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Originally posted by southbeach
reply to post by Lightbringer38
That is the speech that i believe got Kennedy killed and the rest of his family.
Originally posted by jiwozejy214
Oh, by the the way, the one plotting the Northwoods project was Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer's ...a jew.
Originally posted by daynight42
reply to post by TheLegend
Star for you. That was a good summary. Shame more people didn't give you give. Maybe they thought you were serious.
Originally posted by ninjas4321
reply to post by Lightbringer38
Do you really think people are actually going to start a revolution? Sorry guys but its only a pipe dream while fox news is playing 24/7 and people are so concentrated on just scraping enough nickels together to keep food on the table its not going to happen And if it does then what we will probably be stuck with an even worse system ( think animal farm)edit on 8-7-2012 by ninjas4321 because: (no reason given)edit on 8-7-2012 by ninjas4321 because: (no reason given)
late 14c., originally of celestial bodies, from O.Fr. revolution, from L.L. revolutionem (nom. revolutio) "a revolving," from L. revolutus, pp. of revolvere "turn, roll back" (see revolve). General sense of "instance of great change in affairs" is recorded from mid-15c. Political meaning first recorded c.1600, derived from French, and was especially applied to the expulsion of the Stuart dynasty under James II in 1688 and transfer of sovereignty to William and Mary.
late 14c., from L. revolvere "turn, roll back," from re- "back, again" + volvere "to roll" (see vulva). Meaning "travel around a central point" first recorded 1660s.
1540s, from L. vulva, earlier volva "womb, female sexual organ," lit. "wrapper," from volvere "to turn, twist, roll, revolve," also "turn over in the mind," from PIE root *wel- "to turn, revolve," with derivatives referring to curved, enclosing objects (cf. Skt. valate "turns round," ulvam "womb, vulva;" Lith. valtis "twine, net," apvalus "round;" O.C.S. valiti "roll, welter," vluna "wave;" Gk. eluo "wind, wrap," helix "spiral object," eilein "to turn, squeeze;" Goth. walwjan "to roll;" O.E. wealwian "roll," weoloc "whelk, spiral-shelled mollusk;" O.H.G. walzan "to roll, waltz;" O.Ir. fulumain "rolling;" Welsh olwyn "wheel").
expedite (v.) late 15c. (implied in pp. expedit), from L. expeditus, pp. of expedire "extricate, disengage, liberate; procure, make ready, make fit, prepare," lit. "free the feet from fetters," hence "liberate from difficulties," from ex- "out" (see ex-) + *pedis "fetter, chain for the feet," related to pes (gen. pedis) "foot" (see foot). Cf. Gk. pede "fetter." Related: Expedited; expediting.