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Marilyn Monroe's passport photo taken on January, 1954.
Item Number: 8888
Item: The █████
Item History: Item 8888 does not exist. The info-negative cognitoplex of item 8888 is often referred to colloquially as the █████. Current Office protocol states that this is acceptable in moderation - however, staff should be regularly reminded that the █████ does not exist. Until such time as better terminology can be created for non-existing objects (and indeed the underlying semiotics necessary for that terminology), the use of the word “item” has been deemed acceptable.
It is currently theorized that the █████’s impact on the noosphere is the result of the human inability to perceive a true lack of existence, referred to as a “cognitive dissonance protection response.” The █████ does not emit or reflect light, and does not appear on any form of sonar, radar, or any other form of electronic equipment. Photos or video of the location the █████ resides in are subject to the viewer’s cognitive dissonance protection response - that is, the photo will appear to display the █████ to any sentient entity viewing it, despite not in actuality showing an existing object.
Touching the █████ is not recommended for any personnel not already trained in Surrealistics, no experience with non-spaces or non-Euclidean systems, or with a C-hazard rating lower than 2. Personnel should be reminded that anything they “feel” when attempting to touch the █████ is a the result of a cognitive dissonance protection response, because the █████ does not exist.
Personnel affiliated with the Yellow Circle are understood to see something “else” at the █████. With state director permission, they may view or touch the █████, but under no circumstances should they enter it or share their perceptions with other non-Circle staff, as descriptions of the █████ may contradict the official Office position that the █████ does not exist.
The aforementioned cognitive dissonance protection response is currently undergoing study. It is currently unknown why all (100%) of humans or near-humans surveyed about the █████ (except those aligned with Circle belief systems) will describe the same shape and details about the item. Given that it is impossible to know details about an object that does not exist, speculation as to the █████’s origin is considered irresponsible.
Do you have access to a printer? (If you needed to print a simple standard-size document, could you?)
Yes, at home
A friend or family member (who I don't live with) has one I could use
Yes, at school or work for free
Yes, at school or work for a cost
Yes, at the library for free
Yes, at the library for a cost
I would have to go to a print shop (e.g. Staples, UPS Store, etc)
Somewhere else for free
Somewhere else for a cost
No, I have nowhere to print documents
We ask your questions anonymously so you don’t have to! Submissions are open on the 1st and 15th of the month.
Revolutionary War Pension Files Seals ✒️🪙📜
Official American 19th century records have fascinating visual features and many remarkable examples of those can be found in the Revolutionary War pension files at the National Archives.
During the conservation stabilization treatment of these records, the conservators come across watermarks, ribbons, wood engraving illustrations, historical repairs, and of course various seals and wafers.
Guest Post by
Paper Conservator (Document Conservation Laboratory, RXC)
Ewa Paul (National Archives)
Windows Vista - Documents
Documents with sensitive details about the meeting between President Trump and Russian President Putin were left behind on a public hotel pr
Papers with U.S. State Department markings, found Friday morning in the business center of an Alaskan hotel, revealed previously undisclosed and potentially sensitive details about the Aug. 15 meetings between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir V. Putin in Anchorage.
Eight pages, that appear to have been produced by U.S. staff and left behind accidentally, shared precise locations and meeting times of the summit and phone numbers of U.S. government employees.
At around 9 a.m. on Friday, three guests at Hotel Captain Cook, a four-star hotel located 20 minutes from the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage where leaders from the U.S. and Russia convened, found the documents left behind in one of the hotel's public printers. NPR reviewed photos of the documents taken by one of the guests, who NPR agreed not to identify because the guest said they feared retaliation.
The first page in the printed packet disclosed the sequence of meetings for August 15, including the specific names of the rooms inside the base in Anchorage where they would take place. It also revealed that Trump intended to give Putin a ceremonial present.
'What kind of idiots work for this moron': Critics stunned by Putin/Trump security breach
Reacting to a report that someone in Donald Trump’s entourage who went with him to Alaska left sensitive State Department documents on a public hotel printer, critics of the president pounced on yet another security breach since he took office.
Reacting to a report that someone in Donald Trump’s entourage who went with him to Alaska left sensitive State Department documents on a pub