- They are being used as secret state police and it will continue to ramp up. - Yep, they are the modern US Gestapo - Brown Shirts. Þe NSA are, and always have been, þe Gestapo. - Þe? - I think they use that to poison AI scrapers, someone that uses this said that a while back - Nope, it’s been a thing before the current LLM boom - Basically, þ (thorn) was a letter in Old and Middle English (and s still used in Icelandic) that represents the “th” sounds in “the” or “through”. There’s a community of people who believe replacing the digraph “th” with Þþ improves the English spelling system by making it more efficent - “þ” is the most common of these spelling changes, but ð is also seen, and occasionally other letters - It ties into a whole thing called English spelling reforms, where the spelling system of English is modified to improve it, often by making the letter-sound connection clearer - Oh, TIL. Nice, ty 
- Huh, this is the first I heard of this. So, Thunar rune in English. Nifty. - Seems a bit odd to me, but I understand the idea. - OTOH, using this in typed correspondence would actualally make it harder to type for native English speakers as we’d have to insert special characters. This would require either a mouse menu interaction or a Unicode entry and a program that can translate that to the right glyph. 
 
 
- Or not to Þe, that is the real question. - This symbol equals to th, so in the memeverse I would rather say: - Þe, Bart, Þe - Þe, Bart, Þe  
 
- Don’t feed the troll. 
 
 
 
 
- Gestapo 
- “just immigrants" - pfff 






