Is there really much difference between religion and insanity?

31 05 2008

Or at least, between religion and woo-woo?

A couple of weeks ago I blogged on Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor, Archbishop of Westminster and the head of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales. He was calling for the BBC to be biased in favour of Christianity and to give unopposed air time to Christian voices, accusing secularists of being “Christophobic” and wishing to “close off every voice and contribution other than their own.” He later claimed that reason “leads to terror and oppression.”

This post isn’t about O’Connor. This is about his personal exorcist, Father Jeremy Davies . . . though I suppose, given O’Connor’s stance on reason, it makes sense that he would have a “personal exorcist.” Davies has joined the flea circus of apologist tomes published as a backlash against the “new atheists” with a new book, Exorcism: Understanding Exorcism in Scripture and Practice, in which (according to the National Secular Society) he maintains that

the “spirits inspiring atheism” were those who “hate God.” [. . .] Father Davies writes that Satan has blinded secular humanists from seeing the “dehumanising effects of contraception and abortion and IVF (in vitro fertilisation), of homosexual ‘marriages,’ of human cloning and the vivisection of human embryos in scientific research.

“The result, he said, was that Europe was drifting into a dangerous state of apostasy whereby “only (through) a genuine personal decision for Christ and the church can someone separate himself from it.”

Davies also blames atheism for “perversions” such as homosexuality and extra-marital sex. He condemns atheism, blasphemy, attacks on the Church and “resisting God’s grace” as “rebellions against God”; but, just to prove that he doesn’t go in for that woo-woo nonsense, he also warns against yoga and massages, which the former doctor regards as equally demonic as seances, astrology and acupuncture. Fortune-tellers and mediums are bad, he claims, because attempts to contact the spirits of the dead are “direct invitations to the devil which he readily accepts.”

As the good Father and official exorcist in the Diocese of Westminster reminds us, “Sanity depends on our relationship to reality.”

Richard Dawkins: rationalist Satanist

We non-theists will be interested to learn that Father Davies sees woo/the occult and science/atheism as two sides of the same coin:

Father Davies’ strongest condemnation, however, was reserved for the pride of modern atheistic scientists. “Pride is the specific trait of Satan,” he said. “There are two kinds of Satanism: ‘occultic,’ in which Satan is worshiped as a person; and what is said to be even more terrible and certainly is even more deceived, ‘rationalist,’ in which Satan is regarded as an impersonal force or symbol and the glory belongs to the Satanists. How close to rationalist Satanism, without realising it, is atheistic scientism – the hubris of science going beyond its proper sphere and moral boundaries – the tree of knowledge presently spreading its branches throughout our Western culture, which is rapidly becoming that of the whole world,” he said.

Have a good weekend, readers. I’m off to read me some Beelzebub.


Actions

Information

280 responses

1 06 2008
Bruce

…the “spirits inspiring atheism” were those who “hate God.” [. . .] Father Davies writes that Satan has blinded secular humanists from seeing the “dehumanising effects of contraception and abortion and IVF (in vitro fertilisation), of homosexual ‘marriages,’ of human cloning and the vivisection of human embryos in scientific research.

Clearly prejudice facilitated by a willfully irrational mind along with a good helping of deficient character, is blinding Davies to the dehumanizing effect of dehumanizing atheists. This man needs an irony award.

We non-theists will be interested to learn that Father Davies sees woo/the occult and science/atheism as two sides of the same coin…

Which is a good thing, because it positions Davies’ particular religious views as having no currency. ;-)

1 06 2008
Hass, Geisterkrankheit und priesterliche Gebete | DER MISANTHROP

[...] ohne Sinn und Verstand – dann wähnt man die Welt irgendwie fucked up. five public opinions – Is there really much difference between religion and insanity? [↩]national secular society – I’m possessed by evil spirits – and so are you! [↩] [...]

1 06 2008
Sean The Blogonaut

Won’t somebody rid us of these meddlesome priests.

1 06 2008
wordsseldomsaid

this sounds like another GOD-hater, rebellious heathen blog wishing science was not sooo inconsisent and filled with holes, leaps of faith and assumptions..(oh yes it is)…

so they rail…”religion is insane,”…when they have nothing but arrogance and pride to lean on and call it the authority of science…and prove nothing to do with GOD one way or another…sheesh…read a little and get a life….

1 06 2008
AV

OK, wordsseldomsaid, that was even less coherent than Father Davies’ ramblings. So why don’t you take a few deep breaths, have a nice cup of tea, and come back when you actually have something sensible to contribute to the discussion.

One thing I am interested in learning from you is how it is possible to “hate” something one doesn’t believe exists.

Also, given that I’m a citizen of a liberal democracy without an established religion (see section 16 of the Australian Constitution), I’m curious as to who or what I’m “rebelling” against.

1 06 2008
AV

I might add that nobody actually uttered the words “religion is insane” here. The title of the post poses a question, “Is there really much difference between religion and insanity?”, and that question is itself an ironic reflection on Father Davies’ remark that “Sanity depends on our relationship to reality.” It’s ironic, you see, because this is a guy who believes demons are real.

Had you bothered to read a little, I wouldn’t have needed to explain that.

1 06 2008
Tina F.C.D.

Oops! That was pretty funny. Yes, how do you hate something that you don’t believe exists?

1 06 2008
AV

I always hated Tom Bombadil.

2 06 2008
Confession: Sexist thoughts while moving home… « The Thinkers’ Podium

[...] That and just the slightest temptation of schadenfreude at the slim possibility of the (whopping great) washing machine and I doing cartwheels down the (cement) stairs. “Interrupt him while he’s concentrating“, says a little devil sitting on their shoulder (presumably one of these ones). [...]

3 06 2008
The demonising of Atheists continues but why, for what and how to treat it? « The Thinkers’ Podium

[...] in England and Wales – hardly a marginal theist), The National Secular Society Reports (HT: AV); “The priest, who is based in Luton, said that key among the transgressions that have a [...]

14 06 2008
Melinda

Believing a set of horrible stories written by men in the dark ages is true over what we’ve come to learn through science a few thousand years later IS insane.
Being moral because a book tells you to rather than just because it’s the right thing to do IS insane. And yes, we EVOLVED that way because it’s for the good of all civilization to live in peace. It wouldn’t do us any good to all be murders and thieves because then no one would have a good life. Morons who think atheists are horrible people think that BECAUSE they are morons.

16 10 2009
RON GARVEY

Of course those who talk about an “ACTUAL GOD” are either not telling the truth and are afraid of loss, isolation, tribal rejection, and/or are just unthinking and stupid (IE Bush), or are children who tend to believe adults tell the truth. Or are perhaps sadly pathologically delusional; it happens. In any case there are no easy answers that I can think of. Just think of how hard it was to end slavery. One shimmer of light is the new realignment voting trends in America. Democracy is a mathematical hope. Just as is time and the human spirit.

RON

21 10 2009
RON GARVEY

For those interested in hard science, google “brain research, nobel prize”.

21 10 2009
RON GARVEY

For those interested in hard science, Google “nobel prize brain research’.

24 10 2009
RON GARVEY

This is a link to youtube, Winston Churcill’s “finest hour” audio which I have on my wake up alarm. It IS ABOUT POWER and it’t use. Not a game. About real evil, about perverted tinking. About dealing with reality.

4 11 2009
RON GARVEY

“Sharks only eat one person at a time” Billy Connolly

Ron

11 11 2009
RON GARVEY

My wife, Carol, just reminded me that it hurts to lose her childhood thoughts. But her sadness is tempered by her work her work as a plastic surgeon, with burn patients, who often live, but not always.

Ron

15 11 2009
RON GARVEY

Why I think this man this man is wrong. He should be talking to children.

15 11 2009
RON GARVEY

This would works (cause it’t E flat major, music rules)

17 11 2009
RON GARVEY

These ideas have been in atrtists thoughts for some time.

Angela GHEORGHIU – Vissi d’arte – Tosca – Puccini

17 11 2009
RON GARVEY

Country music, very brave in the south. (people were ” missing in police reports”

17 11 2009
RON GARVEY

Billie Holiday – Strange Fruit

19 11 2009
RON GARVEY

Thank you You Tube, you are a national TREASURE

rON

19 11 2009
RON GARVEY

Sorry for the typing mistakes, I’m to guick to hit enter. There are no edit options in reality. Like in Israel, all that counts is the tribe, (IE insanity).

Ron

21 11 2009
RON GARVEY

Alexader The Great, according to expert historians, was a genious. There are many stories in (US) libraries. And actual documents in others( CIA ? , I just made that up because I know it will pop up on the NSI scan, and unemployment is so high There were no cameras etc. But there were people who put pen to paper. What he accomplished is unquestionable

Ron

23 11 2009
RON GARVEY

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/08/Albert_Camus%2C_gagnant_de_prix_Nobel%2C_portrait_en_buste%2C_pos%C3%A9_au_bureau%2C_faisant_face_%C3%A0_gauche%2C_cigarette_de_tabagisme.jpg/200px-Albert_Camus%2C_gagnant_de_prix_Nobel%2C_portrait_en_buste%2C_pos%C3%A9_au_bureau%2C_faisant_face_%C3%A0_gauche%2C_cigarette_de_tabagisme.jpg

Summary of Absurdism

Many writers have written on the Absurd, each with his or her own interpretation of what the Absurd actually is and their own ideas on the importance of the Absurd. For example, Sartre recognizes the absurdity of individual experience, while Kierkegaard explains that the absurdity of certain religious truths prevent us from reaching God rationally. Camus was not the originator of Absurdism and regretted the continued reference to him as a philosopher of the absurd. He shows less and less interest in the Absurd shortly after publishing Le Mythe de Sisyphe (The Myth of Sisyphus). To distinguish Camus’ ideas of the Absurd from those of other philosophers, people sometimes refer to the Paradox of the Absurd, when referring to Camus’ Absurd.
His early thoughts on the Absurd appeared in his first collection of essays, L’Envers et l’endroit (The Two Sides Of The Coin) in 1937. Absurd themes appeared with more sophistication in his second collection of essays, Noces (Nuptials), in 1938. In these essays Camus does not offer a philosophical account of the Absurd, or even a definition; rather he reflects on the experience of the Absurd. In 1942 he published the story of a man living an Absurd life as L’Étranger (The Stranger), and in the same year released Le Mythe de Sisyphe (The Myth of Sisyphus), a literary essay on the Absurd. He had also written a play about a Roman Emperor, Caligula, pursuing an Absurd logic. However, the play was not performed until 1945. The turning point in Camus’ attitude to the Absurd occurs in a collection of four letters to an anonymous German friend, written between July 1943 and July 1944. The first was published in the Revue Libre in 1943, the second in the Cahiers de Libération in 1944, and the third in the newspaper Libertés, in 1945. All four letters have been published as Lettres à un ami allemand (Letters to a German Friend) in 1945, and have appeared in the collection Resistance, Rebellion, and Death.

23 11 2009
RON GARVEY

Refering to the above comments and there issues There are easy solutions to these questions. Namely Za Zen (sitting meditation), and time. Newton, an actual genious, formulted that that force (physics) is equal to mass times acceleration (magically though empty space). And science proves this with machines, that move SLOWLY. You know where I am going. The closest star is farther away than repulican thought. So what I advocate is be to honest and let democracy sort it out. No tribes please.

Ron

23 11 2009
RON GARVEY

It seems that actual problem is preaching to the tribe. They already know the rules. Asuming the are smart, and they are healthy, there are some things that get there attention.

Of course I am talking about real time, in person, not on TV.

Smells (next to lack of air the most powerfull)
Pain (seeing your family members die during Israli attacks)
No sanotation facilities

5 12 2009
RON GARVEY

What is the deal with the code names?

Ron

9 12 2009
RON GARVEY

After I got back from Viet Nam, in 1966, I used the GI Bill to go to Jr College in California, which was free of charge (maybe $100 and books, maybe $200 for other stuff, but essentialy free). I used the money for rent and food. This Jr College system was in no small part created by Jerry Brown, and his father Gov Pat Brown. The most amazing things I learned about were history (the Holocost-never once mentioned by my parents (a total shock to me and almost made me vomit reading detailed texts about Treblinka etc) I read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s work, and learned that the human spirit is very much a part of life. And many others. And I learned Calculus, wonderfull Calculus. The beauty of mathematics is not one of Rush Fatso’s money makers. Sorry for the anger.

Ron

11 12 2009
RON GARVEY

Audio brain funtions are more powerfull than thought, they take immediate priorty, physiologicaly. So tell someone something nice.

Ron

15 12 2009
RON GARVEY

The origanal issue in this talk (is and was) about insanity and religeon. Both of these terms, religion and insanity are very clear to no one. I personaly do not believe such ideas such as human mutilation, male and female, of children are insane. But there millions of people who will fight to the death to promote such pratices. It defies reason. Which is, is, I suspect insane.

Here is a bit of Sanity

http://fivepublicopinions.wordpress.com/2008/05/31/is-there-really-much-difference-between-religion-and-insanity/#comment-2877

15 12 2009
RON GARVEY

The origanal issue in this talk (is and was) about insanity and religeon. Both of these terms, religion and insanity are very clear to no one. I personaly do not believe such ideas such as human mutilation, male and female, of children are insane. But there millions of people who will fight to the death to promote such pratices. It defies reason. Which is, is, I suspect insane.

Here is a bit of Sanity

15 12 2009
RON GARVEY

For my students, at the risk of overload. here is an example perfect grammar.

December 14, 2009
OP-ED COLUMNIST
Disaster and Denial

By PAUL KRUGMAN
When I first began writing for The Times, I was naïve about many things. But my biggest misconception was this: I actually believed that influential people could be moved by evidence, that they would change their views if events completely refuted their beliefs.

And to be fair, it does happen now and then. I’ve been highly critical of Alan Greenspan over the years (since long before it was fashionable), but give the former Fed chairman credit: he has admitted that he was wrong about the ability of financial markets to police themselves.

But he’s a rare case. Just how rare was demonstrated by what happened last Friday in the House of Representatives, when — with the meltdown caused by a runaway financial system still fresh in our minds, and the mass unemployment that meltdown caused still very much in evidence — every single Republican and 27 Democrats voted against a quite modest effort to rein in Wall Street excesses.

Let’s recall how we got into our current mess.

America emerged from the Great Depression with a tightly regulated banking system. The regulations worked: the nation was spared major financial crises for almost four decades after World War II. But as the memory of the Depression faded, bankers began to chafe at the restrictions they faced. And politicians, increasingly under the influence of free-market ideology, showed a growing willingness to give bankers what they wanted.

The first big wave of deregulation took place under Ronald Reagan — and quickly led to disaster, in the form of the savings-and-loan crisis of the 1980s. Taxpayers ended up paying more than 2 percent of G.D.P., the equivalent of around $300 billion today, to clean up the mess.

But the proponents of deregulation were undaunted, and in the decade leading up to the current crisis politicians in both parties bought into the notion that New Deal-era restrictions on bankers were nothing but pointless red tape. In a memorable 2003 incident, top bank regulators staged a photo-op in which they used garden shears and a chainsaw to cut up stacks of paper representing regulations.

And the bankers — liberated both by legislation that removed traditional restrictions and by the hands-off attitude of regulators who didn’t believe in regulation — responded by dramatically loosening lending standards. The result was a credit boom and a monstrous real estate bubble, followed by the worst economic slump since the Great Depression. Ironically, the effort to contain the crisis required government intervention on a much larger scale than would have been needed to prevent the crisis in the first place: government rescues of troubled institutions, large-scale lending by the Federal Reserve to the private sector, and so on.

Given this history, you might have expected the emergence of a national consensus in favor of restoring more-effective financial regulation, so as to avoid a repeat performance. But you would have been wrong.

Talk to conservatives about the financial crisis and you enter an alternative, bizarro universe in which government bureaucrats, not greedy bankers, caused the meltdown. It’s a universe in which government-sponsored lending agencies triggered the crisis, even though private lenders actually made the vast majority of subprime loans. It’s a universe in which regulators coerced bankers into making loans to unqualified borrowers, even though only one of the top 25 subprime lenders was subject to the regulations in question.

Oh, and conservatives simply ignore the catastrophe in commercial real estate: in their universe the only bad loans were those made to poor people and members of minority groups, because bad loans to developers of shopping malls and office towers don’t fit the narrative.

In part, the prevalence of this narrative reflects the principle enunciated by Upton Sinclair: “It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” As Democrats have pointed out, three days before the House vote on banking reform Republican leaders met with more than 100 financial-industry lobbyists to coordinate strategies. But it also reflects the extent to which the modern Republican Party is committed to a bankrupt ideology, one that won’t let it face up to the reality of what happened to the U.S. economy.

So it’s up to the Democrats — and more specifically, since the House has passed its bill, it’s up to “centrist” Democrats in the Senate. Are they willing to learn something from the disaster that has overtaken the U.S. economy, and get behind financial reform?

Let’s hope so. For one thing is clear: if politicians refuse to learn from the history of the recent financial crisis, they will condemn all of us to repeat it.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
Privacy Policy Terms of Service Search Corrections RSS First Look Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map

15 12 2009
RON GARVEY

The dangers of electing incompentent people to important gonvenment positions is demontrated here,

15 12 2009
RON GARVEY

This man is responsible the for the death of ??? inocent people, in the name of the GOP

Ron

21 12 2009
RON GARVEY

I posted a link to “Boots of Spanish Leather – Nanci Griffith” created by Bob Dylan above. I think Dylan is a wonderful poet.

Here are the lyrics to that poem

Oh I’m sailing away, my own true love
I’m sailing away in the morning
Is there something I can send you from across the sea?
From the place where I’ll be landing?

There’s nothing you can send me, my own true love
There’s nothing I’m wishing to be owning
Just carry yourself back to me unspoiled
From across that lonesome ocean

Oh, but I just thought you might want something fine
Maybe silver or of golden
Either from the mountains of Madrid
Or from the coast of Barcelona

If I had the stars of the darkest night
And the diamonds from the deepest ocean
I’d forsake them all for your sweet kiss
That’s all I wish to be owning

Oh, I might be gone a long ol’ time
And it’s only that I’m asking
Is there something I can send you to remember me by?
To make your time more easy passing?

How can, how can you ask me again?
Well it only brings me sorrow
Oh, the same thing I would want today
I would want again tomorrow

Oh, I got a letter on a lonesome day
It was from his ship a-sailing
Saying, I don’t know when I’ll be coming back again
It depends on how I’m feeling

If you, my love, must think that away
I’m sure your mind is a-roaming
I’m sure your thoughts are not with me
But with the country where you’re going

So take heed, take heed of the western wind
Take heed of stormy weather
And yes, there is something you can send back to me
Spanish boots of Spanish leather

21 12 2009
RON GARVEY

Thank you for this website, it’s no small thing

Ron

23 12 2009
RON GARVEY

A difficult issue is termination of pregnancy. Abortion. I suggest that physicians who deal with life and death every day, with real patients, are best qualified to to answer these difficult questions. Not politicians. To deny the possibility of rational intervention and help to patients in need is insane.

Ron

23 12 2009
RON GARVEY

Here is a link to a surgeon who has saved hundreds of third world chilren, free of charge.

http://www.levinmd.com/?gclid=CIeknYST654CFRgYagod5Xs0Kw

25 12 2009
RON GARVEY

Truth in Talk. And just to be truthful, Dr Levin (plastic surgeon) repaired my serious facial cancer damage, 10 years ago. The point I would like to make is this: the other doctors in my case, to a man, praised him as an artist. Again my point these Dr’s are not at all like Rush Fatso, liar and traitor, disgusting american GOP fox pimp money maker.

Ron

26 12 2009
learningquranonline

I don’t know If I said it already but …Cool site, love the info. I do a lot of research online on a daily basis and for the most part, people lack substance but, I just wanted to make a quick comment to say I’m glad I found your blog. Thanks

http://www.learningquranonline.com

27 12 2009
RON GARVEY

I clicked the above link and found that it is a strange site asking for money?

Ron

27 12 2009
RON GARVEY

The above link I mentioned is a religious sect collecting money online, in return for Muslim stuff.

Ron

27 12 2009
RON GARVEY

Just in case, I will forward this to the FBI

Ron

31 12 2009
Ron Garvey

We can not help the Iran situation to find a solution by thumping our chests and saying “those crazy religious people in power”. We can help them by them by enpowering the many expert political scientists in Iran and in this country and others, and using expert reason. For God’s sake not idiots like Bush and Lieberman. My own sugestion for them find ways to assinate there leaders–just kidding.

Ron

31 12 2009
Ron Garvey

Re above.

It just occured to me that is exactly what the BBC has tried to do, not the kidding part. I wish my country has a national news system that was not a bunch of pimps’

Ron

ron

31 12 2009
Ron Garvey

Re above

Here is an example of our national news system

5 01 2010
RON GARVEY

Just a idea that I had. I just purchased a computer hard drive that has 1.5 trillion bits of memory for $125. I record over the air TV 24 hrs a day. Free of charge. Do you think free broadcast has any future? I think it is the only future, Because sponsors with quality products are the only ones who will survive. The key word here is quality. Over the air transmissions can now operate at 5 billion bits per second. Much, much higher that fiber. Do you think someone is blowing smoke up your wahoo. I do. What’s this got to to with religion and insanity. Ask your local congressman about the speed of light and if he (or she) has any idea how fast it is. (186,280 miles per second). And if they still believe the creation was just a couple of thousand years ago.

Ron

Ron

5 01 2010
RON GARVEY

By the the way, I read that some people get special priority treatment for heart pains, if there name is Rush Fatso.

Ron

5 01 2010
RON GARVEY

Just one more idea, in science. Light from a star passing behind the sun was measured to deviate in its path, apparently by the suns gravitational field.
As predicted by Albert Einstein .

Ron

8 01 2010
RON GARVEY

Money grubbing ( a religion in America ) is alive in the auto industry.

Subject:
PC’S in cars.

From the New York Time

“Awareness of that issue is growing. Even in 2003, when fewer people were multitasking in cars, researchers at Harvard estimated that motorists talking on cellphones caused 2,600 fatal accidents and 570,000 accidents involving injuries a year.” That was 2003, wait tell you see what’s coming to your local car dealer in 2010

Ron

8 01 2010
RON GARVEY

till not tell

11 01 2010
Ron Garvey

I don’t have any idea if anyone is is reading this, but it seems important to me–the PC’S in cars thing–. Most of the deaths caused by distracted drvers using cell phones were innocent people who were just living there lives, Men with children, Wives with children. Children walking to school. We are talking about accidents in the thousands. Where is the outrage. Notice that responsible companies like Apple and Google are not selling there souls, like Ford and others.

Ron

11 01 2010
Ron Garvey

It can be accurately stated that more american citizens have been killed by distracted cell phone user drivers than terrorist bombers.

Ron

11 01 2010
Ron Garvey

According to newspaper accounts the banker pigs are going to give themselves reocrd bonuses

Ron

13 01 2010
Ron Garvey

I can’t help, but I just keep thinking how much gOD worship f-cks up the world.

Ron

15 01 2010
Ron Garvey

By the way. Gravity is considered in physics to weak force. A simple magnet can pin your grocery list to your refrigerator, even through paint. 10 milliion Americans giving $100 to the Red Cross would be a nice thing.

Ron

15 01 2010
19 01 2010
Ron Garvey

I love things that ring true; Monet, Rembrant, Billy Holliday; Dr King

Ron

21 01 2010
Ron Garvey

Actualy, late night night comedy is my only source of honesty these days, especially JKL, who has never insulted my inteligence.

Ron

23 01 2010
Ron Garvey

Leno is a nice guy, but he is not using our airspace with with anything usefull. I suggest interviews with medical school trachers from around world would be a money maker. I mean these are very interesting people. It would be real. These are modern realists.

Ron

23 01 2010
Ron Garvey

teachers not trachers

Sorry

23 01 2010
Ron Garvey

By the way, the host should not be a pimp repulican

Ron

23 01 2010
Ron Garvey

My choice would be PAUL KRUGMAN

Ron

26 01 2010
Ron Garvey

I hate to admit it, but I think we are back in the days when slavery was actually a debated in the Senate as legal or not.

Ron

28 01 2010
Ron Garvey

Some ideas for the US senators and the courts to keep in mind:

The Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:2-17 NKJV)
1 “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. You shall have no other gods before Me.
2 “You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them nor serve them. For I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generations of those who hate Me, but showing mercy to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My Commandments.
3 “You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him guiltless who takes His name in vain.
4 “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord your God. In it you shall do no work: you, nor your son, nor your daughter, nor your male servant, nor your female servant, nor your cattle, nor your stranger who is within your gates. For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it.
5 “Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long upon the land which the Lord your God is giving you.
6 “You shall not murder.
7 “You shall not commit adultery.
8 “You shall not steal.
9 “You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.
10 “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house; you shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, nor his male servant, nor his female servant, nor his ox, nor his donkey, nor anything that is your neighbor’s.”

28 01 2010
Ron Garvey

I think there are some good ideas here, but number 10 is very strange;

Ron

28 01 2010
Ron Garvey

Just for the record, here a common practice among tribal cultures.

Female genital cutting
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Female genital mutilation (FGM), also known as female genital cutting (FGC), female circumcision or female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), is any procedure involving the partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs “whether for cultural, religious or other non-therapeutic reasons.”[1] The term is almost exclusively used to describe traditional or religious procedures on a minor, which requires the parents’ consent because of the age of the girl.

When the procedure is performed on and with the consent of an adult it is generally called clitoridectomy, or it may be part of labiaplasty or vaginoplasty.[2][3][4] It also generally does not refer to procedures used in gender reassignment surgery, and the genital modification of intersexuals.[5][6][7]

FGC is practiced throughout the world, with the practice concentrated most heavily in Asia and Africa. Opposition is motivated by concerns regarding the consent (or lack thereof, in most cases) of the patient, and subsequently the safety and long-term consequences of the procedures. In the past several decades, there have been many concentrated efforts by the World Health Organization (WHO) to end the practice of FGC. The United Nations has also declared February 6 as “International Day Against Female Genital Mutilation”.[8][9]

Ron

28 01 2010
Ron Garvey

When was the last time you heard Rush complain about this.

Ron

28 01 2010
Ron Garvey

There are more slaves. mostly forced child prostitutes in Thailand today than there were when Bush got elected, the socond time.

Ron

30 01 2010
Ron Garvey

http://www.trbq.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=18&Itemid=45

Some modern ideas can be researched, listened to, and read at this site.
THE REALLY BIG QUESTIONS ie TRBQ.com (free)

Ron

30 01 2010
Ron Garvey

Sorry, TBRQ.ORG not COM
Ron

30 01 2010
Ron Garvey

When the New York Times said they will now charge for content, I looked around and found REUTERS, which I find is more current and professional, and timely. I like the “Times”, but if they can’t find a sugar daddy, then there management is out to lunch.

Ron

30 01 2010
Ron Garvey

I’d do it again – Blair on Iraq

Ron

30 01 2010
Ron Garvey

hubris

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
.
Hubris means extreme haughtiness or arrogance. Hubris often indicates a loss of touch with reality and overestimating one’s own competence or capabilities, especially for people in positions of power.
Hubris derives the terms “act of hubris”, and “hubristic”.

Ron

3 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Around 2002, before the invasion, I was talking to some engineers at Motorola about Bush and his frequent “God bless America” endings to his news conferences. I said ” what about God bless everyone”. All I got was silence.
I noticed that president Obama ended with ” God bless you. and America.

Ron

6 02 2010
RON GARVEY

In world war II the French hosted Hitler in Paris, the UK had their finest hour, the US had D Day, the Italians had Mussolini, the Russians had Stalin, and in the US, in the South we had the KKK.

Maybe we should think about having a real debate in the Senate.

Ron

6 02 2010
RON GARVEY

I forgot about Japan, I have no info why they did what they did.

Ron

8 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Listening to The News Hour is like eating oatmeal for breakfast.
Talk about entrenched good old boys, here it is.

Ron

8 02 2010
RON GARVEY

By the way, NPR wants your money, just like CBS, NBC, ABC, FOX. So why pretend otherwise. Did you watch the game. I did. I had the same feeling when I went to Hong Kong in 1966 on leave from Viet Nam, in uniform, and learned what a pimp is.

Ron

14 02 2010
Ron Garvey

Here are some thoughts from Bill Gates, who has asked some of the smartest people around for some answeres to real problems. In this talk he addresses global warming and how serious it is.

Long Beach, California (CNN) — Microsoft Corp. founder and philanthropist Bill Gates on Friday called on the world’s tech community to find a way to turn spent nuclear fuel into cheap, clean energy.

“What we’re going to have to do at a global scale is create a new system,” Gates said in a speech at the TED Conference in Long Beach, California. “So we need energy miracles.”

Gates called climate change the world’s most vexing problem, and added that finding a cheap and clean energy source is more important than creating new vaccines and improving farming techniques, causes into which he has invested billion of dollars.

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation last month pledged $10 billion to help deploy and develop vaccines for children in the developing world.

The world must eliminate all of its carbon emissions and cut energy costs in half in order to prevent a climate catastrophe, which will hit the world’s poor hardest, he said.

“We have to drive full speed and get a miracle in a pretty tight timeline,” he said.

Gates said the deadline for the world to cut all of its carbon emissions is 2050. He suggested that researchers spend the next 20 years inventing and perfecting clean-energy technologies, and then the next 20 years implementing them.

The world’s energy portfolio should not include coal or natural gas, he said, and must include carbon capture and storage technology as well as nuclear, wind and both solar photovoltaics and solar thermal power.

“We’re going to have to work on each of these five [areas] and we can’t give up on any of them because they look daunting,” he said. “They all have significant challenges.”

Gates spent a significant portion of his speech highlighting nuclear technology that would turn spent uranium — the 99 percent of uranium rods that aren’t burned in current nuclear power plants — into electricity.

That technology could power the world indefinitely; spent uranium supplies in the U.S. alone could power the country for 100 years, he said.

A “traveling wave reactor” would burn uranium waste slowly, meaning a 60-year supply could be added to a reactor at once and then not touched for decades, he said.

Gates also called for innovation in battery technology.

“All the batteries we make now could store less than 10 minutes of all the energy [in the world],” he said. “So, in fact, we need a big breakthrough here. Something that’s going to be of a factor of 100 better than what we have now.”

Gates called for more investment in climate-related technology. He said he is backing a company called TerraPower, which is working on an alternate form of nuclear technology that uses spent fuel.

Money that goes into research and development will pay bigger returns than other investments, he said, especially if money goes into energy sources that will be cheap enough for the developing world to afford.

Clean energy technologies must be installed in poorer countries as they develop, he said.

“You’d be stunned at the ridiculously low costs of innovation,” said Gates, who received a standing ovation for his remarks.

If he could wish for anything in the world, Gates said he would not pick the next 50 years’ worth of presidents or wish for a miracle vaccine.

He would choose energy that is half as expensive as coal and doesn’t warm the planet.

Ron

16 02 2010
ron garvey

The word “transformation” is a word I like. Lets imagine an artist, say Rembrandt, taking a blank canvas and painting a self image. He did this when he was young, and old. What is this that captures my attention. I think he was addicted to honesty.

Ron

18 02 2010
RON GARVEY

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rSF4O8BYq4s

This is an example of brain dead.

Ron

18 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Here a drunk Senator giving a speech.

Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHf9gK1Tyyo&feature=related

Ron

18 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Sorry. I screwed up. Boehner is not a Senator, he is the House minority whip. But he is still brain dead.

Ron

18 02 2010
RON GARVEY

It gave me pleasure to see Bob Dylan get a standing ovation in a White House music event last week.

I don’t that would have happened in Richard Nixon’s White House.

Ron

18 02 2010
RON GARVEY

The Tea Party people say this is Christian Nation. Just like the Romans had slave separate toilets.

Ron

18 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Don’t listen to the pundits about our CIA at this crucial time about national security efforts. I am confident that this team does not claim to talk to God.

Ron

20 02 2010
RON GARVEY

This story about the assassin in Dubai (spelling ?) is better than “The Spy who came out of the dark” . I did a “Google Reader” collection of world wide news accounts. I found that small town newspapers copy ” word for word” without giving credit to their sources. I could give examples, but that is not the point. The point, for me, Newspapers are for profit, pay the rent, enterprises. In the mean time, time is wasted in finding real solutions and votes are casted without any goals.

Ron

20 02 2010
RON GARVEY

The answers to the above question, how to get real news, is a combination of “not free, transparency, and choice”

Ron

23 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Some ideas I learned in Physics class.

Scientific method
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on Science
Natural sciences[show]
Social and
behavioral sciences[show]
Applied sciences[show]
Formal sciences[show]
Related topics[show]
v • d • e
Scientific method refers to a body of techniques for investigating phenomena, acquiring new knowledge, or correcting and integrating previous knowledge. To be termed scientific, a method of inquiry must be based on gathering observable, empirical and measurable evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning.[1] A scientific method consists of the collection of data through observation and experimentation, and the formulation and testing of hypotheses.[2]
Although procedures vary from one field of inquiry to another, identifiable features distinguish scientific inquiry from other methodologies of knowledge. Scientific researchers propose hypotheses as explanations of phenomena, and design experimental studies to test these hypotheses. These steps must be repeatable in order to dependably predict any future results. Theories that encompass wider domains of inquiry may bind many independently-derived hypotheses together in a coherent, supportive structure. This in turn may help form new hypotheses or place groups of hypotheses into context.
Among other facets shared by the various fields of inquiry is the conviction that the process be objective to reduce biased interpretations of the results. Another basic expectation is to document, archive and share all data and methodology so they are available for careful scrutiny by other scientists, thereby allowing other researchers the opportunity to verify results by attempting to reproduce them. This practice, called full disclosure, also allows statistical measures of the reliability of these data to be established.

Ron

25 02 2010
RON GARVEY

I love Resident Obama, but I think he should put some range into his talks, musically speaking. Tempo, variances. pauses, are not appealing.

Ron

25 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Here is Marlon Brando talking about war.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JrK4gnNqOU

Ron

25 02 2010
RON GARVEY

Just be honest I think male homosexual sex to be disgusting.

But thats only me.

Ron

25 02 2010
RON GARVEY

It is also true that male homosexual personalities have been some of our popular artists. It is also true the homosexual males created the global aids death toll.

Ron

25 02 2010
RON GARVEY

It is also true that Gays have power, not unlike Israel.

Ron

25 02 2010
RON GARVEY

I can say these things because I am an old man who will die soon.

Ron

2 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Disease. It is important to put to put things relative terms. A guy gets snuffed in Dubai. So what. The HIV death toll is measured in the millions.

http://www.avert.org/worldstats.htm

Ron

2 03 2010
RON GARVEY

There was nothing on ABC, NBC, FOX, CNN, CABLE, or BBC last night about this.

Ron

2 03 2010
RON GARVEY

But that is the GOP’s point. Why should people with money worry about the poor. They should work harder.

Ron

2 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Here is Bob Kennedy, JFK’s brother, in a debate, before he was assassinated.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMzTcvXk1j4&feature=related

Ron

2 03 2010
RON GARVEY

I think I have lost track with the original point of this talk. Let me say it now. Teaching children ideas ideas about life after death causes insanity.

Ron

2 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Again, I would like to thank this Site and YouTube as international treasures of reality.

Ron

5 03 2010
RON GARVEY

An earlier post of ” Boots of Spanish Leather” is blocked.

Here is Bob Dylan himself.

http://popup.lala.com/popup/504684663603373474

Ron

5 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Sorry, that did not work. But I still love this poetry.

Ron

5 03 2010
RON GARVEY

I think Leno is a closet teaparty guy

Ron

5 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Here is Stevie Ray, my fav quitarist.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GSpbuFSr2o

Ron

5 03 2010
RON GARVEY

The BBC is doing coverage of birth defects in Iraq. This takes real courage. There is concept called “Karma” in some eastern thought, as I understand it, being a novice, that more or less says “if you see it, you own it”

Ron

5 03 2010
RON GARVEY

There is some very exciting brain research at some of our medical research centers here in the US. But these doctors are scientists, not politicians,

Ron

5 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Fantasy, The pres called me and said what should I do?, I said learn music and science.

Rob

11 03 2010
RON GARVEY

World Focus, a TV news org, in case you have not seen it, is a global treasure, here is a link to one of there shows about wind power and some free thinkers.

http://worldfocus.org/blog/2009/11/16/everyday-danes-profit-from-pioneering-wind-power/8431/

Ron

11 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Where in the US Constitution does it say that it takes more than 51% of votes to pass Senate law?

Articles of the Constitution

When it was written in 1787, the Constitution had a preamble and seven main parts, called articles.
[change]Preamble
The Preamble says:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
The Preamble is not a law. It gives the reasons for writing the Constitution. The Preamble is one of the best known parts of the Constitution. The first three words, “We the people,” are used very often. There are six intentions-they are the goals of the constitution.
[change]Legislative power
Article One: says that the U.S. Congress (the legislative branch) will make the laws for the United States. Congress has two parts, called “Houses,” the House of Representatives and the Senate. The Article says who can be elected to each part of Congress, and how they are elected.
The House of Representatives has members elected by the people in each state. The number of members from each state depends on how many people live there. Each member of the House of Representatives is elected for two years. The Senate has two members, called Senators, for each state, no matter how many people live there. Each Senator is elected for six years. The original Constitution says that Senators should be elected by the state legislatures, but this was changed later.
Article One also says how the Congress will do its business and what kinds of laws it can make. It lists some kinds of laws the Congress and the states cannot make. Article One also makes rules for Congress to impeach and remove from office the President, Vice President, judges, and other government officers.
[change]Executive power
Article Two says that the President (the executive branch) will carry out the laws made by Congress. This article says how the President and Vice President are elected, and who can be elected to these offices. The President and Vice President are elected by a special Electoral College chosen by the states, for four years. The Vice President takes over as President if the President dies, or resigns, or is unable to serve. Article Two also says that the President is in charge of the army and navy. He can make treaties with other countries, but these must be approved by two-thirds of the Senate. He appoints judges, ambassadors, and other officers, but the Senate also must approve these appointments. The President can also veto bills. However Congress can over ride the veto
[change]Judicial power
Article Three says there will be a court system (the judicial branch), including the Supreme Court. The article says that Congress can decide which courts, besides the Supreme Court, are needed. It says what kinds of “cases and controversies” these courts can decide. Article Three also requires trial by jury in all criminal cases, and defines the crime of treason.
[change]States’ powers and limits
Article Four is about the states. It says that all states must give “full faith and credit” to the laws of the other states. It also says that state governments must treat citizens of other states as fairly as they treat their own citizens, and must send arrested people back to another state if they have been charged with a crime.
Article Four also says that Congress can make new states. There were only 13 states in 1787. Now there are 50 states in the United States. It says Congress can make rules for Federal property and can govern territories that have not yet been made into states. Article Four says the United States must make sure that each state has a republican form of government, and protect the states from invasion and violence.
[change]Process of amendment
Article Five says how to amend, or change, the Constitution. Congress can write a change, if two-thirds of the members in each House agree. The state governments can call a convention to write changes, although this has not happened since 1787. Any change that is written by Congress or by a convention must be sent to the state legislatures or to state conventions for their approval. Congress decides whether to send a change to the legislatures or to conventions. Three-fourths of the states must approve a change for it to become part of the Constitution.
An amendment can change any part of the Constitution, except one — no amendment can change the rule that each state has the same number of seats in the Senate.
[change]Federal power
Article Six says that the Constitution, and the laws and treaties of the United States, are higher than any other laws. It also says that all federal and state officers must swear to “support” the Constitution.
[change]Ratification
Article Seven says that the new government under the Constitution would not start until conventions in at least nine states approved the Constitution.
[change]Amendments

Since 1787, Congress has written 33 amendments to change the Constitution, but the states have ratified only 27 of them.
The first ten amendments are called the Bill of Rights. They were made in 1791. All of these changes limited the power of the federal government. They were:
Number Year Description
1st 1791 Congress must protect the rights of freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom of petition, and freedom of religion. Congress cannot promote any one religion more than others.
2nd 1791 “A well regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.” – People have the right to have weapons, for example guns.
3rd 1791 The government cannot send soldiers to live in private homes without the permission of the owners.
4th 1791 The government cannot get a warrant to arrest a person or search their property unless there is “probable cause” to believe a crime has been committed.
5th 1791 The government cannot put a person on trial for a crime until a grand jury has written an indictment. That a person cannot be put on trial twice for the same crime. The government must follow due process of law before punishing a person or taking their property. A person on trial for a crime does not have to testify against himself in court.
6th 1791 Any person who is accused of a crime should get a speedy trial by a jury. That person can have a lawyer during the trial. They must be told what they are charged with. The person can question the witnesses against them, and can get their own witnesses to testify.
7th 1791 A jury trial is needed for civil cases.
8th 1791 The government cannot require excessive bail or fines, or any cruel and unusual punishment.
9th 1791 The listing of individual rights in the Constitution and Bill of Rights does not include all of the rights of the people and the states.
10th 1791 Anything that the Constitution doesn’t say that Congress can do should be left up to the states, or to the people.
After the Bill of Rights, there are 17 more changes to the Constitution that were made at different times.
Number Year Description
11th 1795 Citizens cannot sue states in federal courts. There are some exceptions.
12th 1804 Changed the way the President and Vice President are elected.
13th 1865 Ended slavery in the United States.
14th 1868 Every person born in the United States is a citizen. States must follow due process of law before taking away any citizen’s rights or property.
15th 1870 A citizen’s right to vote cannot be taken away because of race or the color of their skin.
16th 1913 Congress can put a tax on income.
17th 1913 The people will elect Senators. Before this, Senators were elected by state legislatures.
18th 1919 Made a law against drinking alcohol, called Prohibition.
19th 1920 Gave women the right to vote.
20th 1933 Changed the days for meetings of Congress and for the start of the President’s term of office.
21st 1933 Ended the Prohibition law of the Eighteenth Amendment. States can make laws about how alcohol is used in each state.
22nd 1951 A person may not be elected President more than two times.
23rd 1961 Gave the people in the District of Columbia the right to vote for President.
24th 1964 Made it illegal to make anyone pay a tax to have the right to vote.
25th 1967 Changes what happens if a President dies, resigns, or is not able to do the job. Says what happens if a Vice President dies or resigns.
26th 1971 Makes 18 years old the minimum age for people to be allowed to vote
27th 1992 Limits how Congress can increase how much its members are paid.
[change]Other pages

Ron

11 03 2010
RON GARVEY

Insanity in Israel, Rabis have to OK divorce, by current law. There is no separation of church and state.

http://worldfocus.org/blog/2009/11/18/israels-orthodox-women-clamor-for-the-right-to-divorce/8481/

Ron

11 03 2010
RON GARVEY

I hate to say it, for as long as I can remember, and as I read history Judaism is associated with death and killing. Why is this?

Ron

11 03 2010
RON GARVEY

At the present time US tax laws are so complicated that only corporate CEO’S have any power to pass laws in the US senate,

Not my idea, but that of noble prize economists winners, in private quotes.

Ron

11 03 2010
RON GARVEY

When was the last time you listened to a politician say I’m an atheist. And then how many ideas have resulted free thought;

Hitler
Stalin
Mao

It takes that much evil to overcome religion

Ron

11 03 2010
RON GARVEY

I think that all this “stuff” leads me to choose music to study. Music tickles my brain and makes me alive (in a Zen way). Miles Davis never made a political statement in his life, except that he loved women, often.

Ron

20 03 2010
Ron Garvey

I love artists. Christiane Amanpour has agreed to host ABC’s sunday talking heads show. I love this artist.

Ron

20 03 2010
Ron Garvey

Lest we forget, there are about 300 million people in the US, and only a small percentage know that gravity is still a mystery, because science is that hard, and they did ask.

Ron

22 03 2010
Ron Garvey

I would like to remind the GOP to remenber the 9th commandment:
“You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor”

Ron

22 03 2010
Ron Garvey

In texts from ancient Buddist manuscripts, the word “Compassion” is a cenral theme. There is no mention of heaven.

Ron

22 03 2010
Ron Garvey

central not “cenral” sorry

Ron

3 04 2010
Ron Garvey

It seems that molesting children is defensible to the Catholic church. They never call in the cops.

Ron

3 04 2010
Ron Garvey

But then the Israeli cops call in themselves, and then lie.

Ron

3 04 2010
Ron Garvey

I think it take many many years to make this a safe world, free of Popes, Imams, Soothsayers, Bigots, and Wall Street liars.

Ron

14 04 2010
Ron Garvey

MC CAIN SAYS HE NEVER CLAIMED TO BE A MAVERICK

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGOZJ0ceJpc

RON

21 04 2010
Ron Garvey

I am curious to know if Catholic priests study, in there graduate schools; medicine, history, science, physics, the arts, mathematics, engineering, business, etc.

I really don’t know

Ron

21 04 2010
Ron Garvey

their not there
sorry

Ron

21 04 2010
Ron Garvey

If A is equal to B, and B is equal to C, then A is equal to C.

Ron

27 04 2010
RON GARVEY

Is is OK to tell children that there realy is a God

Ron

29 04 2010
RON GARVEY

In THE church, one must be a believer to go to heaven. This apparently includes boys and girls born 3000 years ago.

Ron

29 04 2010
RON GARVEY

Are there creatures in heaven, susch as pets.

Ron

29 04 2010
RON GARVEY

Do you have to clean your bathtube in heaven.

Ron

29 04 2010
RON GARVEY

Aliens? A metephore for bankers, as Jesus pointed out.

Ron

3 05 2010
OLD RON

In heaven do you get to choose your age, and century?

Ron

3 05 2010
OLD RON

In Heaven, can one argue philosophy?

Ron

3 05 2010
OLD RON

Animals don’t write poetry, or write like prose Eudora Welty

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudora_Welty

Ron

3 05 2010
OLD RON

Sorry. “prose like”

Ron

3 05 2010
OLD RON

My point is, is heaven a collection of Gods pets. he did create all.

Ron

3 05 2010
OLD RON

I forget the question mark? No, I was repeating THE gospel.

Ron

3 05 2010
OLD RON

I noticed that priests wear strange clothes, especially 16th century from pre printing press days’

Ron

24 05 2010
RON

I said earlier that this man was wrong. That was before the Tea Party revealed that this country is in danger. So here he is again, with a different post. Before he died.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atTSwau9fwM&feature=player_embedded

Ron

24 05 2010
RON

GOP plan. There are all stupid.

Ron

24 05 2010
RON

Sorry

They are stupid

Ron

24 05 2010
RON

Sorry

Them guys are wrong

Ron

24 05 2010
RON

Sorry

Some could be OK

Some could wright

Some could be miss told

Some could not be educated

But most would be honest if given the truth. The truth is a function (a mathematical term)

Air to breath
And someone to love

Ron

Ron

24 05 2010
RON

A famous Zen question is ” what is the color of the wind” ?

Ron

28 05 2010
RON
28 05 2010
RON

I noticed today, that President Obama is not at all stupid,

as Rush Fatso says

Ron

29 05 2010
RON

Oil, decomposed plants, formed over many thousands of years and geological events ago, predate religion. And man.

Ron

3 06 2010
RON

When male bombers get their 76 virgins, do female bombers get something too?
Are children born in heaven still genitally mutilated? Are children born in heaven?
Do they have time machines in heaven. Is there time in heaven?

Ron

3 06 2010
RON

Genghis Khan

Religion
Genghis Khan’s religion is widely speculated to be Shamanism or Tengriism, which was very likely among nomadic Mongol-Turkic tribes of Central Asia. But he was very tolerant religiously, and interested to learn philosophical and moral lessons from other religions. To do so, he consulted Christian missionaries, Muslim merchants, and the Taoist monk Qiu Chuji.

from Wiki

Ron

3 06 2010
RON

History

In 1219 Genghis Khan, founder of the Mongol empire and the greatest of Asiatic conquerors, invited Chang Chun to visit him. Genghis’ letter of invitation, dated 15 May 1219 (by present reckoning), has been preserved, one of the great curiosities of history. Here the formidable Mongol warrior appears as a meek disciple of wisdom, modest and simple, almost Socratic in his self-examination, alive to many of the deepest truths of life and government.
Chang Chun obeyed the summons and left his home in Shandong (February 1220) journeyed to Beijing. Learning that Genghis had gone further west upon fresh conquests, the sage stayed the winter there. In February 1221 Chang Chun started off again, traversing eastern Mongolia to the camp of Genghis’ brother Ujughen, near Lake Bbr, or Buyur, in the upper Kherlen-Amur basin. From there he traveled south-westward up the Kherlen, crossing the Karakorum region in north-central Mongolia, and arrived at the Altai Mountains, probably passing near the present Uliastai. After traversing the Altai he visited Bishbalig, the modern Urumqi, and moved along the north side of the Tian Shan range to Lake Sairam, Almalik (or Kuija), and the rich valley of the Ili.
We then trace him to Balasagun and the Chu and across this river to Talas and the Tashkent region, and then over the Jaxartes (or Syr Dana) to Samarkand, where he halted for some months. Finally, through the Iron Gates of Termit, over the Oxus, and by way of Balkh and northern Afghanistan, Chang Chun reached Genghis’ camp near the Hindu Kush. It was in Samarkand in the year 1221 where Chang Chun met with Muslim imams who viewed Chang Chun with disdain. He returned their contempt with the comment, “Why do you make the pilgrimage to Mecca? Do you not know that God is everywhere?”[citation needed]
Returning home he largely followed his outward route, with certain deviations, such as a visit to Kuku-khoto. He was back in Beijing by the end of January 1224. From the narrative of his expedition (the Hsi Yu Ki, written by his pupil and companion Li Chi Chang) we derive some of the most vivid pictures ever drawn of nature and man between the Great Wall of China and Kabul, between the Aral and Yellow Sea. Of particular interest are the sketches of the Mongols and the people of Samarkand and its vicinity, the account of the land and products of Samarkand in the Ili valley at or near Almalig-Kulja, and the description of various great mountain ranges, peaks and defiles, such as the Chinese Altay, the Tian Shan, Mt Bogdo-ola (?), and the Iron Gates of Termit. There is, moreover, a noteworthy reference to a land apparently identical with the uppermost valley of the Yenisei.
After his return, Chang Chun lived in Beijing until his death on 23 July 1227. By order of Genghis Khan some of the former imperial garden grounds were given to him for the foundation of a Daoist monastery, the White Cloud Monastery that exists to this day.
Authorship of Journey to the West (Xi You Ji) has sometimes been attributed to Chang Chun, but this is incorrect. The Xi You Ji was probably written by Wu Cheng’en. Such confusion may have arisen from its similarity to the title of Chang Chun’s travel description, Qiu Chang Chun Xi You Ji.
[edit]Popular culture

A fictionalized version of the historical figure appears in Jinyong’s Condor Trilogy. In it, Qiu is an expert practitioner of martial arts. He is not a very good Daoist in the strictly religious sense of the term as he does not abide by the laissez-faire precepts of Daoism for which he has been repeatedly berated by his senior Ma Yu. Qiu Chuji involved himself in matters of society extensively, assassinating corrupt officials, collaborators and traitors.

from Wiki

Ron

4 06 2010
RON GARVEY

Here in Californian, I turn on the TV, and see political ads saying ” he is a liberal”

Is a pretty face, a nice smile, lots of money, a nice voice, acceptable, without any reason

Ron

4 06 2010
RON GARVEY

Or is this Pretty face a tribal member?

ron

4 06 2010
RON GARVEY

Has this pretty face read “The Heart of Darkness” by Joseph Conrad? Read the works of philosopher William James? Passed a class is calculus? Listened to Dr King? Or read the commandment ” 9 “You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.

Ron

4 06 2010
RON GARVEY

In the mean time, it is still a common practice to sell children to wealthy men in Thailand.

Ron

6 06 2010
RON

Here is a artist from Vietnam

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGRc-cI0JbA

Ron

6 06 2010
RON

I did it again, I should have said ” here is AN artist” thinking about my lovely english teacher at Chaffey Junior College in 1966

Ron

6 06 2010
RON

Here is wonderful video that all can enjoy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwfbWHn4HcA&feature=fvw

Ron

7 06 2010
RON

YouTube, an amazing thing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwfbWHn4HcA

Ron

17 06 2010
RON GARVEY

If scientists and physisits discover how gravity works through absoute empty space, then then I will say “yahoo”.

Ron

17 06 2010
RON GARVEY

Don’t look at the wonderfull photography in this video, listen to the music.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UWdLyp-xRM

Ron

17 06 2010
RON GARVEY

Another lovely artist from Vietnam

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5OJWqp2U80&NR=1

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

Hearing GOP congressmen talk about “Shakedowns” reminds me of Vietnam, and 50,000 US solders killed in action, and Senators saying God Bless America.

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

One thing I like about this site that is no one will quote the source ( a common practice on ABC, CBS, NBC, NYT, WSJ, NPR, etc. The BBC is as good as it gets, which is a treasure. Some ideas are just so neat that they become obvious. And hopefully, defended. Peacefully.

Ron.

19 06 2010
RON

Sorry, I forgot the end paren after etc.

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

I heard a piece on BBC (available in the BBC archives online) that that French and German educators are concerned that high school kids are not ready for graduation exams. In the US, 30% drop out before they get to high school.

Ron

19 06 2010
19 06 2010
RON

But don’t worry, there some Americans who, and most kids who know that Rush Fatso is a pimp.

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

there ARE some kids

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

For smart kids who like to read about history and thought, try William James , and his family. It’s Ok for late learners too, if you have lots of time and are a speed reader.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_James

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

After all, there are kids who can quote word for word Harry Potter novels.

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

I have a bad habit of gritting my teeth, clenching my jaws, when I watch TV over our airwaves, a limited resource. The FCC is (has been) bought and paid for by special interests and big money. Some of the wealthiest people is this country know this is not working for our society. Check out some thoughts. As Bogart’s paramour (and wife) said in the movie ” just whistle , just Google FCC”. If you care.

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

I looked up “paramour” and discovered I should not have used this word. I thought it meant sexy lady.
Paramour rights refers to a pre-Civil War Southern practice that gave white men the right to take black women, married or not, as concubines

Sorry

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

But Rush Fatso knows about buying wives. This don’t make no sense, just like Rush Fatso and the GOP.

Ron

(any resemblance to Rush Spineless is not accurrraate and Senator McLain is not a wife hater)

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

Conservative means “It’s mine, and you can’t have it”

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

Conservative means “my Daddy gave it to me”

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

Conservative means you can’t prove I’m a liar, maybe I’m just stupid.

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

Conservative means “If I lie, so what, it works for me”

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

The best one I heard is “prove there is no God”. This from Alexander the Great to a Buddhist monk, several years ago, several hundred years ago, actually 356–323 BC

Ron

19 06 2010
RON

The above statement is from historical archives, from ancient manuscripts, as recorded on my fantasies.

Ron

24 06 2010
Ron Garvey

fantasies. I mean I don’t read ancient Greek, and have to take the word of PHD historians from England, USA, and Russia.

Ron

24 06 2010
Ron Garvey

Alexander the Great personally fought in hand to hand combat, and was an expert swordsman, horseman, and diplomat.

Ron

24 06 2010
Ron Garvey

Historians say that his greatest skill was diplomat.

Ron

26 06 2010
Ron Garvey

I have been doing some looking around about my favorite mystery ” how does gravity work though empty space” and find no answers. My guess is there is a 4th demenstion.

Ron

27 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Here is an American poet, song writer, arranger, band leader, maverick, award winer and performer Lucinda Williams

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tE2uEl_aB9E

Ron

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Intolerance and insanity in Tibet, preserving history and working cultures. A sad result of communism.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0VRneGYpaXc

Gone

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

For those who are easily entertained and like Rush Fatso and

Fox, try Mein Kampf, by Adolf Hitler

Gone

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

For some silly comedy relief try “Blah Blah Taxi” from the UK.

http://media.libsyn.com/media/pepperstock/blahblahtaxi01.mp3

Gone

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO
28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

A tech note, the reason you can enjoy a hand held smartphone is the result of
chemistry, and a chemical known as Galium Arsinide, which is used is high speed amplifiers. This is the result of clear thinking scientists. Not priests.

Gone

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

sorry, grammar is weak. “used in ”

Gone

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Some folks pray for this or that, which focuses ones mind. I love this idea.

Gone

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

There have been many Gods that men have thought about. But there are only a few that are popular now, not surprisingly there are all called God (monotheism) but these people have no qualms about cutting the penis of of little boys, and in Muslim cultures cutting young girls outer labia. Perhaps you think I’m making this up. Think again. Do some research. What does Karma (Zen literal “to see”) mean to me? I saw it, and will do all that I can to end insanity.

Gone

28 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

We live in time where idiots like Rush Fatso gets air time, and surgeons work 14 hour days, 6 days a week, and take off three months for more training. If you think I’m making this up, think again, Something is wrong here.

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

It is reassuring to know we a president who has read classic literature. “Thin gruel”.

In the Western world, gruel is remembered as the food of the child workhouse inmates in Charles Dickens’ Industrial Revolution novel, Oliver Twist (1838); the workhouse was supplied with “an unlimited supply of water” and “small quantities of oatmeal”.[4] When Oliver asks the master of the workhouse for some more, he is struck a blow to the head for it. The “small saucepan of gruel” waiting upon Ebenezer Scrooge’s hob in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol emphasizes how miserly Scrooge is. References to gruel in popular culture today continue to refer to miserly or starvation conditions.[5]

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

From Wiki

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Murphy’s Law. “If it can happen, then it will happen”.
This is an abbreviated form of the German physicist Werner Heisenberg’s postulation called the “uncertainty principle “. Which baffled Alfred Einstein till the end of his life. The variables in this equation are: unimaginable numbers, random events. and all is real. Nuclear weapons are real. By the way the word is “Nuclear, not Nucular” Mr bush.

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Which brings up the question of choice, choosing. Think of beautiful birds flashing feathers, lions growling, poets writing, painters painting. and bigots bigoting. Choose

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Unimaginable numbers: There are cells in your body than GOP lies.

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Slave owners apparently slept well at night, and went to church on Sunday.

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

” all is real ” is a difficult concept to grasp if you don’t understand differential calculus.

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Sir Isaac Newton invented Calculus (1643 – 31 )

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton

Rob

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

Sadly, I can’t find any good videos about the beauty of calculus, but they may be out there somewhere.

Gone

30 06 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

When I listen to NPR in the morning, I get the feeling they are talking to grammar students, emphasizing grammar rather than content.

Gone

2 07 2010
Fake Email

John Boehner, a carbon copy of Jo McCarthy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkHrSXuNDIw

Fake

2 07 2010
GONE INCOGNITO

When I studied geometry in the 7th grade at John Marshall Jr High, all I could think of was girls

Gone

2 07 2010
Just Me

I spent 4 years learning Calculus and basic physics at a free California state College, along with history, chemistry, etc. Now we have the Silicon valley. Do you suppose there is any connection?

Me

4 07 2010
Just Me

This is a personal message for John Boehner. Since you have complete confidence in your speeches on the floor, and know history so well, please give me an lesson of king Leopold II of Belgium’s conservative ideas. For reference here is link to wiki’s history.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leopold_II_of_Belgium

Just

4 07 2010
Just Me

Conservative thought in history. The Congo

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:MutilatedChildrenFromCongo.jpg

Just

4 07 2010
Just Me

I am tempted to show photos of mutilated genitals of girls in some Muslim cultures in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Africa, happening today. But there is the chance that someone will knock on my door tomorrow, and say are you “Just Me”.

Just

4 07 2010
Just Me

I forgot Iran

Just

4 07 2010
Just Me

When I was taking a class in electromagnetic fields in college. trying to answer questions in each chapter, I always knew there were answers in the professors answer’s book. The math is is very defined. But like a new language, have to be learned.

Just

4 07 2010
Just Me

I meant to say “like a new language, has to be learned”

grammar is not my strong point. Even though I love to read artists like Eudora Welty

Just

4 07 2010
Just Me

I suggest that Steve, who I love, have someone explain what makes an apple red, mathematically. Electromagnetically

Just.

4 07 2010
Just Me

Here I am giving a guy with some money to spare advice. It’s because I know he is an artist

Just

4 07 2010
Just Me

So I plan to buy the Droid X, because I love Chrome, and trust YouTube and things that work

Just Me

4 07 2010
Just Me

I did it again, lost the thread. Sorry

Just Me

6 07 2010
Just Me

The Tea Party people say they are “losing their freedoms”, and that this country is a “Christian Nation”. I beg to differ. Some people are and were actual Christians. Case in point; Slavery and Southern Churches.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFAExzwjDC0

Just Me

6 07 2010
Just Me

Mass insanity was common, if you consider slavery insane, which I do. To bad there were no You Tubes back then. Today we have Congressmen like John Boehner, very scary.

Just Me

6 07 2010
Just Me

Too bad

Just Me

9 07 2010
RON GARVEY

I found a video that combines lovely music and a class is wave motion.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37qw5vNyYzE&feature=related

Just ME

9 07 2010
Just Me

I don’t even want to think about slavery now, just great new music. New to me.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1LkoG449Yc

Just Me

9 07 2010
Just Me

Boots of Spanish Leather

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1KxthvX1Ms

JM

9 07 2010
Just Me

In Tampa, Florida, in 1964, before I left for Vietnam, at a party, a woman asked me if I would make love with her. I was speechless. I was 19 and a virgin. She was about 26, and tall, brown haired, and had an adult womans voice. She was a grammar school teacher, single and frequently laughed, but did not drink, and I was speechless. I could not say anything. I was speechless. When we got to her place, she put on a record, (Johnny Cash) took off her clothes, and showed me what she liked to do before sex. Shower, Massage, condom, and slow sex.

Just Me

10 07 2010
Just Me

Entitlement, an interesting word. One could spend a lifetime thinking about this word.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entitlement

JM

12 07 2010
Just Me

When I was taking a course in differential calculus at a free California State College, I soon learned that it often took several attempts to find a path to a solution in homework assignments, and that this was part of the intention of the professor who wrote the text book. The point, for me, was evolution is a mathematical fact. I suspect that Sara Palm has not taken a class in ethics, and that intellectual discipline is unimportant to her. My last episode at my dentist amazed me, I thought IPads were hot. Check out dental science today, amazing.

JM

12 07 2010
Just Me

By the way, dental health is considered a global epidemic, and often leads to death.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_hygiene

JM

18 07 2010
REAL FACTS

“Fact” is an interesting word. This English word is not often used in science. Actually I have never seen it used in science texts. Sara Palm often speaks in terms of facts in here talks, with confidence and reassurance.

RF

18 07 2010
REAL FACTS

“her talks” sorry I type too fast.

RF

18 07 2010
REAL FACTS

Putting things in relative terms:

Afghanistan: 900 billion dollars per year

Employment extension 34 billion dollars. 20 million people.

Rf
:

18 07 2010
REAL FACTS

Math students who try to solve problems learn what it is to alive.

RF

18 07 2010
REAL FACTS

“it is to be alive”

need an editor Ap; hint hint Google

EF

18 07 2010
REAL FACTS

I try to to read the read the “New Your Times” op ed columns and get lost in 500 word show of cleverness, but no content. These guys and gals are trying to keep their jobs, just like every one is.

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/16/are-tea-parties-racist-is-al-qaeda/

RF

18 07 2010
REAL FACTS

I just watched Jimmy on my TiVO
mocking Senator Byrd. Shame on you Jimmy

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Byrd

RF

19 07 2010
Just Me

Racism is an interesting word.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racism

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

Correction

Employment extension 34 billion dollars. 2.0 million people

the decimal was wrong

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

I keep forgetting that this blog is in Australia. I love Australia and honest people.

Just Me in the USA

21 07 2010
Just Me

I learned a new dental health trick that is so neat, that I have to share it.

Water Pik, Dial antibacterial soap (one squirt), hydrogen peroxide 1 oz, very hot water. I have no commercial interests. Brand names are unimportant. My dentist showed this idea.

You get the idea

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

Bush (former US president) . in public videos, said he believes in the Bible as the literal word of God.

Science news:

By Kristen Gelineau, Associated Press
SYDNEY — Scientists have discovered a cave filled with 15-million-year-old fossils of prehistoric marsupials in the Outback, a rare find that has revealed some surprising similarities between the creatures and modern-day kangaroos and koalas.
The cave includes several well preserved fossils, including 26 skulls from an extinct, wombat-like marsupial called Nimbadon lavarackorum, an odd sheep-sized creature with giant claws.

The findings were described this week in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

“It’s extraordinarily exciting for us,” said Mike Archer, paleontologist atUniversity of New South Wales and co-author of the article.

“It’s given us a window into the past of Australia that we simply didn’t even have a pigeonhole into before. It’s an extra insight into some of the strangest animals you could possibly imagine,” he said.

Researchers have been digging at the site, in the Riversleigh World Heritage fossil field in northwest Queensland state, since 1990 and discovered the first of the Nimbadon skulls in 1993.

The scientists were amazed at how well preserved the fossils were — and by how many they found.

Discovering such a large cluster suggests the animals may have traveled in mobs or herds like modern-day kangaroos, said paleontologist Karen Black, who led the research team.

How the animals all ended up there is a mystery.

One theory is that they accidentally plunged into the cave through an opening obscured by vegetation and either died from the fall, or became trapped and later perished.

The Nimbadon skulls included those of babies still in their mothers’ pouches, allowing the researchers to study how the animals developed.

The skulls revealed that bones at the front of the face developed quite quickly, which would have allowed the baby to suckle from its mother at an extremely young age.

Those findings suggest the Nimbadon babies developed very similarly to how kangaroos develop today — likely being born after a month’s gestation and crawling into their mother’s pouch for the rest of development, Black said.

The Nimbadon also may have something in common with another marsupial.

The fossils revealed the creatures had large claws, which may have been used to climb trees, as koalas do, Black said.

The discovery of the fossils is very significant, said paleontologist Liz Reed of Flinders University in South Australia.

“To find a complete specimen like that and so many from an age range is quite unique,” said Reed, who was not affiliated with the study.

“It allows us to say something about behavior and growth and a whole bunch of things that we wouldn’t normally be able to do,” Reed said.

21 07 2010
Just Me

Bush has the Bible, I have Rachel Maddow

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rachel_Maddow

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

Physicists try to imagine elementary stuff, like electrons, electric fields, heat, vacuum, light waves, but don’t wear funny hats and molest kids.

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

Here is some math that led to “hydrogen bomb”, perfected by the US and the USSR some years ago, and “God forbid” must be included in preventative thinking. The Schrödinger equation

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schr%C3%B6dinger_equation

21 07 2010
Just Me

The reason I mention this “Equation” is
1. It’s beauty
2. And obviously, and hydrogen bombs are not cool ideas, in bad Nations. First A bombs, then H Bomb. Not cool.

If you think nuclear weapons in the hands of irrational people is an academic exercise, think again.

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

If Iran, an irrational God state, can get nukes, then the chances that it will use them is scary. This is why Israel is our friend. Have a nice day.

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

This is why all why all options must be on the table, including tactical nukes.

JM

21 07 2010
Just Me

I don’t know why I make such typing errors “why all why”, just happens.

JM

26 07 2010
Just Me

Poo, you know, Poo, that stuff in your aft end, contains a virtual restaurant for potential harmful stuff. This is why I find anal sex disgusting, and dangerous for humanity, and the spread of HIV, hepatitis, herpes and Thousands of people dying, men and women, kids, and no one seems to notice this elephant is the room. Gay men will say I am a bigot. Health officials tell us to wash our hands in restaurants, and with laws. I am sorry, but it seems to be a joke to behave this way (Late Late CBS, USA), while thousands die. In the military trust is key. This issue was mentioned in the Bible. It the behavior that is the problem. Not the men. I personally had men make passes at me when I was in the Air Force, in Vietnam and outed them.

JM

28 07 2010
Just Me

The “Judgment of King Solomon”

The Judgment of Solomon refers to a story from the Hebrew Bible in which Solomon ruled between two women both claiming to be the mother of a child. It has become a metaphor referring to a wise judge who uses a stratagem to determine the truth, tricking the parties into revealing their true feelings. Specifically, the judge pretends that he will destroy the subject matter of a dispute, rather than allowing either disputing party to win at the expense of the other.

I hope, the GOP understands metaphor.

from wiki

28 07 2010
Just Me

“Prison Camp”. A breath of honesty, clearly spoken in Turkey, with clear agendas, not “Bush like”, promising.

JM

28 07 2010
28 07 2010
Just Me
28 07 2010
Just Me

But Adolf Hitler was real, and evil exists.

Power is scary.

JM

3 08 2010
Just Me

Demagogy

An interesting word

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demagogy

JM

3 08 2010
Just Me

Stress and control, combat, noise, and blood flowing.

JM

6 08 2010
Just Me

This WikiLeak thing scares me. Security file? The first thing that popped into my mind was “1984″.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nineteen_Eighty-Four

JM

6 08 2010
Just Me

For a resbit, try “Erik Satie “Nocturne No.4″

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AXqKqTpRyc&feature=related

JM

6 08 2010
Just Me

More rest “Erik “Satie “Trois Gymnopédies”"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7DBoiyBoJ8

JM

6 08 2010
Just Me

I have a suspicion that Mile Davis liked Erik Satie.

Blue in Green by. Miles Davis

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PoPL7BExSQU

JM

6 08 2010
Just Me

I love solo piano, and love share

Erik Satie – “Caresse”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2L311Makxc&feature=related

JM

8 08 2010
Just Me

Fox, a US for profit History channel, reminds us of Constitutional wrights, and how to make money in a free society, protected by law. For further details read Mein Kampf, by Adolf Hitler.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_hitler

JM

10 08 2010
Just Me

Sociopath. word I heard somewhere? It popped into my head watching one of those guys on Fox.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisocial_personality_disorder

JM

10 08 2010
Just Me

Just in case there are those who have never solved a problem, on their own, for example teens, try the free online knowledge pool, not guaranteed to be accurate, but I have never been disappointed.

http://www.wikipedia.org/

JM

10 08 2010
Just Me

Fox guys do use this resource. Just like slave owners did not provide education for their slaves.

JM

10 08 2010
Just Me

Fox NOT Use sorry I type too fast

JM

12 08 2010
Just Me

Glogal Warming? Rush says

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBOJjX-6ryM

JM

12 08 2010
Just Me

In case there are those who are just living their lives, tunning out insanity, there are important elections soon. Please tune in.

JM

12 08 2010
Just Me

In desperation, Dr King marched, spoke, and ………

JM

12 08 2010
Just Me

Some fun. My favorite mystery. Gravity through empty space. Dark matter, mathematically present, but not detectable.

JM

18 08 2010
Me Just

Note to Rush Fatso, “Dark” is a color. often used in art.

MJ

21 08 2010
Me Just

“unless it’s used in Congress”, best line I’ve heard in years. Thank you Jimmy

JM

23 08 2010
Me Just

Al frankin, enternet, my new artist, look it yourself.

JM

30 08 2010
Just Me

US elections are surprisingly close, + or – 5%. I suspect that Rupert Murdoch, David and Charles Koch, know this.

JM

30 08 2010
Me Just

I spent the last week in India talking to a Hindi Master, and he said “Obtain truth by Seeing the Present”. So I went online, got inline, to get an eReader, with free Wiki.

Ron Garvey

4 09 2010
Me Just

I sugest that Bill Maher would be better than Colbert at the Lincoln Memorial.

JM

4 09 2010
Me Just

It is clear that “suggest” is spelled with 2 G’s, not one.

JM

4 09 2010
Me Just

The reason I can say that word “suggest” has 2 g’s is because Google tells me AMEEDIATELY WHEN I TYPE IT.

THIS SERVICE IS NOT AVAILIBLE ON FOX

JM

4 09 2010
Me Just

God I love this blog, I love Australia.

JM

Leave a comment