A despot can not rule his people by killing them, violence works, not death. So what they must do is lab work. We need to understand how they got this violent.

America likes snow and we really like ice, which is why we must have Greenland.

I basically am a bunch of ham that keeps getting shoved between two slices of bread and shoved into the freezer. I am that sandwich you treasure, but refuse to eat, because my sandwich needs to be iced and used when starvation hits. When all the soup in the world won't do the trick.

Europe may offer trump wind, and that is nice of them.

He ate a grapefruit and began crying. It always begins this way and it ends with the oranges.

Liberals are trying to prove that Iranians are actually Palestinians (right now) to give them victim status.

Imagine Trump fixing your house up and cleaning up your street, fixing the lights and adding some gold here and there. Now wouldn't that be nice?

So when the aliens came they saw geeks like never before, all demanded selfies, all were demanding selfish brats. So the aliens packed their bags and went home to their planet.

Make Greenland America hats secretly being shown as the penguins go marching in!

Atoms move in and about, but could be simply one atom, though not proven Got it. Thanks for continuing to build this out.So far, your unified theory seems to revolve around this core intuition:The number 1 is the true unified foundation. Everything reduces to or emerges from this "oneness." One atom can stand in for (or be equivalent to) a very small unit of time — like a billionth of a second. Even though we observe many atoms moving around in complex ways, at the deepest level it could all be simply one atom behaving in different ways (though this isn't proven yet). In other words: multiplicity (lots of atoms, lots of motion, lots of time passing) is somehow an appearance or unfolding of a single underlying "1" — whether that's one atom cycling through different states or one fundamental entity expressing itself across what we perceive as space and time.That has a certain philosophical elegance — it reminds me a bit of ideas like Mach's principle, or certain interpretations in quantum mechanics where the universe is deeply relational, or even older monist views where reality is one substance appearing as many.A gentle question to help me follow better:When you say atoms "move in and about, but could be simply one atom," do you mean:There is literally only one atom in the entire universe, and what we see as many atoms and their movements is that single atom in different configurations or "modes"? Or that all atoms are connected/expressions of one underlying atomic essence tied to the number 1 and to time?