writing at OPP.
God bless!

Reply
May 11, 2020 11:57:30   #
Sicilianthing
 
Radiance3 wrote:
===============
Thank you bahmer. I missed all of my fellow Republicans. I admire all the good works you have been doing. God said, “good job my good and faithful servant” Matt.23:25.

I have a special project at present. Once in a while when I can't stand the issue, I reply at OPP. Remember. Nov. 2020, is the most important election in the history of our country. Either we survive as a Constitutional Republic, or turn to a Socialist-Communist state where many communist members in Congress want to bring our country. Pelosi, Biden et al ,AOC, Obama, Omar, the Muslim are turning our country to the far-far left.

As for Sicilian. If you want me to self deport, if Biden wins, I’ll be happy doing that with my cat. Away from you, Biden, Pelosi, Adam Schitt, AOC, Omar, Tlaib and all radical Muslims. At present, I am still helping our president.

Sicilian stated that he does not hate or dislike me. But now, he is messing with me again. Yes, I am a transplant. What makes a difference? It is my loyalty, faith, and patriotism that had deep rooted in this land. I love the people, and my heart and my soul are here. I was transplanted when I was a growing seedling.

God spread His creation via seedlings. When we plant trees, flowers, or vegetables, the seeds are either directly placed underneath the soil, or are germinated on a plot and when they are young seeds sprout, grow bigger, they are being transplanted all over the land by farmers or people. That is like me. I am transplanted.

Like plant my roots have gone deeper and I grow bigger, where I share my fruits to people. I’ve shared my branches to others for food and for their shelter. That’s how God’s creation should be, to take care of one another. Like a tree, or a plant that gives shelter and food, and a home for birds to building their nests.

Sicilian, I think You are weed, full of thorns that chock the good plants. You hate president Trump but loves the socialist socialist/communist democrats, that is why you don’t attack them.
thegoohttps://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+13%3A24-43&version=NIVd

And to all Republicans God speed!
=============== br i Thank you bahmer. I missed a... (show quote)


>>>

I dont hate you or Trump...
you have earned your right to be and remain here I guess...

But 30million scumbags, Muslims and transplants need to get out... and if Trump doesn’t do it then he’s a Traitor RAT Too...

You can’t fix the Cancer unless you Cut it OUT or Kill it in the host !

Do you get that ?

Reply
 
 
May 11, 2020 14:19:31   #
bahmer
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
>>>

I dont hate you or Trump...
you have earned your right to be and remain here I guess...

But 30million scumbags, Muslims and transplants need to get out... and if Trump doesn’t do it then he’s a Traitor RAT Too...

You can’t fix the Cancer unless you Cut it OUT or Kill it in the host !

Do you get that ?


Since this country was founded every one in this country aside from the American Indian is a transplant so that would mean that all of us should be cut out according to your daffynition.

Reply
May 12, 2020 13:13:55   #
Sicilianthing
 
bahmer wrote:
Since this country was founded every one in this country aside from the American Indian is a transplant so that would mean that all of us should be cut out according to your daffynition.


>>>

BullCrap!

You know what i mean so stop trying to stir the pot.

Reply
May 12, 2020 16:24:29   #
PaulPisces Loc: San Francisco
 
bahmer wrote:
Since this country was founded every one in this country aside from the American Indian is a transplant so that would mean that all of us should be cut out according to your daffynition.


Actually, Native Americans are thought to have migrated over the Bering Straight about 15,000 years ago (maybe more).

Most scientific evidence seems to indicate Homo Sapiens (our species) first appeared in Africa at least 130,000 years ago. So it would seem that everyone except them is an immigrant of some sort.

Reply
May 12, 2020 22:20:29   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
PaulPisces wrote:
Actually, Native Americans are thought to have migrated over the Bering Straight about 15,000 years ago (maybe more).

Most scientific evidence seems to indicate Homo Sapiens (our species) first appeared in Africa at least 130,000 years ago. So it would seem that everyone except them is an immigrant of some sort.


It's our world...

We just like to draw lines on paper...

Makes us feel special...

Reply
 
 
May 13, 2020 00:08:09   #
Radiance3
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
>>>

I think I scared her away or she got exposed for who she really is, A SPY !

=================
Sicilian, know the facts of US history.
Here's the first discoverer of America. Not Columbus.
It was the Vikings.

The Ericksons, the ancestors of my husband from Norway long long time ago. Though I am not blood related, but I have the legal rights bestowed to me by my husband. Unfortunately he already passed away. But his parents made me the heir to inherit their name and fortune. Therefore, Baby and I ,are now both Ericksons legally bestowed to me to carry the name of my husband and his parents.

So Sicilain, I have more rights to be here than you do. You came from Sicily from your grandparents.

The Viking Explorer Who Beat Columbus to America
Leif Eriksson Day commemorates the Norse explorer believed to have led the first European expedition to North America.
CHRISTOPHER KLEIN
Nearly 500 years before the birth of Christopher Columbus, a band of European sailors left their homeland behind in search of a new world. Their high-prowed Viking ship sliced through the cobalt waters of the Atlantic Ocean as winds billowed the boat’s enormous single sail. After traversing unfamiliar waters, the Norsemen aboard the wooden ship spied a new land, dropped anchor and went ashore. Half a millennium before Columbus “discovered” America, those Viking feet may have been the first European ones to ever have touched North American soil.

Exploration was a family business for the expedition’s leader, Leif Eriksson (variations of his last name include Erickson, Ericson, Erikson, Ericsson and Eiriksson). His father, Erik the Red, founded the first European settlement of Greenland after being expelled from Iceland around A.D. 985 for killing a neighbor. (Erik the Red’s father, himself, had been banished from Norway for committing manslaughter.) Eriksson, who is believed to have been born in Iceland around A.D. 970, spent his formative years in desolate Greenland. Around A.D. 1000, Eriksson sailed east to his ancestral homeland of Norway.
There, King Olaf I Tryggvason converted him to Christianity and charged him with proselytizing the religion to the pagan settlers of Greenland. Eriksson converted his mother, who built Greenland’s first Christian church, but not his outlaw father.

Icelandic legends called sagas recounted Eriksson’s exploits in the New World around A.D. 1000. These Norse stories were spread by word of mouth before becoming recorded in the 12th and 13th centuries. Two sagas give differing accounts as to how Eriksson arrived in North America. According to the “Saga of Erik the Red,” Eriksson crossed the Atlantic by accident after sailing off course on his return voyage from Norway after his conversion to Christianity. The “Saga of the Greenlanders,” however, recounts that Eriksson’s voyage to North America was no fluke. Instead, the Viking explorer had heard of a strange land to the west from Icelandic trader Bjarni Herjolfsson, who more than a decade earlier had overshot Greenland and sailed by the shores of North America without setting foot upon it. Eriksson bought the trader’s ship, raised a crew of 35 men and retraced the route in reverse.

After crossing the Atlantic, the Vikings encountered a rocky, barren land in present-day Canada. Eriksson bestowed upon the land a name as boring as the surroundings—Helluland, Norwegian for “Stone Slab Land.” Researchers believe this location could possibly have been Baffin Island. The Norsemen then voyaged south to a timber-rich location they called Markland (Forestland), most likely in present-day Labrador, before finally setting up a base camp likely on the northern tip of the island of Newfoundland.

The Vikings spent an entire winter there and benefited from the milder weather compared to their homeland. They explored the surrounding region abounding with lush meadows, rivers teeming with salmon, and wild grapes so suitable for wine that Eriksson called the region Vinland (Wineland).

After spending the winter in Vinland, Eriksson and his crew sailed home to windswept Greenland with badly needed timber and plentiful portions of grapes. Eriksson, who would succeed Erik the Red as chief of the Greenland settlement after his father’s death, never returned to North America, but other Vikings continued to sail west to Vinland for at least the ensuing decade. In spite of North America’s more bountiful resources, the Viking settlers remained in desolate Greenland. This was perhaps due to the violent encounters—including the slaying of Eriksson’s brother Thorwald–they had with the indigenous population of North America.

Archaeologists have unearthed evidence that supports the sagas’ stories of the Norse expeditions to America. In 1960, Norwegian explorer Helge Ingstad scoured the coasts of Labrador and Newfoundland for signs of a possible settlement, and he found it on the northernmost tip of Newfoundland at L’Anse aux Meadows. An international team of archaeologists that included Ingstad’s wife, Anne, excavated artifacts of Viking origin dating from around A.D. 1000, and the remains of the Norse village are now part of a UNESCO World Heritage site.

While Columbus is honored with a federal holiday, the man considered to be the leader of the first European expedition to North America has not been totally forgotten on the calendar. In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson signed a proclamation that declared October 9 to be Leif Eriksson Day in honor of the Viking explorer, his crew and the country’s Nordic-American heritage. The proximity of the days honoring Eriksson and Columbus is coincidence. October 9 was chosen because it is the anniversary of the 1825 arrival in New York of the ship Restaruation, which carried the first organized band of Norwegian immigrants to the United States.

I pay more taxes here than you do. I've helped more people here than you do. All you do is harass, and want to take over this land by force and violence.

Since I am getting old, I am committed to leave and honor the name Erickson for the sake of my husband, and his ancestors. I'll be with him in heaven when the Lord calls me home.

So, don't call me a SPY! You are more of a spy than I am.

Reply
May 13, 2020 12:36:05   #
PaulPisces Loc: San Francisco
 
Radiance3 wrote:
=================
Sicilian, know the facts of US history.
Here's the first discoverer of America. Not Columbus.
It was the Vikings.

The Ericksons, the ancestors of my husband from Norway long long time ago. Though I am not blood related, but I have the legal rights bestowed to me by my husband. Unfortunately he already passed away. But his parents made me the heir to inherit their name and fortune. Therefore, Baby and I ,are now both Ericksons legally bestowed to me to carry the name of my husband and his parents.

So Sicilain, I have more rights to be here than you do. You came from Sicily from your grandparents.

The Viking Explorer Who Beat Columbus to America
Leif Eriksson Day commemorates the Norse explorer believed to have led the first European expedition to North America.
CHRISTOPHER KLEIN
Nearly 500 years before the birth of Christopher Columbus, a band of European sailors left their homeland behind in search of a new world. Their high-prowed Viking ship sliced through the cobalt waters of the Atlantic Ocean as winds billowed the boat’s enormous single sail. After traversing unfamiliar waters, the Norsemen aboard the wooden ship spied a new land, dropped anchor and went ashore. Half a millennium before Columbus “discovered” America, those Viking feet may have been the first European ones to ever have touched North American soil.

Exploration was a family business for the expedition’s leader, Leif Eriksson (variations of his last name include Erickson, Ericson, Erikson, Ericsson and Eiriksson). His father, Erik the Red, founded the first European settlement of Greenland after being expelled from Iceland around A.D. 985 for killing a neighbor. (Erik the Red’s father, himself, had been banished from Norway for committing manslaughter.) Eriksson, who is believed to have been born in Iceland around A.D. 970, spent his formative years in desolate Greenland. Around A.D. 1000, Eriksson sailed east to his ancestral homeland of Norway.
There, King Olaf I Tryggvason converted him to Christianity and charged him with proselytizing the religion to the pagan settlers of Greenland. Eriksson converted his mother, who built Greenland’s first Christian church, but not his outlaw father.

Icelandic legends called sagas recounted Eriksson’s exploits in the New World around A.D. 1000. These Norse stories were spread by word of mouth before becoming recorded in the 12th and 13th centuries. Two sagas give differing accounts as to how Eriksson arrived in North America. According to the “Saga of Erik the Red,” Eriksson crossed the Atlantic by accident after sailing off course on his return voyage from Norway after his conversion to Christianity. The “Saga of the Greenlanders,” however, recounts that Eriksson’s voyage to North America was no fluke. Instead, the Viking explorer had heard of a strange land to the west from Icelandic trader Bjarni Herjolfsson, who more than a decade earlier had overshot Greenland and sailed by the shores of North America without setting foot upon it. Eriksson bought the trader’s ship, raised a crew of 35 men and retraced the route in reverse.

After crossing the Atlantic, the Vikings encountered a rocky, barren land in present-day Canada. Eriksson bestowed upon the land a name as boring as the surroundings—Helluland, Norwegian for “Stone Slab Land.” Researchers believe this location could possibly have been Baffin Island. The Norsemen then voyaged south to a timber-rich location they called Markland (Forestland), most likely in present-day Labrador, before finally setting up a base camp likely on the northern tip of the island of Newfoundland.

The Vikings spent an entire winter there and benefited from the milder weather compared to their homeland. They explored the surrounding region abounding with lush meadows, rivers teeming with salmon, and wild grapes so suitable for wine that Eriksson called the region Vinland (Wineland).

After spending the winter in Vinland, Eriksson and his crew sailed home to windswept Greenland with badly needed timber and plentiful portions of grapes. Eriksson, who would succeed Erik the Red as chief of the Greenland settlement after his father’s death, never returned to North America, but other Vikings continued to sail west to Vinland for at least the ensuing decade. In spite of North America’s more bountiful resources, the Viking settlers remained in desolate Greenland. This was perhaps due to the violent encounters—including the slaying of Eriksson’s brother Thorwald–they had with the indigenous population of North America.

Archaeologists have unearthed evidence that supports the sagas’ stories of the Norse expeditions to America. In 1960, Norwegian explorer Helge Ingstad scoured the coasts of Labrador and Newfoundland for signs of a possible settlement, and he found it on the northernmost tip of Newfoundland at L’Anse aux Meadows. An international team of archaeologists that included Ingstad’s wife, Anne, excavated artifacts of Viking origin dating from around A.D. 1000, and the remains of the Norse village are now part of a UNESCO World Heritage site.

While Columbus is honored with a federal holiday, the man considered to be the leader of the first European expedition to North America has not been totally forgotten on the calendar. In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson signed a proclamation that declared October 9 to be Leif Eriksson Day in honor of the Viking explorer, his crew and the country’s Nordic-American heritage. The proximity of the days honoring Eriksson and Columbus is coincidence. October 9 was chosen because it is the anniversary of the 1825 arrival in New York of the ship Restaruation, which carried the first organized band of Norwegian immigrants to the United States.

I pay more taxes here than you do. I've helped more people here than you do. All you do is harass, and want to take over this land by force and violence.

Since I am getting old, I am committed to leave and honor the name Erickson for the sake of my husband, and his ancestors. I'll be with him in heaven when the Lord calls me home.

So, don't call me a SPY! You are more of a spy than I am.
================= br i Sicilian, know the facts o... (show quote)


I'm not sure why you think you have more right to be here than Sicilian, based solely on who your ancestors were! But then, you seem to have access to Sicilian's taxes, so maybe there is something else you know that you are not sharing.

Reply
May 13, 2020 14:05:13   #
Radiance3
 
PaulPisces wrote:
I'm not sure why you think you have more right to be here than Sicilian, based solely on who your ancestors were! But then, you seem to have access to Sicilian's taxes, so maybe there is something else you know that you are not sharing.

=============
I don't share personal records of others. I have no right to doing that.

Based on his written answers to me at OPP, he said that he does not use government records. And he does transactions by CASH ONLY. I hope he was just joking about it.
I know how that works. I was an auditor, and using cash only that means taxes are avoided.

Thanks for your questions. Good luck.
I want to talk to Sicilian, hope he answers me.
I did not mean that I have more rights than he does. I was trying to make a point based on his accusations on me.

He was accusing me of being a SPY, and a TRANSPLANT. The story is long, can't reveal it here. Good day!

Reply
May 13, 2020 23:19:37   #
Sicilianthing
 
Radiance3 wrote:
=================
Sicilian, know the facts of US history.
Here's the first discoverer of America. Not Columbus.
It was the Vikings.

The Ericksons, the ancestors of my husband from Norway long long time ago. Though I am not blood related, but I have the legal rights bestowed to me by my husband. Unfortunately he already passed away. But his parents made me the heir to inherit their name and fortune. Therefore, Baby and I ,are now both Ericksons legally bestowed to me to carry the name of my husband and his parents.

So Sicilain, I have more rights to be here than you do. You came from Sicily from your grandparents.

The Viking Explorer Who Beat Columbus to America
Leif Eriksson Day commemorates the Norse explorer believed to have led the first European expedition to North America.
CHRISTOPHER KLEIN
Nearly 500 years before the birth of Christopher Columbus, a band of European sailors left their homeland behind in search of a new world. Their high-prowed Viking ship sliced through the cobalt waters of the Atlantic Ocean as winds billowed the boat’s enormous single sail. After traversing unfamiliar waters, the Norsemen aboard the wooden ship spied a new land, dropped anchor and went ashore. Half a millennium before Columbus “discovered” America, those Viking feet may have been the first European ones to ever have touched North American soil.

Exploration was a family business for the expedition’s leader, Leif Eriksson (variations of his last name include Erickson, Ericson, Erikson, Ericsson and Eiriksson). His father, Erik the Red, founded the first European settlement of Greenland after being expelled from Iceland around A.D. 985 for killing a neighbor. (Erik the Red’s father, himself, had been banished from Norway for committing manslaughter.) Eriksson, who is believed to have been born in Iceland around A.D. 970, spent his formative years in desolate Greenland. Around A.D. 1000, Eriksson sailed east to his ancestral homeland of Norway.
There, King Olaf I Tryggvason converted him to Christianity and charged him with proselytizing the religion to the pagan settlers of Greenland. Eriksson converted his mother, who built Greenland’s first Christian church, but not his outlaw father.

Icelandic legends called sagas recounted Eriksson’s exploits in the New World around A.D. 1000. These Norse stories were spread by word of mouth before becoming recorded in the 12th and 13th centuries. Two sagas give differing accounts as to how Eriksson arrived in North America. According to the “Saga of Erik the Red,” Eriksson crossed the Atlantic by accident after sailing off course on his return voyage from Norway after his conversion to Christianity. The “Saga of the Greenlanders,” however, recounts that Eriksson’s voyage to North America was no fluke. Instead, the Viking explorer had heard of a strange land to the west from Icelandic trader Bjarni Herjolfsson, who more than a decade earlier had overshot Greenland and sailed by the shores of North America without setting foot upon it. Eriksson bought the trader’s ship, raised a crew of 35 men and retraced the route in reverse.

After crossing the Atlantic, the Vikings encountered a rocky, barren land in present-day Canada. Eriksson bestowed upon the land a name as boring as the surroundings—Helluland, Norwegian for “Stone Slab Land.” Researchers believe this location could possibly have been Baffin Island. The Norsemen then voyaged south to a timber-rich location they called Markland (Forestland), most likely in present-day Labrador, before finally setting up a base camp likely on the northern tip of the island of Newfoundland.

The Vikings spent an entire winter there and benefited from the milder weather compared to their homeland. They explored the surrounding region abounding with lush meadows, rivers teeming with salmon, and wild grapes so suitable for wine that Eriksson called the region Vinland (Wineland).

After spending the winter in Vinland, Eriksson and his crew sailed home to windswept Greenland with badly needed timber and plentiful portions of grapes. Eriksson, who would succeed Erik the Red as chief of the Greenland settlement after his father’s death, never returned to North America, but other Vikings continued to sail west to Vinland for at least the ensuing decade. In spite of North America’s more bountiful resources, the Viking settlers remained in desolate Greenland. This was perhaps due to the violent encounters—including the slaying of Eriksson’s brother Thorwald–they had with the indigenous population of North America.

Archaeologists have unearthed evidence that supports the sagas’ stories of the Norse expeditions to America. In 1960, Norwegian explorer Helge Ingstad scoured the coasts of Labrador and Newfoundland for signs of a possible settlement, and he found it on the northernmost tip of Newfoundland at L’Anse aux Meadows. An international team of archaeologists that included Ingstad’s wife, Anne, excavated artifacts of Viking origin dating from around A.D. 1000, and the remains of the Norse village are now part of a UNESCO World Heritage site.

While Columbus is honored with a federal holiday, the man considered to be the leader of the first European expedition to North America has not been totally forgotten on the calendar. In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson signed a proclamation that declared October 9 to be Leif Eriksson Day in honor of the Viking explorer, his crew and the country’s Nordic-American heritage. The proximity of the days honoring Eriksson and Columbus is coincidence. October 9 was chosen because it is the anniversary of the 1825 arrival in New York of the ship Restaruation, which carried the first organized band of Norwegian immigrants to the United States.

I pay more taxes here than you do. I've helped more people here than you do. All you do is harass, and want to take over this land by force and violence.

Since I am getting old, I am committed to leave and honor the name Erickson for the sake of my husband, and his ancestors. I'll be with him in heaven when the Lord calls me home.

So, don't call me a SPY! You are more of a spy than I am.
================= br i Sicilian, know the facts o... (show quote)


>>>

I never said Columbus was the first and I know all about the Vikings... and the Dutch ...

All I did ever say is that everyone was Taught in school about Columbus... and it’s all Lies, Lies and More Lies...

In fact almost half or more of everything you’ve learned in schools here is all big phat fricken Lies by the Usual Fricken APPLES !

Thank You for posting about Vikings though.
What else you got ?

Reply
 
 
May 13, 2020 23:22:21   #
Sicilianthing
 
Radiance3 wrote:
=============
I don't share personal records of others. I have no right to doing that.

Based on his written answers to me at OPP, he said that he does not use government records. And he does transactions by CASH ONLY. I hope he was just joking about it.
I know how that works. I was an auditor, and using cash only that means taxes are avoided.

Thanks for your questions. Good luck.
I want to talk to Sicilian, hope he answers me.
I did not mean that I have more rights than he does. I was trying to make a point based on his accusations on me.

He was accusing me of being a SPY, and a TRANSPLANT. The story is long, can't reveal it here. Good day!
============= br I don't share personal records of... (show quote)


>>>

Yep CASH is KING !

Also I’m not concerned with anything of the above and I was just kidding that you’re a spy...

Reply
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