Dr. Susan Blackmore, who uses the example of hotel toilet paper folding to illustrate the use of memes, pointed out in the 2006 Darwin Day Lecture before the British Humanist Association that even a remote guesthouse she visited in rural Assam in India folded the first sheet on its rolls of toilet paper.
In the 2010s, the Organization abandoned Joshua, who then joined the Reconstruction after the Eurowar and worked in Quito, Ecuador on the GeoSync Cable and saw with Alice the beginning of the development of memes that would unify all countries and religions, leading to the War of the Memes (referred to in some of Barnes' other books) that culminated in the takeover of Earth by One True.
The resulting pages are named Memes on the site, supposedly with reference to Richard Dawkins’ concept of meme.
Initially known as the One True Church of Ecucatholicism, One True develops through exposure to other memes.
Books can be loaned; Internet memes can be shared; speeches can be overheard; YouTube videos can be embedded in web pages.
The week before Memorial Day 2013 featured "Meme-orial Week," in which fans submitted their '90s Nick-themed memes for air during the block.
However, a variety of other subjects exist on the sidelines, from video game characters to 2channel memes to humorous depictions of Hitler.