My motto was always, manners are nice, politeness is neat but have a plan to kill everyone you meet.
The Cato Institute published some data recently showing that the chances of dying in a terror
attack are around 1 in 3 million.
Statistically speaking, you have a better chance of being crushed to death by a vending
machine.
But we dont demand that our governments spend hundreds of billions of dollars that
taxpayers cannot possibly afford in order to protect us from vending machines.
Thats because deep down we sense that vending machines dont truly pose a threat.
But with terrorism our senses are heavily manipulated until we believe that the threat is far
greater than what the statistics show.
Sigmas are the original thought criminals of society. The freethinking Sigma will be ostracized,
They wont be men who live the life script given to them by the Great Marketing Machine, that tells
them which car to buy, what house to live in, and how much money to make. The Sigma male is the
natural Villain to the zeitgeist. The dangerous man in the shadows who at any time can strike like
lightning on some fuck boy Alpha types. One of the best and most lethal traits of the Sigma is his
unpredictability. Because he does not care to be very social, most people are alarmed whenever he
inserts himself in their group. The brazen Sigma can absolutely destroy social groups and situations
where there is a conformist mind set.
The Alphas will always look with concern, anger, threat and even fear at the Sigma
.A suggestion was sent in to use a 9 foot TV receiver (the old kind) and cover it with mirrors to heat a
water pod sticking out from center. The water got to 1200 degrees. Then they connected it to a steam
engine and then they thought about (very publicly) connecting the steam engine to an electric generator
Papier mache can be made quite durable. I use full strength white glue instead of watering it down for
some critical parts. It can be molded or shaped to the level of detail needed here.
People of the Middle East made walls for their fortifications and homes by pounding moist clay
between forms, often called pise work. To protect the surfaces of the clay from erosion, the ancients
discovered that a moist coating of thin, white, burnt limestone would chemically combine with the
gases in the air to give a hard protecting shied.