Monday, November 29, 2010
AMERICA'S NAZI SECRET by JOHN LOFTUS
It will be an important and enlightening evening. Please join us tomorrow night both on the air and in the chatroom. The live program will take place Tuesday, November 30, 2010 at 7 p.m. Eastern time, 4 p.m. Pacific time.
Tune in and STAY TUNED!
CONSTANCE
The largest security leak in history:
Downloaded onto Lady Gaga CDs and transferred to a memory stick: The staggeringly simple theft of 250,000 top secret documents...
http://tinyurl.com/37ugd77
UN officials silent of anti Isreal statements at UN
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/news.aspx/140783
RFID Tracking of embryos?
http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/68759
Archbishop Bustros of Mass.-controversial statements interfaith relations with Islam has replaced relations with Judiasm as top priority.
http://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/articles/2010/11/19/news/local/doc4ce5874d92761941457037.txt
AT
does this have any validity ?
http://www.proliberty.com/observer/20070405.htm
It would seem that
placing flaming gays next to
flammable information can
cause major fires.
There is much I would believe, but the SCHERFF story smacks of the "Watch the Fundamentalists Run" urban type legends! George H. W. Bush fought in World War II as a USA Air Force adult pilot!
Constance
"...Now, I'm no lawyer, but as I understand the matter, the new legislation permits the state to be the sole arbiter of what is acceptable speech, and allows any state within the EU to prosecute those who are deemed to have run afoul of this new law. Since it institutes the principle of cross-border transfer, any EU member state may prosecute the citizen of any other for "hate speech", and the police of the accused's country would be obliged to deliver the individual to the complainant state to stand trial. ..."
As the latest round of UN-sponsored climate talks opened in Cancun today, ’scientists’ had a stark message on the threat posed by Man Made Global Warming. It is now so severe that only by exterminating ourselves like the vile parasite we are can we hope to leave a planet fit for habitation by generations as yet unborn, ’scientists’ say.
http://tinyurl.com/28c8jgz
Cancun climate change summit: scientists call for rationing in developed world
Global warming is now such a serious threat to mankind that climate change experts are calling for Second World War-style rationing in rich countries to bring down carbon emissions.
http://tinyurl.com/2djybba
http://tinyurl.com/2edcl4h
I'll let everyone follow this one and make up their own mind without adding too much in the way of commentary here. I will say that this is getting into the VERY slippery slope region of convicting for crimes simply based on thought.
Individually Loving Jesus and it's opposite extreme, social justice,or loving the community, gives no guidelines for individual self-control. For Jews focusing on Israel or charity won't work either.
Spirituality without morality is the basis of New Age One World Religion. Never forget that.
Churches and synagogues need to focus again on the morality individuals must adopt if the communities are to avoid another dictatorship. I don't know how we can get there.
http://www.alternet.org/belief/149002/are_we_becoming_an_atheist_nation_3_reasons_young_people_are_abandoning_religion/
http://tinyurl.com/2axrn7e
Exposing the real power behind the radical transformation of America
http://tinyurl.com/2b4nl2k
http://daphneanson.blogspot.com/2010/11/dignity-and-dhimmi.html
Constance
http://europenews.dk/en/node/37479
Thanks again to Dorothy for this intelligence!
Constance
http://daphneanson.blogspot.com/2010/11/secret-of-israels-eternity.html
Usually that is an expression I hear only from confirmed anti-Semites,
Are you?
Constance
Constance
Pro Talmud? Why you must be pro- Jewish. After all things that are pro-Talmud are things that are pro intellectual analysis of ethics. Here is where you or anyone can learn more about the Talmud.
http://www.mideastweb.org/jewreligion.htm
"I would have you know, brethren," said the apostle, "that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom." His Kingdom is now a spiritual thing in the hearts of those who have been taken out of the kingdom of darkness and translated into the Kingdom of the Son of His love. That is a thing already done. A day will come when He will translate them from this world while He deals with the rest, and purges this world and makes it fit for the habitation of saints, without any antagonism. He came to do that. He is doing it. We know it in our own hearts. That is exactly what has happened with us. We are not of the world. Our life "is hid with Christ in God." We look for a Saviour.
http://tinyurl.com/34tfyyu
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/
12/01/rollins.palin
Most importantly, they refer to a UN resolution submitted by Libya calling for a "single Palestinian state." This was proposed by Javier Solana in 2009 and is referred to Jimmy Carter's book. I suspect Libya is doing the work perhaps even at the behest of Solana who wants to maintain the fiction that he is a good friend of Israel.
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/199013
Constance
What does that have to do with the New Age movement? Are you being paid by the post to go to sites and throw something controversial in? Or are you just clueless?
One of the New Age themes is that the final religion will be one that can be scientifically proven. Templeton has played a big role in work in that area.
Well Templeton is gone, but his ideas live on.
http://tinyurl.com/29v2sbw
"Scholars Delve Into Roots of Impulse to Give
December 2, 2010, 12:12 pm
"New research led by the University Notre Dame will explore how the workings of the human brain stimulate or stifle charitable impulses, USA Today writes in a special section on giving.
"The Science of Generosity Initiative, started last year with a $5-million grant from the John Templeton Foundation, seeks to create a new academic field by applying economics, sociology, neurology, and psychology to examine why some people give and some don’t."
Excerpt:
Deep Jewish Education for All, Talmud
http://hebrewlearningcircles.com/2010/11/19/deep-jewish-education-for-all-talmud/
In the 1960s, when a young Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz embarked on the mammoth task of translating the ancient Jewish texts of the Talmud into modern Hebrew and, even more daringly, providing his own commentary alongside those of the classical sages, the state of Israel was still in its teens, there were no home computers, and man had not yet landed on the moon.
The monumental work took 45 years. But this month in his hometown, Jerusalem, Rabbi Steinsaltz, now 73, marked the end of the endeavor, as the last of the 45 volumes of his edition of the Babylonian Talmud, originally completed 1,500 years ago, rolled off the press.
Rabbi Steinsaltz, frail after a recent illness, sealed his achievement on Nov. 7 with a modest closing ceremony at City Hall here and a live video linkup connecting 360 Jewish communities across 48 countries on a global day of Jewish learning in the spirit of the Talmud.
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, sent greetings by video and, recalling his private Talmud sessions with the rabbi in the past, said they were among the most rewarding intellectual experiences of his life.
The original Talmud, written in a mixture of old Hebrew and Aramaic, is all about learning. The act of learning, according to the rabbi, is the “central pillar” or “backbone” of Judaism — what connects Jews with the Almighty above, with their roots below and with one another.
“This book is essential for our existence,” Rabbi Steinsaltz said.
The Talmud, a compilation and analysis of oral Jewish law and ethics governing everything from marital relations to agriculture, is written as a flowing rabbinic discourse. Though the terms are archaic, many say the Talmud contains founding principles that can still be applied today. But its condensed and obscure style made it largely incomprehensible to all but serious scholars.
By adding vowel markings and punctuation to the ancient text, a modern Hebrew translation that fills in gaps, and contemporary interpretations, the Steinsaltz edition aims to make the Talmud accessible to everyone.
Rabbi Steinsaltz, a diminutive man with straggly hair and an unruly white beard tinged yellow after decades of smoking a pipe, is widely considered one of the most brilliant Jewish scholars of his age.
He was born into what he described as a “not especially religious home”; his father was a Zionist socialist who volunteered in the international brigades in Spain. The rabbi says his religious belief developed gradually in his teens.
His father sent him to a Talmud tutor at the age of 10 so that he would not grow up an “ignoramus.” Later, in college, he specialized in mathematics and physics. As a result, the rabbi has an unusual ability to move easily between different worlds — secular and sacred, scientific and spiritual, earthly and divine.
Though born sickly, Rabbi Steinsaltz has long compensated for the limitations of the human condition with intellectual and metaphysical flights. Among his most popular works is “The Thirteen Petalled Rose,” a journey into Jewish mysticism that he described as “a book for the soul.”
Asking questions, he said, is both the secret of science and the essence of the Talmud, the dialectic forming the character of the Jewish people.
Some in the traditional establishment were suspicious, even hostile at first. The rabbi’s level of religiosity was in doubt, and there was a reluctance to open up locked treasures.
Today, the rabbi bridges different streams and communities within Judaism, an unusual feat helped by the fact that he chose not to associate himself fully with any one religious group, according to his son, Rabbi Menachem Even Yisrael.
Excerpt:
Deep Jewish Education for All, Talmud
http://hebrewlearningcircles.com/2010/11/19/deep-jewish-education-for-all-talmud/
The monumental work took 45 years. But this month in his hometown, Jerusalem, Rabbi Steinsaltz, now 73, marked the end of the endeavor, as the last of the 45 volumes of his edition of the Babylonian Talmud, originally completed 1,500 years ago, rolled off the press.
..Nov. 7 with a modest closing ceremony at City Hall here and a live video linkup connecting 360 Jewish communities across 48 countries on a global day of Jewish learning in the spirit of the Talmud.
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, sent greetings by video and, recalling his private Talmud sessions with the rabbi in the past, said they were among the most rewarding intellectual experiences of his life.
The original Talmud, written in a mixture of old Hebrew and Aramaic, is all about learning. The act of learning, according to the rabbi, is the “central pillar” or “backbone” of Judaism — what connects Jews with the Almighty above, with their roots below and with one another.
“This book is essential for our existence,” Rabbi Steinsaltz said.
The Talmud, a compilation and analysis of oral Jewish law and ethics governing everything from marital relations to agriculture, is written as a flowing rabbinic discourse. Though the terms are archaic, many say the Talmud contains founding principles that can still be applied today. But its condensed and obscure style made it largely incomprehensible to all but serious scholars.
..
most brilliant Jewish scholars of his age.
He was born into what he described as a “not especially religious home”; his father was a Zionist socialist who volunteered in the international brigades in Spain. The rabbi says his religious belief developed gradually in his teens.
His father sent him to a Talmud tutor at the age of 10 so that he would not grow up an “ignoramus.” Later, in college, he specialized in mathematics and physics. As a result, the rabbi has an unusual ability to move easily between different worlds — secular and sacred, scientific and spiritual, earthly and divine.
Though born sickly, Rabbi Steinsaltz has long compensated for the limitations of the human condition with intellectual and metaphysical flights. Among his most popular works is “The Thirteen Petalled Rose,” a journey into Jewish mysticism that he described as “a book for the soul.”
Asking questions, he said, is both the secret of science and the essence of the Talmud, the dialectic forming the character of the Jewish people.
Some in the traditional establishment were suspicious, even hostile at first. The rabbi’s level of religiosity was in doubt, and there was a reluctance to open up locked treasures.
Today, the rabbi bridges different streams and communities within Judaism, an unusual feat helped by the fact that he chose not to associate himself fully with any one religious group, according to his son, Rabbi Menachem Even Yisrael.
Rabbi Steinsaltz is now eager to get on with his other work, including a concise commentary of the Bible. He says he regularly puts in a 17-hour day.
Excerpt:
Deep Jewish Education for All, Talmud
http://hebrewlearningcircles.com/2010/11/19/deep-jewish-education-for-all-talmud/
The monumental work took 45 years. But this month in his hometown, Jerusalem, Rabbi Steinsaltz, now 73, marked the end of the endeavor, as the last of the 45 volumes of his edition of the Babylonian Talmud, originally completed 1,500 years ago, rolled off the press.
..Nov. 7 with a modest closing ceremony at City Hall here and a live video linkup connecting 360 Jewish communities across 48 countries on a global day of Jewish learning in the spirit of the Talmud.
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, sent greetings by video and, recalling his private Talmud sessions with the rabbi in the past, said they were among the most rewarding intellectual experiences of his life.
The original Talmud, written in a mixture of old Hebrew and Aramaic, is all about learning. The act of learning, according to the rabbi, is the “central pillar” or “backbone” of Judaism — what connects Jews with the Almighty above, with their roots below and with one another.
“This book is essential for our existence,” Rabbi Steinsaltz said.
The Talmud, a compilation and analysis of oral Jewish law and ethics governing everything from marital relations to agriculture, is written as a flowing rabbinic discourse. Though the terms are archaic, many say the Talmud contains founding principles that can still be applied today. But its condensed and obscure style made it largely incomprehensible to all but serious scholars.
..
most brilliant Jewish scholars of his age.
He was born into what he described as a “not especially religious home”; his father was a Zionist socialist who volunteered in the international brigades in Spain. The rabbi says his religious belief developed gradually in his teens.
His father sent him to a Talmud tutor at the age of 10 so that he would not grow up an “ignoramus.” Later, in college, he specialized in mathematics and physics. As a result, the rabbi has an unusual ability to move easily between different worlds — secular and sacred, scientific and spiritual, earthly and divine.
Though born sickly, Rabbi Steinsaltz has long compensated for the limitations of the human condition with intellectual and metaphysical flights. Among his most popular works is “The Thirteen Petalled Rose,” a journey into Jewish mysticism that he described as “a book for the soul.”
Asking questions, he said, is both the secret of science and the essence of the Talmud, the dialectic forming the character of the Jewish people.
Some in the traditional establishment were suspicious, even hostile at first. The rabbi’s level of religiosity was in doubt, and there was a reluctance to open up locked treasures. (cont.)
Excerpt:
Deep Jewish Education for All, Talmud hebrewlearningcircles.com/2010/11/19/deep-jewish-education-for-all-talmud/
The monumental work took 45 years. But this month in his hometown, Jerusalem, Rabbi Steinsaltz, now 73, marked the end of the endeavor, as the last of the 45 volumes of his edition of the Babylonian Talmud, originally completed 1,500 years ago, rolled off the press.
..Nov. 7 with a modest closing ceremony at City Hall here and a live video linkup connecting 360 Jewish communities across 48 countries on a global day of Jewish learning in the spirit of the Talmud.
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, sent greetings by video and, recalling his private Talmud sessions with the rabbi in the past, said they were among the most rewarding intellectual experiences of his life.
The original Talmud, written in a mixture of old Hebrew and Aramaic, is all about learning. The act of learning, according to the rabbi, is the “central pillar” or “backbone” of Judaism — what connects Jews with the Almighty above, with their roots below and with one another.
“This book is essential for our existence,” Rabbi Steinsaltz said.
The Talmud, a compilation and analysis of oral Jewish law and ethics governing everything from marital relations to agriculture, is written as a flowing rabbinic discourse. Though the terms are archaic, many say the Talmud contains founding principles that can still be applied today. But its condensed and obscure style made it largely incomprehensible to all but serious scholars.
..
most brilliant Jewish scholars of his age.
He was born into what he described as a “not especially religious home”; his father was a Zionist socialist who volunteered in the international brigades in Spain. The rabbi says his religious belief developed gradually in his teens.
His father sent him to a Talmud tutor at the age of 10 so that he would not grow up an “ignoramus.” Later, in college, he specialized in mathematics and physics. As a result, the rabbi has an unusual ability to move easily between different worlds — secular and sacred, scientific and spiritual, earthly and divine.
Though born sickly, Rabbi Steinsaltz has long compensated for the limitations of the human condition with intellectual and metaphysical flights. Among his most popular works is “The Thirteen Petalled Rose,” a journey into Jewish mysticism that he described as “a book for the soul.”
Asking questions, he said, is both the secret of science and the essence of the Talmud, the dialectic forming the character of the Jewish people.
Some in the traditional establishment were suspicious, even hostile at first. The rabbi’s level of religiosity was in doubt, and there was a reluctance to open up locked treasures.
Today, the rabbi bridges different streams and communities within Judaism, an unusual feat helped by the fact that he chose not to associate himself fully with any one religious group, according to his son, Rabbi Menachem Even Yisrael.
Rabbi Steinsaltz is now eager to get on with his other work, including a concise commentary of the Bible. He says he regularly puts in a 17-hour day.
Excerpt's:
Deep Jewish Education for All, Talmud
http://hebrewlearningcircles.com/2010/11/19/deep-jewish-education-for-all-talmud/
The monumental work took 45 years. But this month in his hometown, Jerusalem, Rabbi Steinsaltz, now 73, marked the end of the endeavor, as the last of the 45 volumes of his edition of the Babylonian Talmud, originally completed 1,500 years ago, rolled off the press.
..Nov. 7 with a modest closing ceremony at City Hall here and a live video linkup connecting 360 Jewish communities across 48 countries on a global day of Jewish learning in the spirit of the Talmud.
The original Talmud, written in a mixture of old Hebrew and Aramaic, is all about learning. The act of learning, according to the rabbi, is the “central pillar” or “backbone” of Judaism — what connects Jews with the Almighty above, with their roots below and with one another.
“This book is essential for our existence,” Rabbi Steinsaltz said.
The Talmud, a compilation and analysis of oral Jewish law and ethics governing everything from marital relations to agriculture, is written as a flowing rabbinic discourse. Though the terms are archaic, many say the Talmud contains founding principles that can still be applied today. But its condensed and obscure style made it largely incomprehensible to all but serious scholars.
..
most brilliant Jewish scholars of his age.
.. his father was a Zionist socialist who volunteered in the international brigades in Spain. The rabbi says his religious belief developed gradually in his teens.
His father sent him to a Talmud tutor at the age of 10 so that he would not grow up an “ignoramus.” ... the rabbi has an unusual ability to move easily between different worlds — secular and sacred, scientific and spiritual, earthly and divine.
.. Rabbi Steinsaltz has long compensated for the limitations of the human condition with intellectual and metaphysical flights. Among his most popular works is “The Thirteen Petalled Rose,” a journey into Jewish mysticism that he described as “a book for the soul.”
Asking questions, he said, is both the secret of science and the essence of the Talmud, the dialectic forming the character of the Jewish people.
Some in the traditional establishment were suspicious, even hostile at first. The rabbi’s level of religiosity was in doubt, and there was a reluctance to open up locked treasures.
Melinda
Constance
By Juliet Eilperin
With United Nations climate negotiators facing an uphill battle to advance their goal of reducing emissions linked to global warming, it's no surprise that the woman steering the talks appealed to a Mayan goddess Monday.
Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, invoked the ancient jaguar goddess Ixchel in her opening statement to delegates gathered in Cancun, Mexico, noting that Ixchel was not only goddess of the moon, but also "the goddess of reason, creativity and weaving. May she inspire you -- because today, you are gathered in Cancun to weave together the elements of a solid response to climate change, using both reason and creativity as your tools."
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/post-carbon/2010/11/cancun_talks_start_with_a_call.html
or
http://tinyurl.com/29jw3rn
Dave in CA
Pagan gods and goddesses; that's
what the New Age is all about.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/02/nasa-new-life-arsenic-bacteria_n_791094.html
http://www.herescope.blogspot.com/
"The synthesis of
meditation impressions from all participants was written up as
the “Darjeeling Declaration,” which became a potent, and later
a somewhat controversial document for those who were not in
attendance. The synthesis of impressions about the Great
Decision was as follows:
“The Great Decision for humanity is whether it will tread the
lighted Way and choose to throw off the shackles of all that
binds it to the lower realms and liberate itself into the freedom
of the Spirit.
The Decision of the Arhats is to provide the energy to humanity
to make this possible despite whatever upheavals and
destruction this may cause in humanity."
http://www.synthesis.tc/history.htm
Constance
Snakes of a feather slither together!
Constance
First Edition 2010
published by UNITY, the publishing arm of "Unity Church of Practical Christianity."
By the way, UNITY, was the bunch that sponsored Benjamin Creme coming to Detroit on November 4, 1981. And to
think there are some people out there who actually consider UNITY Church "Christian." If the devil has a place he is comfortable in Church, it certainly well includes "Unity."
Constance
Constance
since at least 1985). This book clearly shows he is in with the worst of the worst of the Lucis Trust gang!
Constance
Constance
Constance
I would commend to Davidson/McLaughlin who were once upon a time Baptists the scripture from Isaiah, "woe to them who call darkness light and light darkness"
Constance
Constance
http://citizeninitiative.com/complaint_to_david_lorimer.htm
http://citizeninitiative.com/complaint_to_david_lorimer.htm
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