Why does it seem like people became "kinder" starting around the 1700s?
| Stirring heaven incel | 11/01/25 | | Cerise Haunted Graveyard | 11/01/25 | | spectacular church internal respiration | 11/01/25 | | talented mother box office | 11/01/25 | | Stirring heaven incel | 11/01/25 | | irradiated pink forum | 11/01/25 | | talented mother box office | 11/01/25 | | irradiated pink forum | 11/01/25 | | talented mother box office | 11/01/25 | | irradiated pink forum | 11/01/25 | | talented mother box office | 11/01/25 | | comical rehab | 11/02/25 | | talented mother box office | 11/02/25 | | Stirring heaven incel | 11/02/25 | | cyan galvanic circlehead | 11/02/25 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: November 2nd, 2025 1:16 AM Author: comical rehab
My answer would be "Martin Luther".
I'm curious as to what happened in that thread. I'm guessing a number of other people mentioned the Reformation too. Reddit jannies hate the idea that religion ever accomplishes anything good so they nuke the whole thread claiming it's somehow not scholarly enough even though it's fairly obvious
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5792522&forum_id=2).#49394523) |
|
|