
easter bunny also has the forward facing eyes of a predator.
And the beady eyes of a foccacia hammocker
FALSE!
If the 6 “limbs” include the specialized limbs on its head, then the Easter Bunny is not an insect because the 6 legs on an insect come out of its thorax.
This means…the Easter Bunny is an alien! I’m on to you alien sympathizer!
I am Speaker for the Dead.
Ah, the real Bugs Bunny.
No wonder he seemed immortal… his colony just kept making more.
Also, I just can’t resist sharing:



Whats the last one from? Looks familiar, but I keep coming back to Mass Effect
All three are from the same franchise: Resident Evil movies, the last one is the Red Queen, an avatar of an AI control system based on the daughter of the creator of the T-virus.
I need to rewatch those
Jesus wasn’t dead for three days. Dude died at like Friday night and was back before Sunday morning!!! If you got off work on Friday at 5 pm, and then came into work 6 am on Sunday, you would not call that a 3 day weekend smh lying ass Sunday school teachers
Okay but that’s still not the point. The point is I had this dream where instead of a big stone wheel in front of the tomb, they put a big wheel of cheese. And it was up to you and me to help Jesus eat his holy way out of the tomb so grab a cracker.
The point is I like cheese and if we can make a religion around it I’m there.
I don’t even know where you people got the easter bunny from and why does he lay/bring eggs??? It makes no sense
The rabbit doesn’t lay eggs. They are both Celtic fertility symbols. Ostara is a spring festival tied to the spring equinox focused on awakening and rebirth. The church of Rome repurposed it into Easter.
Got it. The Easter Bunny is an immigrant, over 1,500 years old, and has at least one ovipositor. Let me restate the remaining question: Why does it lay/bring Celtic fertility symbols?? I learn so much here.
The bunny, and the eggs are both symbols of fertility. I’ve no idea why it’s the way it is nowadays though. Commercialisation?
Oh so that’s who americans got it from and are jow raping everybody with them. Good to know the historical context.
I didn’t realize Easter was an America-specific holiday.
No. But I have never locally seen the easter hunny as traditional. It was imported by the americans
The bunny is primarily a German tradition. It became prevalent in the US because of the high volume German immigrants. However, the bunny was already spreading throughout the Hapsburg Monarchy prior to America exporting its version. Decorating eggs is also a Slovenian tradition that came to prominence when what would be become the US was still just colonies. Not a lot of pop culture getting shipped back to Europe back then.
Could have sworn it was from ishtar, who was from Babylon, but I’m no expert
The Easter Bunny has been around since the 1500s but if it helps you to think that all of the evils in the world are American you’re free to do that.
Well where I live most of the exposure to the rabbit is american. If the origin is not american it does not mean it’s not being proliferated by them. Same as santa claus. 20-30 years ago almost nobody here got gifts from Santa. It was either saint Nicholas on 6. December or father frost whenever he decided to come (no set date). But now with just how prevalent american made media is it’s annoying how many of their customs are coming here and displacing local ones.
This reads like the hipster version of history. “It was fine until America started doing it.”
Lol. No.
You don’t onow where I am from.
You’re the wizard pope, you’re from wherever I get my weed gets my weed from.
I have a rough estimate. and if it’s correct, it’s certainly not imported from the US
Huh… are we really sure it’s not just a mammal that lays eggs? Occam’s Razor and all that.
A mammal with a cloaca, yeah. A cool mammal.
Platypus exists, so there’s precedent
It’s also called a “duck-billed” platypus, so there must be other types. “Kangaroo-eared” platypus really doesn’t seem any more far-fetched.
Recently I’ve been reading the book Eifelhelm, which features a character named “Okham.” Another character familiar with him says he’s met Okham’s successor and says “he used your razor.” It took me an embarrassing amount of time to realize that wasn’t meant literally. My first thought was that it was unsanitary, though the relevant part of the book is set in the 1300’s so I suppose that wasn’t a major concern.
I love this truth













