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21
1.
Chan 5 month s ago
#2. It’s starting to happen again. Pay attention.
       
16
2.
Ivan 5 month s ago
#20 and 66 years after that, what have we accomplished? Refrigerators that call you on the phone and men in girl's locker rooms.
       
0
3.
Nate 5 month s ago
#16 that was dumb, he ain't never gonna retrieve it.
       
-1
4.
Kristy 5 month s ago
Nate,

I hope he got his keys and such
       
6
5.
Sadie 5 month s ago
#32

John Allen Chau (December 18, 1991 – November 17, 2018) was an American evangelical Christian missionary who was killed by the Sentinelese, a tribe in voluntary isolation, after illegally traveling to North Sentinel Island in an attempt to introduce the tribe to Christianity.

Idiot christians, hell bent on spreading the opiate of the masses.
       
-6
6.
Cass 5 month s ago
#1 Communist!

#25 #36 learn to copy paste better, izi
       
3
7.
Cinderella 5 month s ago
#22 this is an example of how sick religions really van be. To deny someone their own choices and decide over them like they have no free will. Beware of agressive religions, before they destroy your way of life.

#35 nowadays it looks like a crematorium. With the food made of dead people.
       
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8.
Kristy 5 month s ago
#1 communist heart
       
0
9.
Kristy 5 month s ago
#22 the text is incorrect. The law didn't ban all animals, only the female ones. Apparently, female donkeys looked too seductive to the monks on mount Athos in 1000 a. D.
       
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"A Greek Orthodox monk, Mihailo Tolotos, lived his entire life of 82 years without ever seeing a woman due to the strict rule of the monastery he lived in on Mount Athos, which banned #Women from entering.

A law was passed in 1060 AD banning women and animals from Mount Athos. Even today, only male tourists are allowed inside the monastery and monks are not allowed to shave, bathe, tight, argue and ask what lies beyond the walls of the monastery.

He was abandoned as an infant and adopted by the monastery, and never left the walls of the monastery throughout his entire life.

Despite living in seclusion, Mihailo’s story is a reminder of the strict rules and regulations that governed monastic life in the past."

 

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