Emperor Constantine, Black Roman Emperor sitting on his throne with his Bishops.
Above and below you will find paintings of the original council of Nicea and the persons who sat on it.
US military suicide rate hits one per day
Suicides have outnumbered combat deaths in US troops in 2008 and 2009
As of 3 June, 2012 active-duty suicides reached 154, compared with 130 in the same period last year, the Pentagon confirmed to the BBC.
It seems that lots of so-called white people are either not having fun or their life is full of guilt.
It is a known that the suicide rate disparity between so-called whites and so-called black males in North America is simply shocking. Many studies have under-stated the ratio as being 28:1. For every 28 white male that commits suicide there is 1 black male.
Many researchers have come on Rasta Livewire to provide information about English cannibals and how they consumed the indigenous people of North America.
What unripe plantain can do
by Ebuka Ezeji (ebukaezeji@gmail)
Many things could make a man unable to fulfill his sexual obligation to his partner. A man who is not able to “perform” sexually would experience both psychological and mental block. He may also experience emotional torment. To guard against this, take this meal:
Tamoxifen is made from an extract of Madagascar periwinkle, an African herb.
Madagascar periwinkle
Amgygdalina is an extract of an African herb known in Nigeria as the Bitter leaf.
Jim Hercules, an Abyssinian Guard of the Russian Orthodox Church
The Abyssinian Guards were elite Ethiopian soldiers deployed to guard the Emperor of Russia. They had been part of the Russian Orthodox Church and its Royal family since the time of Peter the Great, perhaps even beyond then.
King Mirian’s fresco from Svetitskhoveli cathedral, Georgia
Historical Context:
According to the early medieval Georgian annals and hagiography, Mirian was the first Christian king of Iberia, a kingdom in modern Georgia. He converted through the ministry of Nino, a Cappadocian female missionary.
By Tia Ghose
LiveScience
The genetic lineage of Europe mysteriously transformed about 4,500 years ago, new research suggests.
The findings, detailed … in the journal Nature Communications, were drawn from several skeletons unearthed in central Europe that were up to 7,500 years old.