wepwawet
Wepwawet
wepwawet

To modern eyes and vocabularies, sure it was slavery. To the Egyptians of the time, it was one of three or four unskilled jobs available (depending on season). Life was harsh, life was tough, it was expected that you couldn't leave, but there were families and communities and enterprise around the slave camps which

All things considered, Ancient Egypt was pretty light on the slavery (compared to their neighbours). Because the flooding of the Nile prevented the farmers of Egypt from tending to their land for 1/3 of the year, they were put to (paid) work building the various monuments.

They had slaves, but it wasn't like chattel, or racial based slavery. Something fancy like a statue wouldn't have been made by slaves as it required too much skilled work.

People could simply express it in a different way - "Oh you're a fan of ___ genre? You might also be interested in _____." Don't be an asshole, but share inspiration without judgment!

Same universe, different show, you can built a city on that and save humanity.

Humanz rool, alienz droooool

There's no thinking here. The knee-jerk is the correct answer.

Because if you actually know your Lovecraft, you know Cthulhu is a member of an alien race.

species that makes unlimited Bread?....you had me a "Pew"

It's a tie: Time Lord and TARDIS

duh

Planets have moons, minor planets have giants rocks floating around them. ;)

This is Mama, there are two judges in this block, I want them dead.

Work your way up; it can be a taste that acquired — and it will do much to alleviate a penchant for sweets.

ARYA IS THE BEST!!!

Most Americans do not call it mythology, though.

What is this, r/atheism? The Chinese certainly had gods, and they believed it was pleasing to them to have society organized in a certain way.

The Chinese believed that the empire of Earth mirrored the empire of Heaven, and that civil obedience were pleasing to the celestial Emperor. So, being a society of strict

A dig on spirituality as expressed as a dogmatic belief in the fables meant to illustrate the principles of that belief, and the typical argumentative loop that often occurs in defending that dogma.

People who settled near a river system that flooded randomly and violently created a violent and petty god. One who had to be constantly appeased our the whole civilization would be wiped out. They go on to be petty illiterate farmers living a shit existence. People who settled near the Nile created rational caring

Yeah those poor orcs weren't wicked, just misunderstood. Those movies showed us that modern audiences just don't like that kinda thing. I mean flying eagles.... come on! Oh, and why doesn't voldemort just kill frodo if he's so powerful? Nobody likes these weird stories.