Witchcraft is what people believed in when they knew nothing about science. Same as gods and all that other nonsense.
@WebDevJapan13 күн бұрын
I saw your online store and would like to make Death Wish coffee the official coffee brand I drink and showcase in all of my videos. I didn't see any other way to connect with you guys.
@MR.B00_24 күн бұрын
1818
@eldin1427 күн бұрын
Noah's Flood could've done that...just sayin.
@anthonyalexzander2104Ай бұрын
The coffee taste great but every single pod unsealed at the top and grounds come out. I tried to tell them on their web site but there is no place to post a comment.
@egrintarg230Ай бұрын
Witchcraft is the most scientific faith ever. You can try casting spells and observe what happens. If a spell works repeatedly then it is the real deal. You can't test other belief systems this way.
@MihiriMadhushika-bmwАй бұрын
😍
@TruthIsTheNewH8Ай бұрын
This coffee is the worst thing thats happened to me. I tried the espresso roast k cups and now im hooked. Its so good i cant help but drink like 6 of them a day. I am hooked on the espresso roast.
@KazeriantheVIIIIАй бұрын
Not sure if its true or not but I heard Anthony De Longis did some un-credited fight choreography on Batman Returns.
@SamicheekxАй бұрын
I’m glad they left them together but i feel like they should’ve left them at the grave site they were found at. It’s wrong to dig up a grave & move them from their resting spot. Unless they were murdered & placed there, then moving them frees their souls.
@hanisitsobarna4897Ай бұрын
she is alive ...., alive ...., alive ... 🤞😅
@jessicabrown72742 ай бұрын
😃Hi Mr. Ward, 😎Good story about your Dad, and your Mom, excellent and very scary.👹Looking forward to looking up your movies.
@PaulSmith-ru6ne2 ай бұрын
Great story, great video! Love Bill Burr. So awesome he got to sit in with one of my favorite bands. Made me feel good watching this.
@prodlinco2 ай бұрын
This guy is actually so good. I love his Elsysium album, one of my favorites is Canary in a Mine. I love Sadistik's music, and learning about his backstory is awesome.
@WeddingDress012 ай бұрын
Hello, I come from a village in Russia, at one time I followed the course - THE GARAGE LEARNING, but never received anything. I saw a link to this course on your website, but registration on your website is not available to me. I would be grateful if there is a small opportunity to get a link to the course
@tobycarr85163 ай бұрын
Ben Shapiro? Is that you interviewing Terry?
@poopazoo19753 ай бұрын
Love it!!!!
@danilaird3 ай бұрын
I see Micky Ward wearin a Boston Scally Co. scally cap!! Awesome repping them. Great caps. Ken Casey and all the DKM's are awesome guys. My favorite band
@Stina-ms4fq3 ай бұрын
Lame excuse, foo.
@realABN3 ай бұрын
Which song was in F is for Family Season 2 Episode 9
@nicolasribeirodossantos60823 ай бұрын
1:19 this stutter is different than Porky's stutter.
@EsperanzaRigoGarcias3 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@SwagRum76_4 ай бұрын
holy moly i didn't know my favorite coffee company had a vid on this
@that_broly4 ай бұрын
Legacy locked indeed ❤
@that_broly4 ай бұрын
Rip his sweetheart 🙏
@foxmullder37424 ай бұрын
my favs! love from ft myers!!
@FirePowerCoffee4 ай бұрын
Nice video!
@TruthIsTheNewH84 ай бұрын
Recently my dad had to fly out to upstate ny and him and i have gone over to stay with my 95 year old grandfather to take care of him because he cant live alone and we dont want him in a nursing home. Weve been really busy and need the caffeine to keep functioning. Came across this coffee the other day and its great. I love the rich flavor and caffeine level. Seems to actually wake me up. Just wish money wasnt so tight because id be drinking a lot more of it. Im really happy i found this coffee. I really enjoy it.
@maggsvamp4 ай бұрын
Titus needs a role on the MCU!
@lanceprzybyla76624 ай бұрын
So Awesome....get to do this to your buds... TREMENDOUS 👋👋👍❤️
@StephenDoyle-oh8hy4 ай бұрын
Where can I find a great amount of Robs paintings to see what he's done and to see his various styles
@dante686935 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@dante686935 ай бұрын
Looks pretty good
@adamhonda985 ай бұрын
You know a light roast hase more caffeine in it then a dark roast right?
@KabeloKhampepe-p2e5 ай бұрын
Where is this salon
@barbarahamilton5865 ай бұрын
I've listened to many Harry Bosch novels, but was afraid of being disappointed in the TV series. Titus Welliver's narrations made me believe in Bosch. After watching this interview, I'm ready to watch the series. Match made in Heaven.
@UtubeH8tr5 ай бұрын
Born with a death wish.
@HamletYT5 ай бұрын
She is amazing♥
@musasiziannet60155 ай бұрын
Isaiah55:6&7,"Seek the Lord while he may be found; call on him while he is near.Let the wicked forsake their ways and the unrighteous their thoughts.Let them turn to the Lord, and he will have mercy on them, and to our God, for he will freely pardon." Repent, receive Jesus Christ as your Lord and savior today.This is God's invitation for redemption, Jesus loves you so much and he is the only WAY to eternity.God bless you
@musasiziannet60155 ай бұрын
Isaiah55:6&7,"Seek the Lord while he may be found; call on him while he is near.Let the wicked forsake their ways and the unrighteous their thoughts.Let them turn to the Lord, and he will have mercy on them, and to our God, for he will freely pardon." Repent, receive Jesus Christ as your Lord and savior today.This is God's invitation for redemption, Jesus loves you so much and he is the only WAY to eternity.God bless you
@bernstyles5 ай бұрын
No good movies are on netflix
@KGSerage6 ай бұрын
That's not a new move. 😒 Taiji Ishimori and Shinsuke Nakamura have been using it forever.
@thomasdavenport79356 ай бұрын
No wonder it was so amazing.
@galvinstanley32356 ай бұрын
I've seen ouija boards work.
@aaronbrigham47436 ай бұрын
Amazing video I'm a equine business management student at Johnson Wales University I've been around horses my whole life and I always thought being a fairer was really good work it's tough work it's like the bronze and I've observed a lot of barriers it's not an easy job but I'm willing to take the first step.
@Diamonddavej6 ай бұрын
Frankenstein's creature actually goes back a lot longer than the discovery of electricity and batteries. It links with the old abandoned theory of spontaneous generation ... the theory the life is imbued with a life force that could cause recently dead matter to turn into living creatures, from mice to maggots, and by the 19th century when the theory was receding in popularity, at least microbes might spontaneous arise from recently dead matter. Given life by the residual life force. It is a very old belief that originated with the Ancient Greeks. There was a fierce debate since the c. 15th century, a scepticism grew over whether life could arise spontaneously. Those who held onto their theory in the late 18th and 19th centuries were known as vitalists, who believed life contained a life force. Anyway, I'm sure it links with Frankenstein and electricity. Here is a comment I wrote on Reddit a few years ago: They thought organic matter, in particular recently dead organic matter, was imbued with a residual life force. This life force could result in the Spontaneous Generation of new organisms from dead organic matter, not just fungi, but also flies and even mice. This from the book, Chymist, by Jan Baptist van Helmont in 1671: "When water from the purest spring is placed in a flask steeped in leavening fumes, it putrefies, engendering maggots. The fumes which rise from the bottom of a swamp produce frogs, ants, leeches, and vegetation. . . Carve an indentation in a brick, fill it with crushed basil, and cover the brick with another, so that the indentation is completely sealed. Expose the two bricks to sunlight, and you will find that within a few days, fumes from the basil, acting as a leavening agent, will have transformed the vegetable matter into veritable scorpions . . . If a soiled shirt is placed in the opening of a vessel containing grains of wheat, the reaction of the leaven in the shirt with fumes from the wheat will, after approximately twenty-one days, transform the wheat into mice." Philosophers and naturalists who believed in this idea were called Vitalists, they believed in the theory of Vitalism. It was originally thought that this Life Force had a supernatural origin, given to life into by God himself, but it was later imagined as some form of natural energy, unique to life, outwardly expressed as electricity or a magnetic fluid. This theory of Vitalism and Spontaneous Generation persisted far longer than it deserved, well into the 19th century, as some scientists believed that at least simple microscopic organisms (amoeba, fungi, bacteria) could spontaneously generate from dead organic matter, and this explained purification, fermentation, and parasitic diseases. Before its end, the theory of spontaneous generation received a major blow in the late 18th century, from the Italian scientist Lazzaro Spallanzani, who conducted experiments with heated Broths in sealed glass bottles. For a time the theory of spontaneous generation was in retreat, but there was revived interest again, driven primarily by British scientist John Needham and French scientist Georges-Louis Leclerc (Comte de Buffon) who failed to properly repeat Spallanzani's experiment (they didn't heat the broth sufficiently, it wasn't sterile, it contained tiny heat-resistant bacterial endospores that did not see under their simple microscopes). However, Louis Pasteur finally disproved the last vestiges of spontaneous generation via a series of elegant experiments conducted in 1859 that in turn proved the germ theory of nature, using boiled "fertile broth" (pasteurised soup) inside glass bottles that were not airtight, but separated from the outside air by a fluid or air lock valve (Swan Necked Flasks). Pasteur showed that if the broth was sufficiently heated, killing all bacteria and heat-resistant spores, the broth would not spoil. Only after opening the bottles, well to be precise, tilting the cleverly designed bottles so unheated liquid in the neck of the flask (visibly contaminated) entered the broth, BUT NOT outside air, the broth would then spoil. Critically, because the Swan Neck Flasks weren't hermetically sealed, but allowed air in when the broth was boiled, this cleverly disproved stubborn critics who claimed that air itself contained the "vital principle" that caused spontaneous generation. Pasteur played an important though not decisive roles in ending the theory of spontaneous generation and vitalistism. It didn't go down without a fight. It was hard to convince some scientists, including the stubborn British again, especially because Pasteur had trouble repeating his experiments constantly. Pasteur approached respected Irish scientist, John Tyndall for help. Tyndall repeated Pasteur's experiment successfully in 1871, finally helping Pasteur prove his germ theory to the satisfaction of his most stubborn sceptics (Tyndall is also one of the early scientists that discovered that CO2 is a greenhouse gas). Great book if you ever get your hands it... Farley, J., 1979. The spontaneous generation controversy from Descartes to Oparin. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 30(1) Edit: I wonder if the theory of Vitalism influenced Mary Shelly and Frankenstein (The Modern Prometheus). I think Frankenstein is influenced by Vitalism, in particular Mesmerism (a version of Vitalism). Luigi Galvani thought that electricity was the life force, based on his 1780 experiments with electricity and frogs legs, this theory of animal electricity was influenced by Franz Anton Mesmer who earlier develop his ideas of animal magnetism. However, I've never read anyone examine Shelly's novel from the perspective of Vitalism and Spontaneous Generation.
@GabeBushman7 ай бұрын
Im 5'7 at 130 whats my death wish t shirt size
@themattmcclellan7 ай бұрын
Fake and gay
@andy-ht4ts7 ай бұрын
Nice. Someone who likes real books on a shelf. My house is the same. Titus IS Bosch by far.