Frustration with VElves and Nightborne

It states he made the demon prison to revitalize his people, it also then states his people lost their immortality for the second time as they were unable to siphon more energy.

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That is this an assumption they came too, it does not say that is the function it actually served.

Chronicles is written from a third person perspective, like the objective neutral point of view is half the appeal of the books.

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Still doesn’t prove anything, because it was describing how one event lead to another, not the functions those events served.

It is directly, plainly, stating the function of this event. They lost their demonic feed, so they also lose their immortality, A leads into B but that doesn’t mean that B didn’t happen or is somehow suddenly an in universe perspective.

They were once immortal, their status has now changed to no longer immortal.

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No it isn’t, it is simply listing events one after another.

As far as they know. We know Night Elves live as long as they do anyway.

Which Immolthar has nothing to do with.

Why would they immediately talk about the loss of their immortality for a second time directly after discussing how the power feed had been broken unless it was to point out how they were connected? a power feed that was constructed expressly to revitalize his people after they lost their immortality.

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If losing control of Immol’thar didn’t cause them to lose their immortality, then how do you suggest they did lose it a second time?

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Because that is the catalyst for the next series of events… It doesn’t need to be true to set those events into motion.

This isn’t difficult to understand guys…

I beg to differ, your complete failure at reading comprehension will puzzle me for decades to come.

There is no reason for the third person perspective of Chronicles to shift at this exact moment to suddenly be from an in universe perspective.

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Oh the irony…

… When you don’t get what you want, you resort to bullying. Which you have been doing to me for months.

Leave me alone. I don’t want to talk to you ever again.

That isn’t even bullying, no insult was thrown, it’s merely a statement of facts. How you could actually believe this will confuse me for decades.

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I may not completely agree with his wording, but you certainly seem to be dancing around the obvious interpretation of those words in order to support your own stance.

The series of events are crystal clear.

The Shen’dralar lost their immortality when the Well went boom.

The began draining magic from Immol’thar. They also regained their immortality. (But according to you, these two things aren’t necessarily related.)

They then lost control of Immol’thar. They also, at the same time, lost their immortality a second time. (Again, you seem to think the two aren’t necessarily connected)

So, if Immol’thar had nothing to do with the Shen’dralar’s immortality, how do you suggest they regained it after the Well and then lost it a second time?

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You are the one who is consistently wrong about mostly everything, and fill things with your own headcanon.

I’ve reported you for trolling, and truth be told, at this point, this thread has been so derailed by you, its just sad.

Here I was trying to verbalize the thoughts and feelings that my friends and I share about Nightbonre, and you come in here and just act like a royal douche as per usual.

That is literally you though.

And this thread isn’t even about this conversation… Literally, this thread is nothing about this. FFS, leave, or get back on topic. I am sick of asking.

Wonder Woman was created by William Moulton Marston, also known as the inventor of the polygraph. Who drew his inspiration from a mixture of suffragists… and centerfolds. There’s even a movie about him. Suffice it to say that his Amazons and those of the Greeks don’t have that much in common besides the name. He had a wife, a mistress, fathered children by both, and they all lived in the same household. Quote from the NPR article below

Marston, who was a famous psychologist, made up Wonder Woman in 1941. He was interested in the women’s suffrage movement and in Margaret Sanger, the birth control and women’s rights activist — who was also his mistress’s aunt.

A feminist icon, Wonder Woman was an Amazon who forced people to tell the truth with her magic lasso. She was a controversial figure in the 1940s because of her overt sexuality and her link to bondage. Her costume was inspired by Marston’s interest in erotic pin-up art.

Like I said, a colorful figure.

When Ms. Magazine was founded, Wonder Woman had been stripped of her powers and her magic items and had been turned into a denatured James Bond character (minus his sexual freedom) with a chinese martial arts mentor. For the cover of their first issue, Ms. Magazine reprinted one of her classic stories and the resulting out cry got this piece of communication sent to Gloria Steinem, one of the editors of Ms. at the time.

One day, some months after her rebirth, I got a phone call from one of Wonder Woman’s tougher male writers. “Okay” he said. “she’s got all of her Amazon powers back. She talks to the Amazons on Paradise Island. She even has a Black Amazon sister named Nubia. Now will you leave me alone?”
I said we would.

Since then, Wonder Woman has appeared in ever anniversary issue of the magazine.

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That’s kind of cool. I didn’t know anything about the guy.

At the very least, broad anime exposure as well.

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Yes. Nelf druids lost immortality without the blessing of the world tree.

Immortality, sure. But not their extended life span. The Drust could simply be long-lived, considering it was only some-hundred years, which is nothing by elf standards.

The only magic the drust are renowned for is death magic. Are you certain you want to go down that route?

Night elves are long lived because of Azeroth’s radiation mutating them into something more than Trolls. The Drust Vrykul are not stated to have had that happen to them.