Main

processing priority

4

site type

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review version

11

html import

20 (imported)

Events

first seen date

2024-10-20 19:31:57

expired found date

-

created at

2024-10-20 19:31:57

updated at

2025-04-24 00:48:11

Domain name statistics

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crc

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nm parts

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Connections

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Subdomains and pages

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Error counters

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Server

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Mainpage statistics

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20

mp rejected date

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mp saved date

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mp size orig

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mp size raw text

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mp inner links status

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Open Graph

title

(p) (b)

description

porous borders

site name

(p) (b)

author

updated

2026-03-07 22:22:19

raw text

(p) (b) | porous borders (p) (b) porous borders fate With a friend this weekend, I remarked of someone who took a risk and died young that it was his fate. “But you don’t believe in fate, do you?,” my friend said. I said I did, but only in a specific sense: what happens doesn’t happen because it is our fate. It is our fate because it is what happens. You have to engineer the idea of fate in from the other direction, otherwise you get caught up in prophecy and in altering fate. In calling it fate only afterward, we rob ourselves of excuses for wickedness, knowing that, in a matter where choice is possible, we could have chosen to act another way. Written by lucas green March 23, 2010 at 7:34 pm Posted in Uncategorized natural history The museum was anthropological in the obsolete style, and I could see the fluidity of the categories, on the one hand, of black, primitive, and native cultures and, on the other, the clusters of chimpanzee, mandrill, and gorilla famili...

Text analysis

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detected language

1 (English)

category id

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RSS

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Sitemap

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