Jesus walked on water
According to the New Testament, Jesus walked on water (the Sea of Galilee) to reach his disciples' boat during a storm, as recorded in Matthew 14:22-33, Mark 6:45-52, and John 6:16-21. This miracle, which occurred during the "fourth watch" of the night (3 a.m. to 6 a.m.), demonstrated his divine authority.
Peter's Involvement: According to Matthew 14, Peter asked to come to him on the water, walked on it briefly, but began to sink due to fear before being rescued by Jesus.
So, instead of doing the German Scientist who knows since Auschwitz that Jews cannot walk on water, but drown and die, I now try the logic of fucking Sherlock.
Storm. Petrus sunk in water. The documented facts. That means that Jesus did not stand on the water and pulled Petrus out to carry him back walking over water as it says not anything like that. It says that in a weather period with strong winds Jesus walked over water and rescued Petrus from sinking in Roman times.
Did you watch Baywatch?
I hate you.
What about that motherfucker having managed to have is Tunica blown with him straight over the water while using all legs and arms balancing that stunt until smashing down right next to Big P rescuing him by being also a really good swimmer?
You fuck ups.
But no. That story about rebellion against Tyranny is just all bullshit.
#cyberüunkcoltoure
PS:
Yes, the Nazis conducted horrific and lethal cold water experiments, primarily at the Dachau concentration camp. While these tests were not exclusive to Jewish prisoners, Jews were among the primary victims targeted for these atrocities.
"You may say what ever you want, if you just document it well" quote of a historian scholar.
The problem is that some of us still humans had to research German scientific work:
was not just unethical; it was bad science. A major analysis published in the New England Journal of Medicine concluded the research was "scientifically worthless."
Fabricated Data: Researchers frequently faked readings to please their superiors.
Inconsistency: The cooling rates recorded were often physiologically impossible.
Poor Monitoring: They lacked the tools to measure actual causes of death, such as