
| Deck : Rules of the Road - 1282/1025 |
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| « Previous Question |
| BOTH INTERNATIONAL & INLAND The tow shown in illustration D024RR below is less than 200 meters in length and severely restricted in her ability to deviate from her course. Which shape(s) would be displayed by day from the vessel(s)? |
| A) diamond on the last barge |
| B) diamond on the towing vessel |
| C) ball-diamond-ball on the towing vessel |
| D) All of the above |
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Illustration D024RR
| Comments |
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| anturov - 2025-09-04 08:45:01 Registered (148) |
| Casino https://n1casino-au.com/ ways of thinking about risk and chance have surprising parallels in the development of religions, where many doctrines emerged by accident. In Buddhism, the division between Theravāda and Mahāyāna grew from a misinterpreted monastic rule. In Christianity, the final selection of the New Testament canon partly depended on chance — some texts survived in remote libraries, others vanished in fires. A 2021 Cambridge University study estimated that nearly 20% of major religious doctrines resulted from accidents, mistranslations, or political compromises rather than deliberate planning. Just as in casino or slots games, randomness hardened into rules that believers later saw as divine will. This theme resonates online. On Reddit’s r/Religion, a viral 2022 thread with 40,000 comments debated whether mistranslations in sacred texts were “errors or destiny.” TikTok’s hashtag #SacredAccident has millions of views, with creators dramatizing lost gospels or rituals born of mistakes. Literature echoes this as well: Borges imagined entire religions created from misread texts, while Eco described monasteries where accidents shaped dogma. Experts argue that religions endure precisely because they absorb randomness, transforming coincidence into sacred truth. Destiny, in this view, is not revealed by control, but by accident sanctified across generations. |
| infinimitsu - 2017-01-16 12:59:26 Expired Member (19) |
| Does not exceed 200m! |
