You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
With Conchobar III's descent into madness, and forced abdication, the Kingdom of Eire was left in tatters. Succession had rarely been a problem in the kingdom, though the tanistry system had its flaws, the electors could usually be expected to elect the same heir for Ireland as they did for Wales.
This was not here the case. The circumstances were too different. Conchobar's own chosen heir to all three of his titles was his son Magnus II, the King of Denmark. Nobles in Eire, Wales, and Jerusalem alike feared the potential power of a king who could call upon the armies of four whole realms, and for this reason, a passive rebellion of sorts began. It started in Wales, where the local nobility had long resented the fact that their nation was ruled by the Archbishop of Gwynedd, also the titular Archduke of The Welsh, a figure more often than not in the pocket of the Irish king. Jerusalemites, for their part, had come to enjoy the newfound independence that being European royalty so far from Europe had brought.
Through this, the Irish realm found itself divided. Magnus II inherited his father's primary realm, that of Eire, becoming king of two nations. His younger sibling Eochaid became King of Wales, and his youngest was enthroned as Conchobar II of Jerusalem. Tellingly, only a single noble between the two realms Magnus did not inherit objected. Peter Rushen, the English marshal-turned-priest who had mentored a young Conchobar III, and who had been appointed Archbishop of Gwynedd almost 50 years prior.
Thiel and his circle in Silicon Valley may be able to imagine a future that would never occur to other people precisely because they’ve refused to leave that stage of youthful wonder which life forces most human beings to outgrow . . . . He wants to live forever, have the option to escape to outer space or an oceanic city-state, and play chess against a robot that can discuss Tolkien, because these were the fantasies that filled his childhood imagination.
Well, I don't much like his voice either, but that's a personal thing and neither here nor there. Still, fair enough. I'm just tired and thinking about someone I shouldn't give any care about at all.
Comments
I still like that stuff, but it's by no means the heaviest music out there
It is not an unidentified flying object. It's a IFO.
I TOLD you
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Steve Rogers should grow a beard.
But eh, you can't have SHIELD without him
This was not here the case. The circumstances were too different. Conchobar's own chosen heir to all three of his titles was his son Magnus II, the King of Denmark. Nobles in Eire, Wales, and Jerusalem alike feared the potential power of a king who could call upon the armies of four whole realms, and for this reason, a passive rebellion of sorts began. It started in Wales, where the local nobility had long resented the fact that their nation was ruled by the Archbishop of Gwynedd, also the titular Archduke of The Welsh, a figure more often than not in the pocket of the Irish king. Jerusalemites, for their part, had come to enjoy the newfound independence that being European royalty so far from Europe had brought.
Through this, the Irish realm found itself divided. Magnus II inherited his father's primary realm, that of Eire, becoming king of two nations. His younger sibling Eochaid became King of Wales, and his youngest was enthroned as Conchobar II of Jerusalem. Tellingly, only a single noble between the two realms Magnus did not inherit objected. Peter Rushen, the English marshal-turned-priest who had mentored a young Conchobar III, and who had been appointed Archbishop of Gwynedd almost 50 years prior.
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
i liked this one
first RWJ video i've really enjoyed, actually
It's one of my favourite YouTube channels, but each to their own, i suppose.