Alex Hogendorp / Lunar Eclipse Paradox / KermisVoyager1997 / BetterSkatez / Chords of Brazil / Funky the Clown (and many more) - Whiny canuck with TDS, Political flip-flopper, Flat-earther, Fetishistic media encyclopedia, Limbless loli connoisseur, GIANT hypocrite, Raped by fake clowns, Spiritual tranny, Wanna-be skitzocow, Noushintou Hoshi's #1 fan, Betrayed by Kiwi Farms

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Fellow Founding Fathers: Gijsbert Karel van Hogendorp and Thomas Jefferson​

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The American Revolution had a significant impact on the Dutch Republic. The end of the eighteenth century was marked by a spirited exchange of ideas on liberty, political rights and state-building between the two Republics. But it was not merely ideas which traveled freely.

People from both sides of the Atlantic sailed across the ocean for professional, political, and personal reasons, and testified to the great revolutionary events that were unfolding at the time. This led to numerous exchanges between American and Dutch politicians. In this essay Lauren Lauret focuses on Gijsbert Karel van Hogendorp and Thomas Jefferson.


The Dutch Republic was the first country to acknowledge the independence of the United States in 1782. An official delegation set sail to Philadelphia the following year and Gijsbert Karel van Hogendorp joined them in a military capacity. His journey was a transatlantic and revolutionary version of the traditional Grand Tour: the Old World visiting the New.

During the trip he wrote an extensive number of thematic and philosophical letters, now kept by the National Archives of the Netherlands in The Hague. He would later draw on this material when working on the new constitution of the Dutch Restoration government in the 1810s.

In the process, Van Hogendorp retained the institutions of the Batavian Revolution, while providing them with their traditional, pre-revolutionary names. A transatlantic perspective helps us to better understand the pivotal contributions of both Thomas Jefferson and Van Hogendorp to the American and Dutch constitutions respectively.

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“The best-informed man of his age I have ever seen”


After meeting Van Hogendorp in Annapolis, where Congress had assembled, Jefferson recommended him to George Washington “as the best-informed man of his age I have ever seen.”

Of course, Jefferson could not foresee that Van Hogendorp would later become the main author of the Dutch constitution, but, as he wrote to the young man, he was much impressed with his abilities:

“Your thirst after knowledge, your capacity to acquire it, your dispositions to apply it to the good of mankind [..] give your country much to hope from the continuance of your life.”

Such praise no doubt boosted the intellectual ambitions of the twenty-year old youth who relished the exchange of ideas on government with Jefferson from the moment they met. At first glance, Jefferson and Van Hogendorp would appear to be unlikely friends.

They occupied opposite ends of the spectrum as far as fundamental questions were concerned. Jefferson championed popular sovereignty and individual state power.

In contrast, Van Hogendorp believed that the people should be firmly kept in check and that the limitations on the powers of Congress were detrimental to the American Republic.

Nevertheless, the exchange of letters set Van Hogendorp’s mind on fire and he bombarded Jefferson with questions. On reading a draft of Jefferson’s Notes of the State of Virginia in 1784, he asked a poignant question:

“Give me leave to put You in mind of the articles of Your description of Virginia, which You granted me to have copied. I should wish to know whether Your Negroes marry, or what proportion do. One Evening in the Yerseys [New Jersey], riding on very slow on my fatigued horse, I conceived an idea that gave me great Satisfaction. It leads to develope the history and destination of man. In consequence of it I have drawn a rough sketch of a system of Nature, of Society, of Government and of Politics. I am not able now to Send You a copy, but intend doing it afterwards.”

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“Study the laws to simplify them”

A central idea running through Van Hogendorp’s notes is the “simplicity” of the American people. This would also become a key term in plans to reform the government of the Dutch Republic. Van Hogendorp carefully observed how the Massachusetts legislature went about simplifying the state’s legislation in December, 1783:

“Committees do most of the work really, or the main combatants walk up to each other during a debate and settle the matter. They do not always turn a committee report into a state law, nevertheless the report is influential. Several matters are trusted in the hands of committees elected outside of the assembly: this way the most-esteemed are elected to study the laws to simplify them. Seventy [bills] were listed, three of those were presented to the assembly, and all of them spoiled by lucid comments.”

According to Van Hogendorp, public finance was in need of simplification in both the “old” Dutch Republic and the young American Republic.

Most Dutch provinces had been unwilling to adapt their standard contribution to federal expenses when circumstances changed. In the light of this crucial political problem, Van Hogendorp was very interested in the design of American financial system.

Jefferson commented on Van Hogendorp’s “short account of the finances of the United States” and Robert Morris — an initiator of the Bank of North-America— commented on his note on the “Bank of North-America.” The American states, like the Dutch provinces, wanted to maintain the quote system, which they regarded as an essential element of states’ rights.

Van Hogendorp was of the opinion that in doing so the young American Republic ran the risk of making the same mistakes as his homeland and informed Jefferson accordingly.

In his notes, Van Hogendorp also reflected on the benefits of Dutch-American financial and commercial collaboration, which was of course the main purpose of the delegation of which he was part. “The lack of money is a general complaint in America,” he observed.

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Both the American people and several of the states desired to establish a central bank, but lacked sufficient funds to do so. Regardless of the source of funding, Van Hogendorp opined that “the power invested in that bank should be placed in the state.”

He believed Dutch capital should be used, as “we would benefit from foreigners, while we pay them a service.”

American imports of raw materials to the Dutch Republic would reduce commodity costs and thus support Dutch industries, while the surplus of funds accumulated by wealthy merchants would flow out of the country in a secure and profitable way.

In a way, this is what happened subsequently: Amsterdam trading houses and banks supplied a considerable number of loans to the United States in the 1780s and 1790s.

Van Hogendorp’s observations contain the kernel of an idea that would be put into practice in the Netherlands after 1813: a central bank with close ties to the national government.

After Van Hogendorp returned to the Netherlands and Jefferson was stationed in Paris in 1785 their correspondence continued for another year or so. Jefferson sent Van Hogendorp a copy of his Notes on the State of Virginia as well of the proposed revisions of the laws of Virgina.

The proposals, based on Jefferson’s natural philosophy, emphasized gradual political reform and the composition of republican constitutions. Van Hogendorp expressed his hope “to communicate some reflexions” soon, but for the time being, he found the “article of natural history” very pleasing.

Van Hogendorp full-heartedly agreed with Jefferson that “every natural production, in similar circumstances, generally speaking, [was] the same with you as with us.”

In September, he told Jefferson which other documents he would also like to study:

“The Code of laws Your friend will send me As I am now studying more particularly the civil law; that of a people understanding its rights, that which is built on common sense, rather than on authorities of former times, that which takes its origin from an enligthened nation (which You Surely allow the English to be), must be perculiarly interesting and worthy of my whole attention.”

This letter points to the origin of Van Hogendorp’s central notion as author of the Dutch constitution in the early nineteenth century: maintaining the governmental institutions of the Batavian Republic under an early-modern name. He had adopted the idea that history was not the sole source of political legitimacy.

In this case, Van Hogendorp took his lead from civil law which employed common sense as a source of legitimacy. From the Notes Van Hogendorp must have understood that Jefferson too believed that traditional forms of authority had to yield to human reason and common sense, which had become prevalent in the later eighteenth century.

“The bond which connects rulers to the ruled”

Van Hogendorp adopted another crucial idea from the United States: popular influence as a requirement for a stable government. In reacting to the Dutch translation of Richard Price’s Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty, Van Hogendorp posited that political equality of men was an illusion, as equal distribution of possessions was its necessary prerequisite.

In America he had witnessed wise men fall victim to the “tendency of the people” to believe in the future equal distribution of wealth and possessions.

Van Hogendorp feared that the potential growth of the United States would satisfy only the most ambitious: “Interest and custom form the bond which connects rulers to the ruled.”

This also applied in the United States, as the Americans regarded the wealthy free states of Mexico and Peru with suspicion. Rulers should therefore take into account that there would always be conflicts of interest among the people they ruled. And increased wealth among the population could challenge, or even topple, those already in power.

Therefore, a government would act wisely if it allowed the people a say over governmental matters. The main issue was how to manage the people’s influence as installing a system of checks and balances was essential to state building.

Van Hogendorp openly doubted whether wealth or nature should be determinative factors. In any case, America had provided Van Hogendorp with an ingenious way to solve this:

“In the new governments of the American free states, every independent inhabitant has the right to elect members of the commons. But not everyone has the right to elect members of the Council or the two bodies of the legislature. One has to possess a certain property, or double the amount of money, to be elected to the commons; and more so to sit in the Council; and most to be Governor.”

“The executive an illustrious family”

The correspondence between Van Hogendorp and Jefferson was not just one-way traffic. Van Hogendorp supplied Jefferson with information about the Dutch Republic, including his opinion on the risk of concentrating power in the hands of a single executive officer for an extended length of time.

To Van Hogendorp the Dutch Republic was similar to England, where “unequality of fortunes has confined the greatest share of power to a few hands.” He explained how the House of Orange became to regard the highest public office, the stadtholderate, as its private possession: “It is become necessary with us to place at the head of the executive an illustrious family which excludes for ever any other one, and prevents a kind of civil war at every vacancy.”

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He pointed to Dutch history to highlight the dangers:

“The first Stadholders held from the king the same power and in the same way as Your Governors do from the people at large. [..] The [Dutch Revolt] made them Stadholders of the State, instead of the King’s and lately they have been declared hereditary. The nation at that epocha has heaped on her new Stadholder’s head every honour and advantage almost that she was able to bestow. She now has been repenting of her former profusion. But alas! instead of resting satisfyed with her success in reassuming such rights as must be her’s alone in order to entertain an equipoise to the Stadholder’s influence, the nation is imposed upon by some daring men who should wish to lay the foundation of their own greatness on the ruin of the Stadholder’s constitutional authority.”

Thus Van Hogendorp explained how upon his return from the United States, he found his homeland on the brink of civil war. Everyone had to take sides in the struggle between the so-called Patriots party and the Orangist party.

Meanwhile Jefferson had arrived in Europe in 1784 and was informed by Van Hogendorp — a fierce critic of the Patriot movement — about the turmoil.

This partisanship made Jefferson skeptical about the future of the Dutch Republic: “I feel a sincere interest in the fate of your country, and am disposed to wish well to either party only as I can see in their measures a tendency to bring on an amelioration of the condition of the people, an increase in the mass of happiness.”

As the Dutch Republic descended into political turmoil in 1787, the delegates of the American states to the Constitutional Convention taking place in Philadelphia used the Dutch as an example to demonstrate what the future United States should not become. However, the Dutch Republic had been referred to in a more positive way during the constitutional debates in the individual states.

From a Dutch perspective, it is striking to note that many American state constitutions included a mechanism to ensure only Protestants had access to public office well into the nineteenth century.

American Vestiges in the Dutch Constitutional Committee (1815)

After the monarchy in the Netherlands was reestablished in 1813, Van Hogendorp became chair of the committee entrusted with drafting the new constitution. Now he could use American examples to finetune his thoughts on government into a founding document. He had closely studied the Massachusetts Constitution, in which the executive was the strongest of all of the states.

Likewise, the American federal constitution of 1787 had granted extensive powers to the president. Taking his lead from these examples, Van Hogendorp’s draft constitution allocated great power to the executive. In practice, this power would be given to the son of the last stadtholder: King William I (1776-1843).

Van Hogendorp also devoted considerable attention to the idea of a parliament divided into a lower house and a senate. This was “a cardinal point” according to him, but its implementation was hotly contested. Whereas Americans had feared that representatives “like those in Holland” could stay in office for life, Van Hogendorp faced opposition from members who argued that a monarchy needed nobility to keep the lower house in check.

Van Hogendorp was not opposed the idea of two houses per se, but he could not agree to hereditary membership in the senate. After the decision on the two houses of parliament had been made, the committee had to decide whether debates in the lower house should be held in public.

The majority of the committee, including Van Hogendorp, was in favour of public debates. Supporters referred to the United States to point out the benefits of public debates. Debating in public and publishing the proceedings were the only ways to maintain national trust in parliament and nourish the public spirit, the argument ran.

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Despite Van Hogendorp’s American experience, he did not recognize a fatal mistake in the new constitution of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. He had failed to secure equal representation of the various parts of the kingdom in the lower house.

The population of the southern provinces — now Belgium — outnumbered the northern by two to three. The Protestant north feared being outvoted by Catholics from the south. Van Hogendorp’s stance shows the American influence on his conception of political representation.

In the American Republic, the issue of representation in Congress was not addressed definitely. Another member of the committee recalled that the early American Republic had changed its system of representation within a few years after its independence: while the thirteen American states each had had one vote in Congress, they were now “waiting for a general cadastre of the lands” to redistribute the votes accordingly.

Van Hogendorp believed that soil, wealth, and education should determine the number of delegates rather than population size. He also insisted that the Dutch colonial territories should be taken into account, in an echo of the American revolutionary argument regarding taxation and representation. This would mean the Dutch population, including colonies, would outnumber the Belgian south, which did not have any colonies, by two to one.

Taking its lead from the American Republic, the Dutch constitutional committee proposed an unequal representation of the northern and southern parts of the new state. But in true Van Hogendorp fashion, it presented this as a continuation of the Union of Utrecht of 1579: the north and the south should be regarded as equal partners in the Kingdom, as the provinces of the Dutch Republic had been until 1795.

Therefore the north and south should have an equal share of the vote in the new assembly. It did not last. Within fifteen years, the southern representatives separated from the north during the Belgian Revolution of 1830.

Conclusion

What do these exchanges between the Dutch and American Founding Fathers tell us about the principles of redesigning governmental structures in the Revolutionary Era?

Without Van Hogendorp’s study of the American Republic, the Dutch state may have looked very different in the nineteenth century. Of course, the exchange of ideas did not stop at the turn of the century.

Jefferson commemorated his stay in the Netherlands in his 1821 autobiography. He remembered Van Hogendorp as a “royalist” who criticized the central role of the stadtholder.

Shortly before Jefferson visited the Dutch Republic in 1788, Prussian troops had restored the House of Orange to the stadtholderate. Jefferson regarded the stadtholder as the main problem in the constitution of the Dutch Republic, as the English crown forced the stadtholder into the unenviable role of a “servile Viceroy of a foreign sovereign.”

By 1821 however, Van Hogendorp had shed his reputation as a royalist. Instead public finance became the central theme of his political work. He upheld the principles of public finance that he had studied in the U.S. in the 1780s. However, the Dutch king wanted to limit parliamentary control on the state budget as much as possible.

When Van Hogendorp voted against the budget in 1819, William I regarded this as an act of treason and stripped Van Hogendorp of his honorific title as Minister of State.

The Belgian Revolution put the issue of constitutional revision on the political agenda: Van Hogendorp published a pamphlet on the state’s credit and advocated the important issue of national finance that he had discussed with Jefferson decades earlier.


Article and archive
 
Why is Alex so scared of AI? Can't his highly trained team of computer hackers keep him safe? I already know his squadron of ex military security force has him covered as far as physical confrontations.

Oh. I get it. It's satire. He's not shaking in bed out of paranoia. He's quivering with joy, stifling laughter at his own comedic genius. He's pretending he hates the AI videos because he actually doesn't care about being made fun of. It doesn't bother him one iota. He doesn't even read Kiwifarms. He's too busy livin' La Vida Loca over in old Mexico.

Well, since we all love Alex and want him to be happy, we should keep making AI Alex videos and deep fakes.

Here a video of naked Emily Cassidy proving she doesn't have a penish. Maybe someone can do something with this.
Why did I fucking click this while I'm eating breakfast goddamnit
 
Colonial Captains Chest from the van Hogendorp family estate

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Those who travelled to the Dutch East Indies and had enough money and private space on board often had a private chest made in that region to transport their most precious belongings.

The form, decoration and size would depend on both period (fashion/style) and the owners taste. Most often this would be the captain or a high ranking officer of the vessel.

Most vessels traveling to the East Indies in the 18th century would be owned by either the VOC, the United (Dutch) East Indies (trading) Company, or the Dutch navy. Hence the common name for such chests are either VOC/Compagnies chest or Captains’ chest.

In later periods the ships became larger and more people could bring on freight items leading to more and simpler variations of chests in the later 19th and 20th century.

This is an example of such a chest from the end of the 18th or early 19th century with some special variations that make it a rare example of an already rare item. Also the provenance is of interest.

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The chest itself is made of tropical hardwood with brass fittings as is usual. This type of wood was called Djati in the East Indies and nowadays is more commonly described as teak. The brass fittings are interesting as all parts end in a stylized Fleur de Lys – the French national symbol. This is not a common treat on such chests.

This seems to have been in fashion in the ruling classes in the Netherlands only by the end of the 18th and very early 19th century. The period from 1795 up to 1815 (Waterloo) in which the Netherlands were occupied and ruled by the French. We will come back to that a bit later as we come to the provenance.

So far I have only found one similar example in the collection of the Kennemerland museum. This also comes from a noble Dutch family and is dated there as 1790 – 1800.

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The example above from the museum Kennemerland has also the Fleur de Lys decoration as my example but it is larger and the brass fittings are less extensively applied.

The second interesting part of the chest is the lid side of the lock plate. The top is in the form of a crown.

Although crowns are often only seen as the headdress of kings and their likes in heraldry they are a sign of the rank of nobility. In this case not a Kings crown but that of a Dutch Earl (graaf) with a stylized Fleur de Lys in the middle and two halves on the outsides with pearls in between.

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I have not been able to find any other chests with such a feature yet. These crowns in their various forms are often applied to other personal items from plates to swords, rings and clothing.

Many of such Captains’ chests are in Museum collections and there is also an antiques dealer in Utrecht that has sold quite a few of these over the years, also several Auction houses sold such chests. They together function as my reference base for this limited research (I have not found any other good reference sources yet).

Now to a third interesting part, the base. This is different than most which either do not have one or if the have it is an integral part of the chest. In this case it is a loose table with standup sidings on which the chest can be placed.

This base is made of (tropical?) wood that has been colored black to make it look like ebony. The base again has brass wheels that were only added in the early 20th century when it stood in the hall of the families country house in Vorden.

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The brass fittings of the chest run over the entire underside like they do on the top and all sides are also covered by the fittings which is not standard on most chests either. It protects the chest very well when handled more roughly.

A last interesting feature can be seen on both sides of the chest. It has an additional brass fitting that stops the lid around the 90 degree angle, it can not go further than that which prevents it from damage or even breaking the lid.

The handles to lift the chest are well made and also have a Fleur de Lys decoration. They are also designed to stop at a 90 degree angle as a safety device for the hands.

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Provenance Van Hogendorp noble family.

The Van Hogendorp family has a history that traces back to the 16 century where the first traceable member was counselor in the High Council of Holland. Many family member held important positions both in civilian as in military and naval careers.

The family entered nobility during the French reign as Comte de L’Empire (equivalent of Earl or in Dutch Graaf) and a little bit later into the Dutch nobility as well with both Earl and Baron as titles. Some family members had important civilian ranks (Regent of Buitenzorg e.g.) in the East Indies both under French and Dutch royal ruling.

Later in the 19th century family members had important careers in the Dutch navy achieving even the rank of admiral and receiving the Military Order of William. It now comes from the estate of a Baron van Hogendorp, a high ranking officer in the Dutch army and from a longer line of Dutch officers.

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So far within, the Van Hogendorp family, there seems to be only one likely candidate as the original owner of the chest, Dirk van Hogendorp:

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DIRK VAN HOGENDORP

3 Oct. 1761 – 29 Oct. 1822. From the Admiralty of Amsterdam. Cadet in Berlin in 1773. Ensign in 1777. Lieutenant in 1780. Captain in 1782. In Dutch service as Captain-Lieutenant at the Admiralty of Amsterdam in 1783. Joins the VOC (Dutch East India Company) in 1786.

1784 Distinguishes himself on the Utrecht under Van Braam off Malacca, Selangor, and Riau. 1786 Becomes second resident in Patna, Bengal. 1789 Becomes under-merchant and administrator at Onrust. 1791 Becomes resident in Japara. 1794 Governor of Java’s northeastern coast. 1798 Arrested and escapes.

1799 Returns to the Netherlands. 1803 Envoy to the Batavian Republic in St. Petersburg. 1806 Returns to the Netherlands, becomes a member of the Council of State and Minister of War. 1807 Envoy from the Kingdom of Holland to Vienna. 1809 Envoy to Berlin, recalled in 1810 and sent to Madrid.

1811 Becomes Lieutenant General in the French service and adjutant to Napoleon. 1812 Governor of Königsberg, then Governor-General of Lithuania in Vilnius. 1813 Fights in the army of the Emperor at Bautzen. 1814 Governor of Breslau. Removed from the city by Davoust after a disagreement, returns to Holland.

1816 Emigrates to Brazil.


Article and archive
 
If Dutch royalty how their bloodline dies with Alex and his two sisters they've would've hoped out and stay in Europe, I've said this out of intuition and I was proven right.
Alex, you Dishonor your family name, change your gender and your name to fix it.
 
Alextism, mostly about autism blabbering and muh Suhail and Atria is better than the chuds on Kiwi Farms does. Also includes him wanting to suck on ENC’s saggy sausage tits and ugly gunt.

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That website even though I apologized for calling to censor it still embodies almost everything I hate about the modern internet. It's still one of the worst websites I ever visited. (Referring to Kiwi Farms.)
Reply 1:
I still hate almost everyone on this website. Hate them as much as the porn bots on Twitter.
Reply 2:
I'm still not gonna feel sympathy for it if the site shuts down though.
dA | GA
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I was mentioned in N Brio's Internet Trolls Iceberg on 3rd tier with CodyTheKingOfYouTube, IntelligentCODFanboy and Phylofilms which I thought was pretty cool.

Watched the full video and I enjoyed it.
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Projection 1:
It's hard to find funny classic trolls on YouTube anymore. They don't get the recognition anymore. What's just left is UTTP who gets their dick wet trolling Oscar Ferguson and Dan Sobel and fascists. Though there would be a once in a blue moon troll who preach that today's anime sucks or something. But now the modern internet feels like the 10 minute rape scene from irreversible.
Projection 2:
Around 10% of people covered onCuteFuzzyWeasel's feeding the trolls were genuinely funny people like Mariotehplumber and MonkeyGameGuides while another 10% were weird extreme leftists like Monica Punk and Gazi Kodzo while the rest he covered are right wing conspiracy nuts who deserve to be ridiculed to hell and back like Eric Dubay and James The Preacher.
dA | GA
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The internet is basically like chernobyl nowadays. It's a disaster, everything is fake. But dare speak up against the fascists on the internet and you get bullied to death.
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People who say Generative Al is the future needs to shut up. I was raped by generative Al bros.
dA | GA
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How can anyone think an fake 3 headed man that praise God with his Justin Bieber voice despite being ridiculed and bullied be considered better than something like Godspeed You! Black Emperor? God doesn't bless this man by the looks of it. This is nightmare fuel.
dA | GA
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I remember going to that Cambrian room exhibit at the Royal Tyrell Museum and it scared the shit out of children. That was awesome. It's still there by the way. Just added some Ediacaran elements before that room.
dA | GA
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My writing of Suhail and Atria is miles ahead of the generative Al christianized knockoff. I remember when Christian movies were hilariously stupid such as Left Behind and God's Not Dead. Fuck you for thinking it's shit if you can't write. Dumbasses too much of a pussy to handle Elfen Lied (which I'm not really a fan of anyways, it's kinda dumb) Still better than Generative Al by a long shot.
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I owe my apology to Emily Nicole Cassidy. At least she draws and doesn't do generative Al.
It fucks with my mind that people think they can use my characters for free for their fascist propaganda. It makes me sick.
iii_kyO's character Alha was my inspiration to create Suhail.
dA | GA
Gay nigger, it's AI-generated content, not Generative AI, you autistic low IQ dumbfuck.

:story: :story: :story:
 
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BetterSkatez said:
iii_kyO's character Alha was my inspiration to create Suhail.

Alex how hard is it to put a picture or a link in your DeviantArt posts?

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I'm trying to find this "Alha" character, but I'm not finding it through this japanese artist's Twitter

Could you please provide a picture Alex?
 
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  • Optimistic
Reactions: Cheesy Beavy
LMAO @IKOL

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L / A

BetterSkatez
I had one native Russian speaker ridicule me for speaking their language, hurts a lot.​
Sorry to hear that. As a Russian I admire foreigners trying to learn my language.​
Thank you very much. I will continue learning this language.​
That's great. Just don't take the words of assholes to heart. Whoever made fun of you probably doesn't know how difficult it is to learn another language. Удачи!​
as a russian, i'm sorry you had a bad experience, but i want you to know that it's deffo an isolated case. usually most Russians are happy when a foreigner learns our language, and are quite supportive n sweet​

Alex Also wrote comments in this subreddit:
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L / A


Not the best way to wake up after a doctor's visit​

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Actually, it kinda is the best way.

L / A

The black smile of a soulless captive​

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Love that nightcrawler.

L / A

Sorry for double post
 
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LMAO @IKOL
What hap~

Oh...


Whoever made fun of you probably doesn't know how difficult it is to learn another language.
I would like to adress this individual words and say ты не слышал насколько ужасен русский в устах Алекса, так что взял мочало, себе сунул в ротало и завалил ебало.
And frankly I know the struggle of language barrier and the learning curve. After all I've only got to know english somewhat decent through direct interractions with english forums users.
So suck my Russo-Lithuano-oinko-kike shlong, you reddit niggercattle.
 
ANNOUNCEMENT: I have officially banned Alex Hogendorp from learning/studying the Spanish language until further notice. If you see him wanting to learn Spanish, immediately report to the authorities (me and others in this thread).
I say if we catch him, we confiscate all of his amputee loli porn and then we bind him but keep all his limbs so he doesn't enjoy it too much.
 
PSA: Алекс "Лимблесс хуеглот" Хожендёрп официально получил анафему от Русской православной церкви, Русского филиала Католической церки и меня, геральда церкви МочаМедведа, а также от всех патриотов и либералов России (кроме реддитфагов потому что они гниломозглые педофилы и в целом унтерменши). Алекс более не имеет права изучать русский язык. Нюхай бебру, ублюдок.
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Alex "Limbles donggurgler" Hogedorp is officially Anaphema'd by Russian Orthodox churt, Russian branch of Catholic church, by me Ikolthur Benoit the herald of the PissBear Church. He's also Anaphema'd by Russian patriots and liverals alike (except for reddit faggots cuz they are pedophiles and branrotten untermench (subhumans, duh)). Alex is prohibited from learning Russian language. Smell that bebra, amputeefucker.

Oh but you can learn Ukrainian and die for the Oink land. Do it in the name of Zhidlensky.
 
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