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Author Topic: Please Read, Oh, Informed Np!  (Read 10190 times)
Anonymous Bastard
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« Reply #120 on: March 08, 2006, 03:58:27 AM »

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Please read the information.
I did. Only mention was that nuuttipukki eats leftover food. He doesn't even come at Christmas!
 
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American Girl
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« Reply #121 on: March 08, 2006, 05:44:19 AM »

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Looks like the word voodoo is emerging from that text, thus revealing that you are into voodoo afterall. Sometimes my instincts go never wrong, especially when we have seen how hard you are trying to say you are not Christian. Even the academic theologists agree that, if a person walks away from Savior, that person begins searching spirituality in religions, which can be very primitive indeed. All you have to do is to turn around and head back to the light.
It was nothing more than an error made by the computer. I am not into voodoo (I don't even know anything about Voodoo) you however must be into voodoo since you are obsessed about it and keep talking about it. Yes I would even go do far to say that you are trying to make me turn to the Voodoo religion!
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« Reply #122 on: March 08, 2006, 05:52:42 AM »

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I suppose Asparagus is another likely candidate,
I don't know what that is, but difficult words should be used by wise people only, who have Doctor's degree. (They can tell exactly how harmful each substance with a latin name is.)
Names like Aspartame, Acesulphame-K, Lauralebihydrate, etc. sound very suspicious. Consuming them is playing with your health. Even nonsensational programs on the television, for Christ's sake, will tell you that these added chemicals will cause you cancer. Pure produce of nature have natural, simple names like bread, butter, ale and salt.
It is not a difficult word. Asparagus is a vegetable, to be more specific it is the tender young shoots of a Eurasian plant (Asparagus officinalis), eaten as a vegetable. I knew that and I am not a doctor.

Aspartame and Acesulphame-K are sweeteners and there is no such thing as Lauralebihydrate. Natural things such as Bread, Butter, Ale, and Salt have human made chemicals in them now.
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American Girl
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« Reply #123 on: March 08, 2006, 05:53:50 AM »

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It is not a difficult word. Asparagus is a vegetable, to be more specific it is the tender young shoots of a Eurasian plant (Asparagus officinalis), eaten as a vegetable. I knew that and I am not a doctor.

Aspartame and Acesulphame-K are sweeteners and there is no such thing as Lauralebihydrate. Natural things such as Bread, Butter, Ale, and Salt have human made chemicals in them now.
That was me.
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Anonymous Bastard
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« Reply #124 on: March 08, 2006, 06:54:34 AM »

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It was nothing more than an error made by the computer. I am not into voodoo (I don't even know anything about Voodoo)
Oh, I'm glad you don't mess with VD. I mean you must have heard of the urban legend about the voodoo (thingy). :scary:

Pure bread is good for you. But you cannot buy it in megamarkets, you must grow the rye or wheat, etc. at your own farm. This is because industrial farming uses artificial fertilisers, and not the pure stuff you get from the cows and horses. Likewise you make the butter from the milk your wifes milk from your own cows, so there are no added chemicals.
 
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Spear of Destiny
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« Reply #125 on: March 08, 2006, 02:45:46 PM »

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Please read the information.
I did. Only mention was that nuuttipukki eats leftover food. He doesn't even come at Christmas!
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Joulupukki is the Finnish name for Santa Claus. The name Joulupukki literally means Yule Goat or Christmas Goat. This name is likely to come from an old Finnish tradition, where people dressed in goat hides, the apparition being called a nuuttipukki, used to go around from house to house after Christmas eating leftover food.

I'll try to explain it for you.

The Joulupukki most likely find its origins in the Nuuttipukki.

The Nuuttipukki (which you deem to be a better tradition for Christmas) is an apparition that goes from house to house after Christmas and eats left over food.  The traditon would be a person dressing up in goat skins, basically becoming an image akin to that of a horned, goat-like man.  Much like those of Celtic imagery.
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anonymous b.
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« Reply #126 on: March 08, 2006, 07:10:53 PM »

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The Joulupukki most likely find its origins in the Nuuttipukki.
Erm, you are explaining it wrong. Joulupukki was used to overthrow the good nuuttipukki and replace all the good values this tradition represented. There is only a very faint echo remaining of nuuttipukki in Joulupukki, when he asks if there are any nicely behaving children in the house. As for the dressing up as a goat, it is just good to sometimes scare the (poo-poo) out of children, so they would behave well.
 
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HerranRuoska
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« Reply #127 on: March 08, 2006, 11:12:28 PM »

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I liked this paragraph the best, your choice of words gogaveood imagery and did a very nice job of making Christmas sound like the Devils holiday.
That weird jumble of letters in the bold is suppost to be gave, I don't know how it got messed up like that.
EYE KNOW! yuo gutt confyuzed bye the hurriple sin ov LAUGHTR! yuu were LAUGHINK at the hallowed Messias ov ouers NIILO! CUMFESS! CUMFESS YUOR HURRIBLE SIN! ov LAUGHTR! Eye never laufgh and that is hwye Eye can write sutch a Pyautiphull Inglish!
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American Girl
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« Reply #128 on: March 09, 2006, 03:50:36 AM »

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EYE KNOW! yuo gutt confyuzed bye the hurriple sin ov LAUGHTR! yuu were LAUGHINK at the hallowed Messias ov ouers NIILO! CUMFESS! CUMFESS YUOR HURRIBLE SIN! ov LAUGHTR! Eye never laufgh and that is hwye Eye can write sutch a Pyautiphull Inglish!
That's a good theory I guess but I was not laughing when I wrote that. Laughing is healthy for you, if you laugh you will live longer because it relieves stress and tension, also laughing strengthens your stomach muscles. How could something that is good for you be sinful?

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Pyautiphull
What is that suppose to be? That's not even an English word neither is gutt, confyuzed, laughtr, laughink, yuor, hurrible, ov, laufgh, hwye, sutch, or Inglish.
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Spear of Destiny
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« Reply #129 on: March 09, 2006, 04:09:28 AM »

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The Joulupukki most likely find its origins in the Nuuttipukki.
Erm, you are explaining it wrong. Joulupukki was used to overthrow the good nuuttipukki and replace all the good values this tradition represented. There is only a very faint echo remaining of nuuttipukki in Joulupukki, when he asks if there are any nicely behaving children in the house. As for the dressing up as a goat, it is just good to sometimes scare the (poo-poo) out of children, so they would behave well.
Traditions do not overthrow eachother unless there is some kind of huge social upheaval, like an invading force outlawing former practices.  But history shows us that festivals and other similar practices dont get overthrown, they change through intergration.

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The name Joulupukki literally means Yule Goat or Christmas Goat

The "Yule Goat" which this refers to is the Nuutipukki.

Oh, and Yule is Pagan, by the way, just like the Nuutipukki.


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the good nuuttipukki and replace all the good values this tradition represented

Quoting you here, you either support this old Pagan practice of otherwise dont understand it.


As a curiosity though, you seem very determined to speak as if from a position of authority on the subject, which I find interesting being as you obviously had no knowledge of the roots of the Nuutipukki prior to my providing it.  So I would be very interested to know what the source of your information is - beyond your own biased opinion of course.
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abe
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« Reply #130 on: March 09, 2006, 09:38:36 PM »

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like an invading force outlawing former practices.
Santa was the invading force, so yes I am right like you are agreeing.
 
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Spear of Destiny
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« Reply #131 on: March 10, 2006, 08:10:43 AM »

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like an invading force outlawing former practices.
Santa was the invading force, so yes I am right like you are agreeing.
No, no, I mean like another country like the Romans or something like that.


However, I can understand what you are saying.  Certainly, the introduction of aspects more like Santa Claus did serve to better Christianise the celebration and take it a bit further away from the Pagan nuuttipukki.
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