@nomebullyyou

Excluding Northern Africa did they even invent barrells in Africa before White people came along

The way most but not all crowds of black people behave you would have people fighting with barrells

Even if most black people do not commit violent crimes there are a high enough percent who do that places that attract a lot of black people tend to end up with fights

m.youtube.com/watch?v=ClL4qAmD

Video Title

Donkey Kong the Original Barrell Battle

@shortstories @nomebullyyou I believe they used eggshells and clay vessels before the White man came along.

@Bakke @nomebullyyou @shortstories I have doubts that Indians were capable of doing it too. Probably some asians from eaither china or some central asian parts build their things and migrated somewhere else and Indians took over most statues looks more like typical asians than indians.

It is closer to ancient china IMO.

last should be chinese Buddhist statues from the Zhihua Temple near Beijing, Ming dynasty

@Bakke @Stahesh @nomebullyyou

According to some book I read some religious texts have words that use Chinese Pictograms to mean syllables that sound like the pronounciation of Chinese Words but represent Indian words with a different meaning that are pronounced the same as Chinese words

This supposedly means they were trying to translate religious ideas from Indian into Chinese

I do not have time to fact check the language name until later but it might be called the Pali language

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Earlier

I do not have time to fact check the language name until later but it might be called the Pali language

Fact check attempt

Remembered reading a book about the Tibetan book of the dead & them mentioning translations between some language group near India & Chinese related to previous comment

Trying to look into it & I find

The template index of Chinese Tibetan is being considered for deletion

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bardo_Th

· · Web · 1 · 1 · 1

@Bakke @Stahesh @nomebullyyou @Eiregoat

There is a whole wikipedia article about Sino Tibetan Languages with theories of influence by both China and Tibet

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Tib

The funny thing is Indian Sanskrit is much closer looking to me to ancient Greek or Latin than to ancient Chinese or Korean or Japanese

Why Sanskrit has a sick obsession with gender and singular or plural when declining nouns that Chinese Korean and Japanese do not

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