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Forwarded from African Stream
Pan-Africanists and lovers of justice are celebrating that Belgian prosecutors on 17 June recommended that the Brussels Council Chamber refer a 14-year-old lawsuit to the Brussels Criminal Court that Pan-African revolutionary Patrice Lumumba’s eldest son filed against 10 Belgians he accused of playing a part in his father’s assassination. 

The lawsuit accuses the 10 people of war crimes, torture and inhumane treatment. It also stated that the Belgian state was part of a conspiracy to k*ll Lumumba (1925-61), the Democratic Republic of the Congo's first prime minister.

Prosecutors claimed to have a written request from 92-year-old former diplomat Etienne Davignon, who seeks to postpone the case. He is the last remaining of the 10 named in the lawsuit. 
Forwarded from MAYBE? MAYBE NOT?
Mercury passing the Sun
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The UK. 🇬🇧 just passed a Bill in less than an hour.. that makes Full-Term Abortions legal.

This is absolutely horrific & it’s tragic. 😢😢😢😢😢😢😢

We need Jesus back ASAP..😔😔
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Sam Fisher (Data Drops) pinned «Gladio (Sidenotes) The Middle East: Opposing sides of the same face - Sam Fisher YouTube https://youtube.com/watch?v=Vm28VUMb6XY&si=vVehd2faFAoQCGlX»
Forwarded from ned
Zig Zag Zig Allah - Book of Teachnology Chapter 666
👁 87.9K 👍 2.2K
📥 31.12.2018
👤 Big Head Scientist
🕒 08:59

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Big Head Scientist was wrong about Zig Zag Zig.
There were five, not four, RZA, GZA, MZA, SZA & POLKA KING!
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The Polka King | Official Trailer [HD] | Netflix
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📥 15.12.2017
👤 Netflix
🕒 02:16

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The Polka King Sings The Rappin Polka Live at Sundance Film Festival. By John Koterba,
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📥 24.01.2017
👤 JJLightning
🕒 01:08

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ned:
[6/23, 2:16 AM] Ned: Why they call them "indomitable Gauls" and how far/close I got towards figuring out the difference between orgonomic and orgonotic (hint, anything ending in -nomy comes from nomos, law)...


Let's explore the etymological difference between "n" and "t" in Latin and Greek suffixes, using your examples: "Domini" and "domitare"
.
1. "Domini":

"Domini" originates from the Latin word "Dominus," which means "The Lord" or "lord, master of a house".
It traces back to the Proto-Indo-European root "*demh₂-," meaning "to domesticate, tame".
The "-i" ending in "Domini" is a Latin genitive singular suffix, indicating possession or relationship. It's a common ending for nouns in the Latin second declension.
The "n" in "Dominus" is part of the noun stem, not a suffix indicating action or result.

2. "Domitare":

"Domitare" is a Latin verb meaning "to tame or subdue".
It is a frequentative form of the Latin verb "domare," which also means "to tame" or "subdue," related to the same Proto-Indo-European root "*demh₂-".
The "-tare" ending is part of the verb infinitive form in Latin, indicating the action "to tame".
The "t" in "domitare" is part of the verbal root and the frequentative aspect of the verb. It is not a common suffix that transforms a noun into a verb or vice-versa in the same way that "-tion" does.

Key difference:

In "Domini," the "n" is part of the noun's stem, and the "i" is a grammatical suffix for the genitive case.
In "domitare," the "t" is part of the verb stem and indicates the action of "taming".

General notes on suffixes:

Latin and Greek have various suffixes to form nouns, verbs, and adjectives.
For example, Latin uses suffixes like "-tio/-sio" to form abstract nouns from verbs, as in "operate" to "operation".
Greek uses suffixes like "-sis" for abstract nouns derived from verbs and "-ma" for concrete nouns.

The difference between "n" and "t" in "Domini" and "domitare" is not about a consistent etymological contrast between the two letters themselves. Instead, it is about their role within the specific word stems and endings, stemming from different origins and grammatical functions.

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Searched {what is the etymological difference between n and t in Greek and Latin suffixes examples domini and domitare}
[6/23, 2:25 AM] Ned: Took me long enough
Thanks etymonline

-otic comes from -osis and there _is no_ -oty suffix rule.

-osis

word-forming element expressing state or condition, in medical terminology denoting "a state of disease," from Latin -osis and directly from Greek -osis, formed from the aorist of verbs ending in -o. It corresponds to Latin -atio.

neurosis(n.)

1776, "functional derangement arising from disorders of the nervous system (not caused by a lesion or injury)," coined by Scottish physician William Cullen (1710-1790) from Greek neuron "nerve" (see neuro-) + Modern Latin -osis "abnormal condition." Originally of epilepsy, hysteria, neuralgia, etc. Used in a general psychological sense from 1871, "change in the nerve cells of the brain resulting in symptoms of stress," but not radical loss of touch with reality (psychosis); clinical use in psychiatry dates from 1923.

neurotic(adj.)

1775, "acting upon or stimulating the nerves," from Greek neuron "nerve" (see neuro-) + -otic, as in hypnotic. Also compare neurosis. Meaning "relating to the nervous system" is by 1873. Sense of "affected by or prone to neurosis" is by 1887. The noun meaning "a neurotic person" is from 1896; earlier it meant "a drug acting on the nerves" (1660s). Related: Neurotically.
[6/23, 2:26 AM] Ned: So then what's orgonosis⸮
[6/23, 2:34 AM] Ned: If something has great orgonotic potency, there must be some orgonosis going on⸮
Is orgonotic pulsation the same thing as orgonosis⸮