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This collection of 149 Reptilian News Cartoons (drawn over three years before 2020) with commentary spread over 372 pages is the funniest book ever written.This book is also monument for fake news. It has lots of fake news, both from Moral Volcano and from mainstream news journalists. You may not be able to tell the difference but the MSM material is usually funnier. Hence, the commentary accompanying each cartoon has citations almost always from mainstream news sources - very embarrassingly so. No "CONSPIRACY" news sites. NO REAL REPTILIANS.Using an infographic style, these cartoons provide soundbite-level deconstruction of complex problems caused by globalists and their stooges infesting our beautiful planet. (The globalists are not really reptilian but there seems to be no humanity in them.)Because of the revolting nature of these reptilians, this book is not recommended for women and children. However, men may die laughing. The sarcasm is mostly by implication, left unsaid for you to decipher.This book is heavy on counterthink because the Zombie Apocalypse is already here. The dead cannot live but the living can be braindead. These zombies, particularly the young ones, are so brainwashed with propaganda that they they cannot think for themselves. They reject all critical thinking as offensive. Groupthink or hivemind is the norm. Everything has to be validated by the herd. They have no original ideas, as they read no newspapers or non-fiction books.The cartoons are mostly about USA. Globalists test their fiendish schemes in the US first and then try to replicate them everywhere else. The road to hell is paved with good intentions. Journalists outside the US should not make the same mistakes as their American counterparts. They should learn from the American experience and inform their public of hidden traps in advance.All assertions, implications and imputations in this book are in the nature of bets. They can be quite wrong. Read the full disclaimer mentioned inside the book.This is a grayscale paperback. A higher-priced colour paperback is separately available.
If you are learning electronics or thinking of it as a future hobby, here are some fun home-improvement projects to begin with. These DIY electronic circuits: will be extremely useful (particularly in emergencies), are quite easy to make andwill not waste your time or money.Just one of these projects uses AC (alternating current). The rest work on DC (direct current) and are safe for kids (if you are confident soldering is safe).These projects are good for the environment too, as they reuse electronic parts that would have been discarded. If you are a prepper or survivalist, then you will be happy that all the projects will run off-the-grid, as they can consume renewable energy.For the tinkerer, there are projects that add MORE POWER than what the manufacturer had designed for. For the parent of lazy children, there are annoying alarms that can wake up the dead.The circuit designs are explained in plain English. No exotic projects or obscure concepts. Simple and straightforward.
The Dictionary Of Indian English, in its first edition, is a glossary of English words or phrases that have been invented in India or have meanings that are different from the ones specified in dictionaries published in the West. This Indian English dictionary has over 400 words. In future editions, it will become a full-fledged dictionary. For now, it is useful fornon-Indian readers of Indian-English fictionforeign readers of Indian newsforeign travellers to IndiaBackground: India is a land of great diversity. Kerala is about as different from Tamil Nadu as France is from Britain. Yet, we move on, in part thanks to the English language. Over several decades, the language has acquired a unique flavour of its own in the country. People like to call it 'Indian English'; sometimes proudly and sometimes derisively. Indian English is of course not a different language. Yet, we often find that an Oxford or Webster's dictionary is inadequate or incorrect when dealing with certain words or phrases that have changed their meaning or purpose on the Indian soil. And, there are words that are unique to India, such as prepone which are not used anywhere else. In the first edition, this Dictionary of Indian English (DoIE) hopes to provide a ready reference for such words and phrases. In a future edition, it will become a full-fledged dictionary. Its time is sure to come because of the fast-spreading pandemic of political correctness.
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