With the advent of AI, I’d expect these resources to become a goldmine within about 20 years. Libraries will become hives of activity as dens of nostalgia.
xAI’s turbines produce meaningful local/regional pollution (especially NOx in a vulnerable area) but represent a rounding error nationally and globally.
> xAI’s turbines produce meaningful local/regional pollution (especially NOx in a vulnerable area) but represent a rounding error nationally and globally.
If you shoot someone in the face, it will produce a meaningful increase in local/regional murder, but represent a rounding error nationally and globally.
It doesn’t matter if people have to suddenly live by gas turbines that run 24/7 because why again? Can you repeat that last part back to me but say it a little dumber for me?
The Bible contains many verifiable historical references supported by archaeology and ancient records, even as a primarily theological text. Here are three examples:
1. The Tel Dan Stele and the House of David
This 9th-century BCE inscription records an Aramean king’s victories over the “king of Israel” and the “king of the House of David.” It gives the earliest extra-biblical proof of the Davidic dynasty at the heart of the Hebrew Bible.
2. Sennacherib’s Prism and Hezekiah
The prism names “Hezekiah the Judahite,” details the capture of 46 cities, and describes besieging Jerusalem in 701 BCE, closely matching 2 Kings 18–19, including the tribute paid.
3. The Pilate Stone and Pontius Pilate
Found at Caesarea Maritima, this inscription names “Pontius Pilate, Prefect of Judea” under Tiberius, directly confirming the Roman official who tried Jesus in the Gospels.
These independent sources from rival powers strongly support the Bible’s historical value where evidence exists.
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