Hysterical Pawg gives the best reason ever to get off a plane.

duck

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Paper Boi

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Any updates on this crazy shyt??? :heh:
What happened?

According to a statement shared with Complex by an American Airlines rep, the flight—traveling from Dallas-Fort Worth to Orlando—had to be returned to the gate due to “a disruptive customer.” Upon arriving back, per the rep, local law enforcement officials were waiting at the gate, at which point this “disruptive customer” was taken off the plane. In a separate statement from a Dallas-Fort Worth Airport rep, the incident was described as “a disturbance onboard a flight” from someone who was later removed “at the request of the airline.”

Carrot Top, the comedian, later said he was among those on the flight. In a series of since-removed Instagram updates, he said the woman seen in the viral clip a “fukking lunatic” who first became upset aboard the plane due to an incident involving “her earbud.” This “little stunt,” he said, caused a five-hour delay for travelers. “I hope you’re having a relaxing evening behind bars,” Carrot Top said in one upload.

Meanwhile, a TikTok user who says they were also on the plane alleged the woman in question “had been drinking” prior to boarding. The TikTok user also alleged that the woman, whose name has not been publicly revealed, had falsely accused a Black passenger of stealing her AirPods. The subsequent “not real” outburst, this person claimed, was directed at a flight attendant. However, these claims do not appear to have been widely mentioned elsewhere; neither the airline's official statement nor the airport's response mentioned such details.


:mjpls:





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True Blue Moon

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What happened?

According to a statement shared with Complex by an American Airlines rep, the flight—traveling from Dallas-Fort Worth to Orlando—had to be returned to the gate due to “a disruptive customer.” Upon arriving back, per the rep, local law enforcement officials were waiting at the gate, at which point this “disruptive customer” was taken off the plane. In a separate statement from a Dallas-Fort Worth Airport rep, the incident was described as “a disturbance onboard a flight” from someone who was later removed “at the request of the airline.”

Carrot Top, the comedian, later said he was among those on the flight. In a series of since-removed Instagram updates, he said the woman seen in the viral clip a “fukking lunatic” who first became upset aboard the plane due to an incident involving “her earbud.” This “little stunt,” he said, caused a five-hour delay for travelers. “I hope you’re having a relaxing evening behind bars,” Carrot Top said in one upload.

Meanwhile, a TikTok user who says they were also on the plane alleged the woman in question “had been drinking” prior to boarding. The TikTok user also alleged that the woman, whose name has not been publicly revealed, had falsely accused a Black passenger of stealing her AirPods. The subsequent “not real” outburst, this person claimed, was directed at a flight attendant. However, these claims do not appear to have been widely mentioned elsewhere; neither the airline's official statement nor the airport's response mentioned such details.


:mjpls:





sub-buzz-1136-1689274218-9.jpg



I'm sorry, but I'm not about to just take Carrot Top's word on anything :pachaha:

We need a more credible witness account
 

Elle Seven

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apparently this not the only person :lupe:




The breh's point about being armed with scripture because of the faith one follows is pretty interesting. Definitely would have been interesting to see how someone who can wield the power of scripture against another entity would have acted in that scenario.

I'm sure there are those that understand these religious text are spellbooks, too, but they aren't taught like that and so average folks might not truly understand the power of what they're learning and, thus, can't really access it instances like this.
 
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MMS

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The breh's point about being armed with scripture because of the faith one follows is pretty interesting. Definitely would have been interesting to see how someone who can wield the power of scripture against another entity would have acted in that scenario.

I'm sure there are those that understand these religious text are spellbooks, too, but they aren't taught like that and so average folks might not truly understand the power of what they're learning and, thus, can't really access it instances like this.
if you understand the idea of what a hyksos/retenju/asiatic really is you will approach every situation different

the game "devil busters" paints an interesting dynamic/solution. Old text games gave you the options:
  • talk to the creature
  • attack the creature
  • flee from the creature
what happens if you compliment/bless the creature as a first reaction? @Marks @010101

"I have a land that is plentiful for your people, it's in Goshen by the way to Qedar. You can pasture your flocks there and be at rest. The Lord will be with you and guide you" :youngsabo:




Now maybe yall can help be bust a devil...this story is vexing me..."immortalized robbers" :jbhmm:

The robbery of Sobekemsaf's tomb[edit]​

The Abbott and Leopold-Amherst Papyruses, which are dated to Year 16 of Ramesses IX, state that this king's royal pyramid tomb was violated and destroyed by tomb robbers. The confessions and tomb robbery trials of the men responsible for the looting of Sekhemre Shedtawy Sobekemsaf's tomb are detailed in the latter papyrus which is dated to Year 16, III Peret day 22 of Ramesses IX. This document relates that a certain Amenpnufer, son of Anhernakhte, a stonemason from the Temple of Amun Re "fell into the habit of robbing the tombs [of noblemen in West Thebes] in company with the stonemason Hapiwer" and mentions that they robbed Sobekemsaf's tomb along with six other accomplices in Year 13 of Ramesses IX.[9] Amenpnufer confesses that they

...went to rob the tombs...and we found the pyramid of [king] Sekhemre Shedtaui, the son of Re Sebekemsaf, this being not at all like the pyramids and tombs of the nobles which we habitually went to rob.[9]
In his trial, Amenpnufer testifies that he and his companions dug a tunnel into the king's pyramid with their copper tools:

Then we broke through the rubble...and we found this god (king) lying at the back of his burial-place. And we found that the burial-place of Nubkhaes, his queen, situated beside him...We opened their sarcophagi and their coffins in which they were, and found the noble mummy of this King equipped with a falcon; a large number of amulets and jewels of gold were upon his neck, and his head-piece of gold was upon him. The noble mummy of this King was completely bedecked with gold, and his coffins were adorned with gold and silver inside and out and inlaid with all kinds of precious stones. We collected the gold on the noble mummy of this god...and we collected all that we found on her (the Queen) likewise; and we set fire to their coffins. We took their furniture...consisting of articles of gold, silver and bronze, and divided them amongst ourselves...Then we crossed over to Thebes. And after some days the District Superintendent of Thebes heard that we had been stealing in the west, and they seized me and imprisoned me in the office of the Mayor of Thebes. And I took the twenty deben of gold which had fallen to me as my portion and gave them to Khaemope, the scribe of the quarter attached to the landing place of Thebes. He released me, and I rejoined my companions, and they compensated me with a portion once again. Thus I, together, with other thieves who are with me, have continued to this day in the practise of robbing the tombs of the nobles and the [deceased] people of the land who rest in the west of Thebes.[10]
Amenpnufer states that the treasures taken from the two royal mummies amounted to "160 deben of gold" or 32 lbs (14.5 kg).[11] The document ends with the conviction of the thieves—with a probable death sentence—and notes that a copy of the official trial transcripts was dispatched to Ramesses IX in Lower Egypt. Amenpnufer himself would have been sentenced to death by impalement, a punishment which "was reserved for [only] the most heinous crimes" in Ancient Egypt.[12]
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Why did Shalmaneser say that whoever relied on Pharoah his "hand would be piereced"? :jbhmm: why would a "stonemason" want to rob when he was likely very well off...unless this story has a different purpose :leon:
 
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