TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! ANSI
echo: simpsons
to: All
from: FievelJ
date: 2010-01-22 13:30:00
subject: Re: Bob Larson has begun shooting his new Reality TV series.

From: FievelJ 

On Jan 22, 4:11 pm, FievelJ  wrote:
> On Jan 21, 8:22 pm, yumhuyk  wrote:
>
> > On Jan 21, 11:46 am, FievelJ  wrote:
>
> > > Next time, I guess I should use my Manaphy
> > > to represent something shitting on the head
> > > representing itself as You (Anthony x)
>
> > > Fievel. (Throws mouse turds at Anthony x.)
>
> > Pokemon are based on real daemons of the Necronomicon and will lead to
> > daemonic possession.
>
> > yours in Christ,
> > isamu
>
> Huh?
> You Know Nothing About Pokemon!
> Satoshi Tajiri was inspired by bugs.
> The creepy crawly things you find under rocks.
> Here's the context from an interview.
>
> “When you're a kid and get your first bike, you want to go somewhere
> you've never been before,” says Satoshi Tajiri. “That's like Pokemon.
> Everybody shares the same experience, but everybody wants to take it
> someplace else. And you can do that.”
>
> As a young boy, Satoshi Tajiri was dubbed “Dr. Bug” thanks to his
> fascination with insects. But when Tajiri discovered a way to combine
> his interest in insects with his passion for videogames, he had an
> electronic revolution on his hands. Today, children the world over
> remain enthralled with Tajiri’s creation of Pokemon, which has made it
> the most popular video game franchise in the world, second only to
> Super Mario.
>
> Tajiri was born on August 28, 1965 in Machida, Tokyo. His father
> worked as a car salesman, while his mother was a housewife. Ever since
> he can remember, Tajiri has been preoccupied with bugs “As a child, I
> wanted to be an entomologist,” he says. “Insects fascinated me.” His
> family lived close to the forest, which allowed the young Tajiri to
> wander off on his own and observe insects at his leisure.
>
> But Tajiri did not just watch the insects he found; he would also try
> to catch them and create his own collection at home. He would even
> trade insects with his friends to get the ones he really wanted.
>
> When he was not out catching bugs, Tajiri was busy reading comic books
> and watching anime. “I’m part of the first generation who grew up with
> manga [comics] and anime [animation], you know, after ‘Godzilla.’ I
> was absorbed with Ultraman on TV and in manga.” Soon, he became
> interested in video games, and found a job testing video games for
> magazines.
>
> In 1982, when Tajiri was just 17 years old, he got together with a
> group of his friends – all of whom shared his love for video games –
> and they came up with an idea. The group of teenagers decided they
> were going to create their own magazine. It was going to be a magazine
> about new video games and comic books called “Game Freak.” It was not
> long before the magazine – hand-written and stapled as it was – took
> off in popularity. Other Japanese kids could not get enough of the
> tips, tricks, and reviews that Tajiri and his friends were providing.
>
> The success of “Game Freak” led Tajiri to write two books, “CAP Land”
> and “Catch ‘em all CAP land.” Still, he wanted more. And so, later in
> the 1980s, the boys behind “Game Freak” decided they would begin to
> develop their own video games. Tajiri was inspired by the recent
> launch of Nintendo’s Game Boy. He began to think about a video game
> that revolved around insects, collecting them as he used to as a
> child. When Tajiri noticed two boys playing the Game Boy next to each
> other, he was struck with the idea of creating a game that revolved
> around trading.
>
> With that, Tajiri set off to create what would become one of the most
> popular video games in history.
>
> Why is it, we have to keep picking
> on things to satisfy some sort of
> crazy idea?
> Sometimes I wonder if it's some
> sort of internal sick religious orgy,
> making a mockery of anything,
> just because someone doesn't
> like it.
> Marijuana was turned into the
> same thing, back in the 40s
> and 50s.
> But few people really understood why.
> Do you really think that little boy had
> any of this on his mind, when he was
> collecting bugs?
> I really don't believe God wants us running
> around calling anything and everything we
> don't necessarily like, Satanic and sent by
> Daemon.
> This all started because of Pokemon The
> Movie 2000.
> The three legendary Pokemon, were based
> on old Japanese beliefs. Now days, they
> actually have Japanese Christians.
> Your focus, should be more on the fact,
> there seems to be a universal sense of
> a primary God controlling everything.
> One and only one, who's above all other
> Gods, (Arch Angels)
> This means, even though there were
> quite a few regions in the world, where's
> no one knew Jesus was even born.
> They still managed to have a belief
> in a one ultimate God of all.
> Not until the 18th or 19th century, did
> the word start spreading into the States.
> And only in around, the 17th or 16th
> century is when they really started
> translating the whole thing, and started
> placing it together into one book.
> The Holy Bible, that is.
> The first of the King James Versions.
>
> In a very real way, you could have
> Pokemon leaning more toward god
> then Satan. Because it's original
> primary focus was on nature.
> Ancient Japanese beliefs, are not
> Satanic. The old beliefs, which some
> Japanese people are abandoning and
> converting to Christianity.
>
> Why don't you learn some of this,
> instead of being like so many others,
> and chasing everything away, which
> you believe to be Satanic?
> We keep going like this, when the
> really *Real* Daemon comes by, we
> won't even know it's him.
> Hm, a revelation? It just struck me,
> that maybe that's exactly what Daemon
> is hoping for.
> That we're chasing down everything we
> believe to be Satanic, so he can make
> himself seem like the Savior of it all.
> Meanwhile, Jesus will be nearly unnoticed.
>
> Anyways...
> I've chosen to believe a god in some shape
> or form exists. The same one in fact, as
> the one any normal Christian believes in.
> However, I no longer go by the Bible.
> Why should I? Everything was here,
> 65 million years before the bible stories
> even got started.
>
> I'd rather have tons of unexplained questions,
> then a Bible, which mostly relied on stories
> from the beginning of the Human Race.
>
> Basically, you can only stare at the campfire
> so long. Eventually, you're going to find
> something to do. Either that, or let yourself
> go nuts.
> Couldn't exactly just turn on the old tube.
> You had hunting. Playing odd games.
> Building a fire. And sometimes, you had
> someone telling stories.
> That's about all they had. So stories,
> was all they had for entrainment.
>
> Oops,, if you want more, email me directly.
>
> I have written a longer file, which I have
> sent to my father..
>
> Fievel..  (God Bless..) ;-)

I missed something here...

The bible actually predicts a lot of this.
That we will, chase down a lot of nothing,
referring to it as Satanic..
Trust Me, it's there.
So is the Catholic church crap.
 About how they will pretty much all be blamed..

Fievel.. (God Bless..) ;-)  :-)

--- Internet Rex 2.29
* Origin: http://groups.google.com (1:2320/105.98)
SEEN-BY: 10/1 14/250 34/999 120/228 128/2 187 140/1 222/2 226/0 236/150
SEEN-BY: 249/303 250/306 261/20 38 100 1381 1404 1406 1418 266/1413 280/1027
SEEN-BY: 320/119 396/45 633/260 267 285 690/682 734 712/848 800/432 801/161
SEEN-BY: 801/189 2320/100 105 200 5030/1256
@PATH: 2320/105 261/38 633/260 267

SOURCE: echomail via fidonet.ozzmosis.com

Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.