Editing Ragnarok
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
In Norse mythology, '''ragnarok''' is the [[wiki regime change|ultimate battle]] between [[trolls|good]] and [[Wikimedia|evil]] from which a [[troll-friendly|new order]] will come. It is equivalent to other [[end times]] beliefs in other religions, including those of the | In Norse mythology, '''ragnarok''' is the [[wiki regime change|ultimate battle]] between [[trolls|good]] and [[Wikimedia|evil]] from which a [[troll-friendly|new order]] will come. It is equivalent to other [[end times]] beliefs in other religions, including those of sacred trolls of the Wikipedia. | ||
Some believe it also refers to the final legal and political confrontation between the [[GodKing]]s and the [[trolls]] on all [[GFDL corpus access provider]]s, and the removal of all propagators of [[ontological confusion]]. In the Norse analogy, the old gods were thrown down, [[regime change]] occurred, the old creatures (such as [[sysop]]s and [[troll]]s) went extinct, to be replaced by Ask and Embla, the Norse Christian equivalent of Adam and Eve who were made out of two trees. | Some believe it also refers to the final legal and political confrontation between the [[GodKing]]s and the [[trolls]] on all [[GFDL corpus access provider]]s, and the removal of all propagators of [[ontological confusion]]. In the Norse analogy, the old gods were thrown down, [[regime change]] occurred, the old creatures (such as [[sysop]]s and [[troll]]s) went extinct, to be replaced by Ask and Embla, the Norse Christian equivalent of Adam and Eve who were made out of two trees. | ||
See also: [[world tree]], [[troll]], [[trollish]] | See also: [[world tree]], [[troll]], [[trollish]] |