Cultcow Brad Watson / Richard Bradshaw Watson / Brad Watson_Miami - Jesus & Albert Einstein reincarnated, discoverer of GOD=7_4 Theory

How do you grade Brad Watson? This is an official poll that reflects the will of GOD.

  • Excellent A - Freedom from corporeal shackles and permitted audience with THE LORD.

    Votes: 167 13.5%
  • Passing B - Freedom from corporeal shackles and free attendance of GOD's Kingdom.

    Votes: 22 1.8%
  • Fair C - Freedom from corporeal shackles. Given limited, general attendance of GOD's Kingdom.

    Votes: 22 1.8%
  • Poor D - Reincarnated as Man to be given a second chance at attempting to earn GOD's graces.

    Votes: 39 3.2%
  • Fail F - Reincarnated as a non-human for 326 years, 221 days, and 14 hours.

    Votes: 76 6.2%
  • Fail F - Sentenced to eternal tortures in HELL for crimes against THE LORD GOD.

    Votes: 106 8.6%
  • Fail F - Forced to post on the kiwifarms.net for 24 years, 30 days, and 2 hours.

    Votes: 802 65.0%

  • Total voters
    1,234
Except he's so special he can't be just one important figure, he adds to the list varying on what History channel is running that day.
And he obviously doesn't know who some of the people he claims to be were. Vishnu is a perfect example. He thinks Vishnu was a person, when a simple Google search will show that Vishnu is a Hindu deity, which makes him immortal like GOD is. And all he knows of Fibonacci is the Fibonacci sequence. It's like "Hey Dude! I read The DaVinci Code too!"
 
And he obviously doesn't know who some of the people he claims to be were. Vishnu is a perfect example. He thinks Vishnu was a person, when a simple Google search will show that Vishnu is a Hindu deity, which makes him immortal like GOD is. And all he knows of Fibonacci is the Fibonacci sequence. It's like "Hey Dude! I read The DaVinci Code too!"


Because Brad is dumb as a post.

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Black Holes, How The Universe Works (S1/Ep2, 2010) just finished74 on SCI. It ended with Michio Kaku (whom I spoke with at the Einstein Conference in the summer of 2004 at the Aspen Institute) stating how a supermassive white hole is the opposite of a supermassive black hole and how the Big Bang (/Bit Bang) was a SWH and that we all live within the event horizon of a SBH in another universe. A SBH is at the center of every galaxy within our Universe, therefore, they would produce over 150 billion other universes all with their own ~150 billion galaxies...

http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermassive_black_hole
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/White_hole


Synchronism: 09:09 "(There are billions of Earth-size rocky planets within the Goldilocks Zone of their star in this Universe.) Each one could be a Earth-like heaven or a hell." - Planets From Hell, How The Universe Works (S2/Ep3, 2012) on SCI
 
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Black Holes, How The Universe Works (S1/Ep2, 2010) just finished74 on SCI. It ended with Michio Kaku (whom I spoke with at the Einstein Conference in the summer of 2004 at the Aspen Institute) stating how a supermassive white hole is the opposite of a supermassive black hole and how the Big Bang (/Bit Bang) was a SWH and that we all live within the event horizon of a SBH in another universe. A SBH is at the center of every galaxy within our Universe, therefore, they would produce over 150 billion other universes all with their own ~150 billion galaxies...

http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermassive_White_Holes


Synchronism: 09:09 "(There are billions of Earth-size rocky planets within the Goldilocks Zone of their star in this Universe.) Each one could be a Earth-like heaven or a hell." - Planets From Hell, How The Universe Works (S2/Ep3, 2012) on SCI
You're a supermassive white hole.
 
Leonardo Fibonacci c. 1200 introduced Hindu-Arabic numerals to Europe. This is what ended the Medieval Age/Dark Ages and ushered in The Renaissance.
Brad is spreading complete and utter nonsense once more.

The 12th and 13th century are considered the high middle ages (google that ;) ), followed by the late middle ages (late 13th century till roughly the middle of the 15th century).
There is some debate what constitutes the beginning of the so called "Early Modern Period", some say the invention and spread of book printing 1450, some say the discovery of America in 1492... hell, some even say the middle ages didn't stop till Industrialisation kicked in.
However noone would ever consider the 12th/13th century to be part of the renaissance for a simple reason:
The Renaissance gave the "middle ages" its name, denoting it as the period between ancient high cultures of Rome and Greece and their own supposed high culture (a view that I can't really share, seeing how the middle ages haven't been even remotely as dark as Renaissance people viewed them).

But I guess his only exposure to anything remotely historic is when he wanders around a so-called Renaissance Fair, full well thinking that metal-shirted vikings, dangerhaired pixie-wannabe girls and sithlords are totally what the Renaissance was like.
 
Brad is spreading complete and utter nonsense once more.

The 12th and 13th century are considered the high middle ages (google that ;) ), followed by the late middle ages (late 13th century till roughly the middle of the 15th century).
There is some debate what constitutes the beginning of the so called "Early Modern Period", some say the invention and spread of book printing 1450, some say the discovery of America in 1492... hell, some even say the middle ages didn't stop till Industrialisation kicked in.
However noone would ever consider the 12th/13th century to be part of the renaissance for a simple reason:
The Renaissance gave the "middle ages" its name, denoting it as the period between ancient high cultures of Rome and Greece and their own supposed high culture (a view that I can't really share, seeing how the middle ages haven't been even remotely as dark as Renaissance people viewed them).

But I guess his only exposure to anything remotely historic is when he wanders around a so-called Renaissance Fair, full well thinking that metal-shirted vikings, dangerhaired pixie-wannabe girls and sithlords are totally what the Renaissance was like.

Don't forget he's a PhD in History Channel as well.
 
Another winner for him would probably be how mad he gets when he realizes that crazies who think they're Jeebus is a dime a dozen, and those that think they're other famous people aren't that rare either. I think it's that whole "I failed at everything so I NEED something to prove I'm not worthless" thing going for him there.
I am genuinely wondering if it was a completely new idea to Brad that there's a shitton of people that claim to be Jesus or Buddha or George Lucas... and every single one of them is a hundred percent certain their claims are true and they even have "evidence", most often poorly cobbled together nonsense they are eager to share with the world in order to prove their claims :story:

When you call his numbers mumbojumbo meaningless rubbish, he might get mad in the same manner.
Except he's so special he can't be just one important figure, he adds to the list varying on what History channel is running that day.
I assume at some point he skipped through a lexikon entry of important people throughout history and underlined every name that had a nice ring to it.
With Einstein and Jesus, he's willing to drop his invented proof at any given moment, but he also claims to be Jeanne D'Arc... I wonder what reasoning he tries to justify that with... other than wishful thinking, that is.
 
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Brad is spreading complete and utter nonsense once more.

The 12th and 13th century are considered the high middle ages (google that ;) ), followed by the late middle ages (late 13th century till roughly the middle of the 15th century).
There is some debate what constitutes the beginning of the so called "Early Modern Period", some say the invention and spread of book printing 1450, some say the discovery of America in 1492... hell, some even say the middle ages didn't stop till Industrialisation kicked in.
However noone would ever consider the 12th/13th century to be part of the renaissance for a simple reason:
The Renaissance gave the "middle ages" its name, denoting it as the period between ancient high cultures of Rome and Greece and their own supposed high culture (a view that I can't really share, seeing how the middle ages haven't been even remotely as dark as Renaissance people viewed them).

But I guess his only exposure to anything remotely historic is when he wanders around a so-called Renaissance Fair, full well thinking that metal-shirted vikings, dangerhaired pixie-wannabe girls and sithlords are totally what the Renaissance was like.
Even putting the actual dates aside, no specific event or innovation "ended" the Middle Ages. It was a combination of developments that put Europe (and Europe specifically) on a different system than it had functioned under for the past several hundred years. The reintroduction of islamic science (far more than just a number system) was important, but just as important was the printing press, the Treaty of Westphalia, the Protestant Reformation, and a notable reduction of cases of the Black Plague. Saying Fibonacci's numbers ended the Middle Ages is like saying subpar tea started the American Revolution.
 
Everyone - CALLING ALL ATTACKERS! @bacterium , @YankeeTrader , @ChurchOfGodBear , @voiceguy , @Kartoffel , @Adamska , @Batman VS Tony Danza (7 with 4 being ---),

I wrote the above post completely from the SCI program that was on an hour ago which I've seen a few times before. Its synchronism was from another SCI program that's still on. None of this is my original material although I wrote about this relationship of supermassive black holes and supermassive white holes on the Internet prior to my seeing this documentary. PLEASE comment on their material and see if you can do it without referencing me at all...


Black Holes, How The Universe Works
(S1/Ep2, 2010) just finished74 on SCI. It ended with Michio Kaku (whom I spoke with at the Einstein Conference in the summer of 2004 at the Aspen Institute) stating how a supermassive white hole is the opposite of a supermassive black hole and how the Big Bang (/Bit Bang) was a SWH and that we all live within the event horizon of a SBH in another universe. A SBH is at the center of every galaxy within our Universe, therefore, they would produce over 150 billion other universes all with their own ~150 billion galaxies...

http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermassive_black_hole
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/White_hole


Synchronism: 09:09 "(There are billions of Earth-size rocky planets within the Goldilocks Zone of their star in this Universe.) Each one could be a Earth-like heaven or a hell." - Planets From Hell, How The Universe Works (S2/Ep3, 2012) on SCI
 
Even putting the actual dates aside, no specific event or innovation "ended" the Middle Ages. It was a combination of developments that put Europe (and Europe specifically) on a different system than it had functioned under for the past several hundred years. The reintroduction of islamic science (far more than just a number system) was important, but just as important was the printing press, the Treaty of Westphalia, the Protestant Reformation, and a notable reduction of cases of the Black Plague. Saying Fibonacci's numbers ended the Middle Ages is like saying subpar tea started the American Revolution.
This is pretty much why I dislike the arrogant attitude on display during the Renaissance and how it treats the middle ages as a period of stagnation. Sure, the Renaissance gave us many things to marvel at, but just as every period before and after, whatever was made during this period had to rely on the previous periods as a foundation.

The Renaissance is just yet another case of someone "standing on the shoulders of giants", so it's really nonsensical to disregard all the things that went on during the middle ages. For one thing, it was a highly cultured and sophisticated world, even though they might have had a different understanding of what really constitutes something "sophisticated".
 
"Our goal is to find another Earth. But we don't know what craziness we're going to find!" - astronomer Phil Plait on the ending of Planets From Hell
 
Everyone - CALLING ALL ATTACKERS! @bacterium , @YankeeTrader , @ChurchOfGodBear , @voiceguy , @Kartoffel , @Adamska , @Batman VS Tony Danza (7 with 4 being ---),

I wrote the above post completely from the SCI program that was on an hour ago which I've seen a few times before. Its synchronism was from another SCI program that's still on. None of this is my original material although I wrote about this relationship of supermassive black holes and supermassive white holes on the Internet prior to my seeing this documentary. PLEASE comment on their material and see if you can do it without referencing me at all...


Black Holes, How The Universe Works
(S1/Ep2, 2010) just finished74 on SCI. It ended with Michio Kaku (whom I spoke with at the Einstein Conference in the summer of 2004 at the Aspen Institute) stating how a supermassive white hole is the opposite of a supermassive black hole and how the Big Bang (/Bit Bang) was a SWH and that we all live within the event horizon of a SBH in another universe. A SBH is at the center of every galaxy within our Universe, therefore, they would produce over 150 billion other universes all with their own ~150 billion galaxies...

http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermassive_black_hole
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/White_hole


Synchronism: 09:09 "(There are billions of Earth-size rocky planets within the Goldilocks Zone of their star in this Universe.) Each one could be a Earth-like heaven or a hell." - Planets From Hell, How The Universe Works (S2/Ep3, 2012) on SCI
Well, Brad, we've been telling you for a while that your sources aren't very scholarly. Glad you've finally noticed.

This is pretty much why I dislike the arrogant attitude on display during the Renaissance and how it treats the middle ages as a period of stagnation. Sure, the Renaissance gave us many things to marvel at, but just as every period before and after, whatever was made during this period had to rely on the previous periods as a foundation.

The Renaissance is just yet another case of someone "standing on the shoulders of giants", so it's really nonsensical to disregard all the things that went on during the middle ages. For one thing, it was a highly cultured and sophisticated world, even though they might have had a different understanding of what really constitutes something "sophisticated".
It's actually remarkable that society managed to arrest the "decline" of intellectual activity so well. Without the church and nobility stepping in to fill the void (imperfectly, granted) left by the Roman Empire, Europe could have reverted back to the stone ages, rather than merely returning to a feudal state with a barter system. The people in the Middle Ages did a great deal with very little.
 
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