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John Titor's Legacy
AN OPEN LETTER TO MR. ANDREW NISSENBAUM
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<blockquote data-quote="Japrim" data-source="post: 123407" data-attributes="member: 7558"><p>I am glad you enjoyed my post. You don't have to stay away from me. I am not trying to make war with you, or anyone, really. I am simply trying to sort out all this bizarro world stuff that has consumed so much of my life. It gets frustrating when we in the group bicker over our egos or whatever, then I turn into an asshole., things get messy, and what may have been a productive conversation, isn't.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I honestly don't know. My ancestry and extended family is full of military veterans. If it turned out that we have a common ancestor, I would not be surprised. We humans are all related anyway. Maybe the question isn't IF we have a common ancestor, but rather how far back before we discover our common ancestor.</p><p></p><p>I find genealogy rather interesting and have traced my roots a little. Like everyone else in North America, most of my tree comes from north and central Europe. It gets rather difficult to trace after a couple hundred years. Before modern record keeping like census data, churches kept records of births and christenings. Before that, names were used to classify which family or village, and/or which generation thereof, and according to either their origin or occupation, or anything that otherwise identified them as a people. Then there are adopted babies and immigration, etc. With only limited resources, it is difficult.</p><p></p><p>I know my name comes from Lorraine, Alsace, Luxembourg, and southern Belgium. The furthest I have traced it was a group of families in grain farming communities migrating from the foothills of the Ardennes Mountains into Luxembourg about 200-400 years ago.</p><p></p><p>Early Europeans were dependent on their environment and made use of everything they could muster. They used an assortment of stems, anything from grain stalks to bulrush/Juncus plants, cattails, branches, vines, etc, anything reed-like flexible or stringy that could be woven or plaited for wicker products or tools such as hats, mats, brooms, rings/bracelets, rope, wine/beer taps, mattress stuffing, animal bedding, mulch, etc, etc,...</p><p></p><p>The general term for it is my name. There are secondary or alternate slang meanings associated with everything from alternate meanings, forecasting, vagabond, to stringy garbage. That's where my research stops.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Good luck.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Japrim, post: 123407, member: 7558"] I am glad you enjoyed my post. You don't have to stay away from me. I am not trying to make war with you, or anyone, really. I am simply trying to sort out all this bizarro world stuff that has consumed so much of my life. It gets frustrating when we in the group bicker over our egos or whatever, then I turn into an asshole., things get messy, and what may have been a productive conversation, isn't. I honestly don't know. My ancestry and extended family is full of military veterans. If it turned out that we have a common ancestor, I would not be surprised. We humans are all related anyway. Maybe the question isn't IF we have a common ancestor, but rather how far back before we discover our common ancestor. I find genealogy rather interesting and have traced my roots a little. Like everyone else in North America, most of my tree comes from north and central Europe. It gets rather difficult to trace after a couple hundred years. Before modern record keeping like census data, churches kept records of births and christenings. Before that, names were used to classify which family or village, and/or which generation thereof, and according to either their origin or occupation, or anything that otherwise identified them as a people. Then there are adopted babies and immigration, etc. With only limited resources, it is difficult. I know my name comes from Lorraine, Alsace, Luxembourg, and southern Belgium. The furthest I have traced it was a group of families in grain farming communities migrating from the foothills of the Ardennes Mountains into Luxembourg about 200-400 years ago. Early Europeans were dependent on their environment and made use of everything they could muster. They used an assortment of stems, anything from grain stalks to bulrush/Juncus plants, cattails, branches, vines, etc, anything reed-like flexible or stringy that could be woven or plaited for wicker products or tools such as hats, mats, brooms, rings/bracelets, rope, wine/beer taps, mattress stuffing, animal bedding, mulch, etc, etc,... The general term for it is my name. There are secondary or alternate slang meanings associated with everything from alternate meanings, forecasting, vagabond, to stringy garbage. That's where my research stops. Good luck. [/QUOTE]
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John Titor's Legacy
AN OPEN LETTER TO MR. ANDREW NISSENBAUM
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