cult-of-kings-blog
cult-of-kings-blog
Echoes of a dying race
106 posts
21 Male. Traditionalist conservative from rural California.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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Awesome.
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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Hey why not - everything else is free in the age of Obama - why not have the taxpayer pick up the bill for a welfare queen’s wedding?
She’s been on welfare since she was 19-years-old since she was deemed too overweight to work and in total, she has collected over $149,000 in benefits.
Now she’s entitled to a taxpayer wedding? Do you think this is a joke? Sorry, being a bride is not a right….and specifically not a basic human right…you lazy ass douche canoe.
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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Is it weird that I like ranchera? :P
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Por: Abraham Reyes
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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Have to respect someone who singlehandedly brought power to his village.
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William Kamkwamba is an inventive young man from Malawi, a landlocked country in southeast Africa. In 2002, Kamkwamba decided to build a windmill to power the few electrical elements in his family’s home. He got this idea by visiting the local library and learning about how electricity and windmills worked. While he wasn’t able to build a windmill using typical resources, Kamkwamba was creative enough to find local materials that were discarded to build his first windmill. It was a huge success and he was able to build more to help his community. From then on, everyone was learning Kamkwamba’s name and the things that he created. He was a speaker at the 2007 Global TED talk. He participated in Maker Faire Africa in 2009. He was able to continue going to school thanks to sponsors and has graduated from Dartmouth College with a Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies. He now partakes in the Moving Windmills Project, which supports Malawian-run rural economic development and education and it has done amazing things. This brilliant young man has even published books about his journey. The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind is a children’s book as well as a book for adults. 
All of this begin with a library trip, an eagerness to learn, and a want to change his small part of the world. 
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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Cologne, Germany.
(Photo: d.)
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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“Shiksas, am I right?”
-Shlomo Goldstein
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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wait for it…….
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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Really? That’s pretty gross.
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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...soon
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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One year after Revolution. Kyiv Then and Now.
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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cult-of-kings-blog · 10 years ago
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The Past and the Present by Thomas Cole (1838)
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