:lol::lol:
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After the Football Association was formed, the rules were still undecided. Scotland played a skillful, passing game, the English played a rough, kicking each other game. When the first match was played between the two countries, the English players were impressed with the Scottish way of playing, and wanted it adopted into the rules. The Scottish, on the other hand, liked the English way better, and wanted those rules adopted. The result was a mix of the two, where you could trip the other player up, and barge players, including the goalkeeper, shoulder to shoulder.
gratuitous youtube
[youtube]0DtP4ovja3s[/youtube]
I can't explain why I find this funny, but I do :unsure:
No mang, as far as I understand it, there's a possibility, given the nature of the universe, and so forth, that such an entity could stand outside our universe or current time (if the laws of physics vary with time), looking in. Thus its existence wouldn't be restricted to our current physical laws, although its actions would be, if it was to affect us directly, now.
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Also, two more things for whomever it may concern:
*What people don't understand is often classified as magic, or something supernatural, looking back in history. And, as I know we don't know all there is to know yet, it's entirely possible for something that seems unreal now, to become fact later on.
*And two, until something is falsified, the possibility for it being true exists, although it may be somewhat determinable how good the odds for it being true are. And again, knowing that a possibillity exists does not equal "just" believing in it.
So Billy, I wasn't phrasing it to look superior, I was illustrating a dichotomy between knowing and merely believing.
It's strange that you don't see the distinction between the two.