Friday, August 8, 2025

 Another re post...........Japanese islands.......(NYC is a bunch of islands, ports)...1983......the USSR shot down the Korean air, next to an island.......Korea itself, is not an island, mainland Asia...........this is how the illuminati does things.....Zodiac killer...........iron man in it..Rob d Jr..........played a playboy, billionaire, like b wayne, in Marvel's Iron man........was a reporter in one of the Zodiac films.......i seem like the cartoonist.....Jake G plays his role..........a boy scout....does not drink nor smoke, i never smoked cigarettes, not once in my 54 years.....smoked marijuana twice.....as i like to tell the story, my cousin Eric had a bong, we smoked one night, the next night, that 3rd day, in the morning, our Pop drove me to BeeBee hospital in Lewes.....

codes, this from 2019.........repost.......the illuminati is like the zodiac.......sent codes to 3 San Fran newspapers...


T is 20.........Andrew Jackson...........from Tennessee............synchronicity........


In most cases, when someone creates a puzzle for a contest or competition like MIT's Mystery Hunt, the solution to that puzzle is a piece of text, either a word or a phrase, perhaps an instruction. (Some other solutions are numbers, and I suppose some could be pictures.) But when a puzzle is number-based, how does one get from a number or group of numbers to a word or phrase?
The most useful tool is a substitution cipher where each letter of the alphabet is represented by a number which corresponds to that letter's position in the alphabet. In simplest terms, this can be written as A=1, B=2 ... Z=26. Since A is the first letter of the alphabet, it is represented by the number 1. B, the second letter, is represented by 2. Z, the last of the 26 letters in the alphabet, is represented by 26.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526

So if, upon solving a puzzle, you find yourself left with a series of numbers as an apparent "solution," try the A=1, B=2 ... Z=26 cipher on it to see if a word or phrase is represented by the numbers.
For example, here's a simple puzzle:

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