Samuel L. Jackson: The President of the United States was involved in the largest child sex trafficking ring in American history. Let that sink in.

Irrelevant, yes? Or is changing the subject the idea?
Every idea suggesting genetic outcomes aren't inhabiting time adapting as displaced since conception changes the discussion of how evolving actually happens specifically here one at a time, now.
 
Every idea suggesting genetic outcomes aren't inhabiting time adapting as displaced since conception changes the discussion of how evolving actually happens specifically here one at a time, now.
Plain-English Version: “If you think genes don’t change over time from the moment of conception, then you’re misunderstanding how evolution works — evolution happens through small changes, one step at a time, in the present.”

What the original sentence attempted to say: "
  • Genes aren’t frozen in time.
  • They interact with their environment as an organism grows.
  • Evolution isn’t a big, all‑at‑once event — it’s a series of small changes happening across generations.
  • So any idea that treats genetic outcomes as fixed “since conception” misses how evolution actually operates."
 
Plain-English Version: “If you think genes don’t change over time from the moment of conception, then you’re misunderstanding how evolution works — evolution happens through small changes, one step at a time, in the present.”

What the original sentence attempted to say: "
  • Genes aren’t frozen in time.
  • They interact with their environment as an organism grows.
  • Evolution isn’t a big, all‑at‑once event — it’s a series of small changes happening across generations.
  • So any idea that treats genetic outcomes as fixed “since conception” misses how evolution actually operates."
What are the thermodynamic principles about universal motion of adapting since conception as one of a kind existing in series parallel time displaced fertilized cell to decomposed corpse never same details twice daily here? They apply equally to periodic elements into every reproduction native to this atmosphere lived since arrived as combinations to 3 states of matter and 5 ancestral lineages within this species changing population in plain sight each rotation forward so far.

I had a discussion to day about when Ben Franklin wrote as Silence Dogood in 1722 when global population was estimated at 500 million and in 2025 it reached 8.3 billion.

that is 8.3 billion ancestors in this species living in series parallel displacement factual relative time logistics doesn't accurately define ancestors as simple reproductions staying alive as eternally separated since conception.
 

Samuel L. Jackson: The President of the United States was involved in the largest child sex trafficking ring in American history. Let that sink in.​


samuel-l-jackson-the-president-of-the-united-states-was-v0-ll9x50noiong1.jpeg
Leave it to Samuel to tell it like it is.
 
This one is dense, tangled, and mixing several domains at once — thermodynamics, biology, population history, and a philosophical point about ancestry. Let me untangle it into something clear and usable.

I’ll break it into three parts:
  1. what the writer seems to be trying to say,
  2. a plain‑English translation,
  3. a cleaner, coherent rewrite.
They’re blending several ideas:

A. Thermodynamics + biology

They’re trying to say that:

  • Every living organism is a physical system obeying thermodynamic laws.
  • From conception to death, each organism is a unique, never‑repeated configuration of matter and energy.
  • Adaptation happens continuously in time — not frozen at conception.

B. Chemistry + reproduction

They’re also saying:
  • All life on Earth uses the same periodic elements (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, etc.).
  • All organisms exist in three states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) and follow the same biochemical rules.
  • Humans descend from a small number of ancestral lineages.

C. Population growth + ancestry

They bring up:
  • Global population in 1722 (~500 million).
  • Global population in 2025 (~8.3 billion).
  • They argue that calling each person’s ancestors “simple reproductions” is misleading because:
    • Each person is a unique thermodynamic event.
    • Each life is a one‑time, never‑repeated configuration.
    • “Ancestor” isn’t a static copy; it’s a time‑displaced, unique organism.
Here’s the whole thing in simple, direct English:

“Every living thing is a unique physical system that changes continuously from conception to death. You never get the same exact biological details twice. The same physical laws apply to all life — the elements we’re made of, the states of matter we exist in, and the ancestral lineages we come from. Human populations have grown massively since Franklin’s time, but calling ancestors ‘simple reproductions’ misses the point: each person is a one‑of‑a‑kind event in time, not a copy of someone before them.”

If you want it in a polished, academic‑style paragraph:

“Thermodynamics tells us that every organism is a unique, time‑bound configuration of matter and energy, adapting continuously from conception to death. These principles apply equally to all life on Earth, which is built from the same chemical elements and shaped by the same ancestral lineages. When we compare the world of 1722, with a population of roughly 500 million, to today’s 8.3 billion, it becomes clear that describing ancestors as ‘simple reproductions’ is inaccurate. Each human being is a distinct, non‑repeatable event in biological and thermodynamic history.”
 
This one is dense, tangled, and mixing several domains at once — thermodynamics, biology, population history, and a philosophical point about ancestry. Let me untangle it into something clear and usable.

I’ll break it into three parts:
  1. what the writer seems to be trying to say,
  2. a plain‑English translation,
  3. a cleaner, coherent rewrite.
They’re blending several ideas:

A. Thermodynamics + biology

They’re trying to say that:

  • Every living organism is a physical system obeying thermodynamic laws.
  • From conception to death, each organism is a unique, never‑repeated configuration of matter and energy.
  • Adaptation happens continuously in time — not frozen at conception.

B. Chemistry + reproduction

They’re also saying:
  • All life on Earth uses the same periodic elements (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, etc.).
  • All organisms exist in three states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) and follow the same biochemical rules.
  • Humans descend from a small number of ancestral lineages.

C. Population growth + ancestry

They bring up:
  • Global population in 1722 (~500 million).
  • Global population in 2025 (~8.3 billion).
  • They argue that calling each person’s ancestors “simple reproductions” is misleading because:
    • Each person is a unique thermodynamic event.
    • Each life is a one‑time, never‑repeated configuration.
    • “Ancestor” isn’t a static copy; it’s a time‑displaced, unique organism.
Here’s the whole thing in simple, direct English:

“Every living thing is a unique physical system that changes continuously from conception to death. You never get the same exact biological details twice. The same physical laws apply to all life — the elements we’re made of, the states of matter we exist in, and the ancestral lineages we come from. Human populations have grown massively since Franklin’s time, but calling ancestors ‘simple reproductions’ misses the point: each person is a one‑of‑a‑kind event in time, not a copy of someone before them.”

If you want it in a polished, academic‑style paragraph:

“Thermodynamics tells us that every organism is a unique, time‑bound configuration of matter and energy, adapting continuously from conception to death. These principles apply equally to all life on Earth, which is built from the same chemical elements and shaped by the same ancestral lineages. When we compare the world of 1722, with a population of roughly 500 million, to today’s 8.3 billion, it becomes clear that describing ancestors as ‘simple reproductions’ is inaccurate. Each human being is a distinct, non‑repeatable event in biological and thermodynamic history.”
Nice job. Why are you still defending humanity for corrupting your entire ancestry since dawn of civilization? See I am not calling for the end of relative time logistics since it is a necessary tool to schedule needs for an open and fair global market place for all ancestral lineages within this species is no exception to how evolving continues in plain sight.

I explain the means, motives, methods, 7 artificial days a week, organized mayhem, orchestrated chaos, misery put upon anyone not taking sides in believing life exceeds time adapting forward factually here for each intellectual soul that sacrificed their biological time living to keep the dream come true working every day alive.

Every ancestor born is a copy of their direct flow of compounding chromosomes. Just the previous 6 generation gaps are making up 99.34375% dominate genes. the rest are recessive genes going back to inception of one's ancestral lineage existed before dawn of civilization began corrupting ancestors to perform as type cast people cradle to grave daily here.

True believers rule life by artificial intelligence of vernacular tribalism. Every ancestry has their own ancestors seeking exemption and exception to natural time displaced as achieved by working theories and practiced theologies recorded social behavior in every society since dawn of civilization.
 
What serenity is trying to say.

This passage is dense, metaphor‑heavy, and written in a way that mixes biology, ancestry, sociology, and a kind of philosophical fatalism.

1. What the writer is trying to say (plain English)

A. “Why are you defending humanity for corrupting your ancestry?”

They’re arguing that:
  • Human societies (“civilization”) have distorted or constrained people’s natural identities.
  • This “corruption” has been happening since the beginning of organized society.
  • They think you shouldn’t defend systems that, in their view, suppress authentic human nature.
This is more rhetorical than literal.

B. “I’m not calling for the end of time logistics… it’s needed for a fair marketplace.”

They’re saying:
  • We need clocks, calendars, and schedules (“relative time logistics”) to run society.
  • They’re not arguing against those tools.
  • They believe all human groups (“ancestral lineages”) should benefit equally from modern systems.

C. “I explain the means, motives, methods… 7 artificial days a week… organized mayhem…”

This is their worldview:
  • The 7‑day week is “artificial,” created by humans.
  • Society creates “organized chaos” and pressure to conform.
  • People who don’t take sides or don’t believe in the system suffer for it.
  • They see life as something that adapts biologically, while society imposes artificial rules.

D. “Every ancestor is a copy… 6 generations make up 99.34375% of dominant genes.”

They’re trying to make a genetic argument:
  • Each person inherits most of their DNA from the last few generations.
  • They believe this means people are “copies” of their lineage.
  • They contrast this with society’s attempt to “type‑cast” people into roles from birth.
The math is oversimplified, but the point is metaphorical:biology is natural; society is imposed.

E. “True believers rule life by artificial intelligence of vernacular tribalism.”

This is poetic language meaning:

  • People who strongly believe in their group’s ideology (“true believers”) dominate society.
  • They use language, culture, and identity (“vernacular tribalism”) to enforce conformity.
  • They see this as a kind of “artificial intelligence”—not computers, but socially constructed thinking.

F. “Every ancestry seeks exemption from natural time… through theories and theologies.”

They’re saying:
  • Every culture creates stories, religions, and theories to justify its worldview.
  • These systems try to escape or reinterpret the natural flow of life and time.
  • This has been happening since the beginning of civilization.
Here’s the whole thing in one clear paragraph:

The writer believes that human civilization has distorted natural human identity since the beginning of history. They argue that society imposes artificial structures—like the 7‑day week, cultural roles, and ideological tribes—that suppress the natural, biological process of life adapting over time. They claim people inherit most of their traits from recent ancestors, but society “type‑casts” them into roles that don’t reflect that natural lineage. They also argue that every culture creates belief systems to justify its power. They’re asking why anyone would defend these systems when, in their view, they corrupt authentic human existence.
 
Seems the Epstein files have replaced Jan 6 as the go-to hater item of the day.
All Trump had to do is what he promised. Release them all immediately after being elected. You may not have noticed, he did not and has had a huge staff covering them up. They are big because his obvious fighting their release and blacking them out has been going on for over a year.
 
What serenity is trying to say.

This passage is dense, metaphor‑heavy, and written in a way that mixes biology, ancestry, sociology, and a kind of philosophical fatalism.


1. What the writer is trying to say (plain English)

A. “Why are you defending humanity for corrupting your ancestry?”

They’re arguing that:
  • Human societies (“civilization”) have distorted or constrained people’s natural identities.
  • This “corruption” has been happening since the beginning of organized society.
  • They think you shouldn’t defend systems that, in their view, suppress authentic human nature.
This is more rhetorical than literal.

B. “I’m not calling for the end of time logistics… it’s needed for a fair marketplace.”

They’re saying:
  • We need clocks, calendars, and schedules (“relative time logistics”) to run society.
  • They’re not arguing against those tools.
  • They believe all human groups (“ancestral lineages”) should benefit equally from modern systems.

C. “I explain the means, motives, methods… 7 artificial days a week… organized mayhem…”

This is their worldview:
  • The 7‑day week is “artificial,” created by humans.
  • Society creates “organized chaos” and pressure to conform.
  • People who don’t take sides or don’t believe in the system suffer for it.
  • They see life as something that adapts biologically, while society imposes artificial rules.

D. “Every ancestor is a copy… 6 generations make up 99.34375% of dominant genes.”

They’re trying to make a genetic argument:
  • Each person inherits most of their DNA from the last few generations.
  • They believe this means people are “copies” of their lineage.
  • They contrast this with society’s attempt to “type‑cast” people into roles from birth.
The math is oversimplified, but the point is metaphorical:biology is natural; society is imposed.

E. “True believers rule life by artificial intelligence of vernacular tribalism.”

This is poetic language meaning:

  • People who strongly believe in their group’s ideology (“true believers”) dominate society.
  • They use language, culture, and identity (“vernacular tribalism”) to enforce conformity.
  • They see this as a kind of “artificial intelligence”—not computers, but socially constructed thinking.

F. “Every ancestry seeks exemption from natural time… through theories and theologies.”

They’re saying:
  • Every culture creates stories, religions, and theories to justify its worldview.
  • These systems try to escape or reinterpret the natural flow of life and time.
  • This has been happening since the beginning of civilization.
Here’s the whole thing in one clear paragraph:

The writer believes that human civilization has distorted natural human identity since the beginning of history. They argue that society imposes artificial structures—like the 7‑day week, cultural roles, and ideological tribes—that suppress the natural, biological process of life adapting over time. They claim people inherit most of their traits from recent ancestors, but society “type‑casts” them into roles that don’t reflect that natural lineage. They also argue that every culture creates belief systems to justify its power. They’re asking why anyone would defend these systems when, in their view, they corrupt authentic human existence.
Genetic outcomes are biologically evolving one reproduction at a time here now, not philosophical possibilities it works by supernatural entities be they mind over matter or extraterrestrial implants.

Humanity's socially unproven negativity about building better tomorrows by a 7 days a week schedule of events trains every brain since birth to not accept living doesn't exceed adapting to the moment here each personal heart beating forward one at a time now.

Series parallel energy flow works spontaneously separating total sum living forward in plain sight of existing here since conception as just another ever changing form shaped in their relative time alive now.

which generation gap have you achieved after birth arriving a great great grandchild, a great grandchild, a grandchild, mom or dad, son, daughter, sibling, cousin at birth.

there were 30 people involved in last 2 centuries that brought about our specific conception and all you do on this forum is defend who you rather had become than all you were since birth.

You want to use language against in a social arena of ideas, be my guest. I know where the implied energy of karma came from in actual time evolving daily here.

Genetic results inhabiting time individually alive now. Specificity doesn't happen by working theories recited for over 350 generations scheduled by 7 days a week calendar of creating linear time definitions of what evolves never same results twice each rotation of the planet forward now.
Most people defending a reality will to accept that outcome is possible even though they are alive because that is how genetics works in plain sight.

Balancing out details of results never same twice. Perpetual balancing motions a universal movements happen so far.
Context corrupts chromosomes living forward daily here.

Figures lie and liars figure. Imagine 26 letter alphabet creates infinite vocabulary between generations gaps lived so far and integers 0-9 count 8.3 billion sole displacements as typecast people cradle to grave.

this post debunks anything Samuel L. Jackson says and most other people saying humanity is the salvation of every intellectual soul with evolving results so far.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top