Don't hate me but...


Something I can't stop thinking about since I just watched the first two Night at the Museum movies-are all the people that come to life the real people or are they just wax figures of the people? It just seems that if they were wax then they wouldn't know the history of the person (ie: Teddy Roosevelt). Does this make sense? Don't hate me for my question, it's just driving me nuts.

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It's a definite plot point......... I guess the magic of the tablet fills in the gaps.

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They are on display for years - even decades and every day, some tour guide stops in front of the display to give the history of the exhibit. After years and years of learning their "life story" they are bound to remember a few things.

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It is like an actor playing a person from history. They are not that person, but they have learned the history of the person they are portraying. They, in a sense become the person they portray. Teddy Roosevelt even said he was a wax figure and not really Teddy Roosevelt. He was portraying the real Teddy Roosevelt. The wax figure, when coming to life "became" the person he was made up to be.

"Do All Things For God's Glory"-1 Corinthians 10:31
I try doing this with my posts

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