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by Georgiana S.
Member since:
September 14, 2007

This Should Put An End to the Crazies, but will it?

September 29, 2009 01:28 AM EDT
views: 436 | comments: 232

I came across this film interview from a great post by Fred R. I have been using it to try to get through to so many of the disbelievers out there!

This is a sensible man, a former Fundalmentalist christian, a former Republican, who 'saw the light' and is warning of the reprecussions if this faction of unbalanced people are not 'turned around' or at best, ignored.

To all the mis-guided people out there:

I beceech you to watch this in its entirety, with an open mind. And if it doesn't make a bit of understanding in your stubborn heads, you are probably lost anyway.





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Comments: 232 ( 1 removed by Georgiana S. )

Korak 257 Sep 29, 2009, 1:38am EDT
hi,
Have you ever been to New Jersey ? Nuff said...please do not drink the water.
excellant post...ty
Purrrrrrrrrrr~Genki dashite~Nantoka naru-yo! S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:34am EDT
HEY!
Korak 257 Sep 29, 2009, 3:54pm EDT
Hey...I got sicker than a sick dog with no fleas. Shoot , I had to purge my whole system. I think Jimmy Hoffa cells were floating in that glass of water.
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Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 1:47am EDT
Yes I have, I am surprised this didn't originate a bit further south frankly!
i won't drink the water if these nut jobs will stop drinking the kool-aid!
Mugg Muggles, "The Man With the Jive" Sep 29, 2009, 7:10pm EDT
It would solve the problem if they all took a long drink of "Jim Jones" kool-aid.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:03pm EDT
amen!
Korak 257 Oct 19, 2009, 7:23pm EDT
Georgiana you have a very funny personality ...I love kool -aid.
ORANGE ......NICE POST !
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Connie L. Sep 29, 2009, 1:49am EDT
I prefer hawaiian punch powder in my water these days. It is actually quite good.
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La Lady Lisa Westerfield Sep 29, 2009, 2:08am EDT
'Crazy for God' I think I will have to out and but this book. Thank you for the heads up Georgiana.
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Debra H. Sep 29, 2009, 2:26am EDT
Good one Georgiana, I am a crystal light fan myself but now my MD tells me that some of the ingredients are known to cause depression although I haven't had any ill effects from it.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:03pm EDT
try Country Time!
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Angel sent from God Secret Sisters Sep 29, 2009, 2:30am EDT
Well Obama is not the Anti Christ!! Its scary that some people think he is.
Elizabeth R. Sep 29, 2009, 2:36am EDT
I second that!
Angel sent from God Secret Sisters Sep 29, 2009, 2:37am EDT
Thank you
Georgiana S. Oct 9, 2009, 7:02pm EDT
I don't think the 'Anti-Christ' goes around winning the Nobel Peace Prize
René Allen Oct 18, 2009, 3:08pm EDT
Ditto to What Angel said ~ Third to what Elizabeth said...

And, I think that the VIDEO is very convoluted in its content. The speaker in this video sounds insane. I do not know what kind of Christianity he was raised with, and I do not believe that those that think Obama is the anti-christ are Christians. In fact, I know they're not.

Now, I have to say that this short clip on what he (the speaker) was brought up thinking and what he was led to believe is very INSANE. But, Christian it is not.

Kennedy ~ an antichrist? How far out in la~la~land is that!
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Elizabeth R. Sep 29, 2009, 2:35am EDT
Frank Schaeffer and I have a lot in common. I grew up in a Fundamentalist Republican family and didn't understand them at the time. If you don't belong to certain churches you aren't going to heaven and so on.

'Crazy for God' described my experiences. I dropped out of most organized religion many years ago. I think of myself being more spiritual and linked to the one God than tied to any religious organization.

Then there is my sister who seems to be one of those "birthers." This is all so insane. Why can't these people simply accept the facts? I am totally baffled.

Thanks for this post, Georgiana.
Kathryn E. Sep 29, 2009, 3:47am EDT
it is really scary. i came from Utah....but my parents left the LDS church as teens because they saw right through it...

I never argue with anyone whose 'elevator doesn't go to the top floor' which includes nutjobs and religious nutjobs.

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Kathryn E. Sep 29, 2009, 3:18am EDT
i was a bit shocked a couple of weeks ago when we were south of the line.....

the only news on was FOX...and people at breakfast were saying..

obama won't even admit he's a muslim...

couldn't get back here fast enough.

Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:02pm EDT
south of the Manson-Nixon line! LOL
Kristi C. Sep 30, 2009, 6:45pm EDT
If we are talking the Marilyn Manson- Nixon Line I'm with Manson. Otherwise you'll need to be more specific.
Georgiana S. Sep 30, 2009, 9:48pm EDT
It is a silly parody on saying Mason-Dixon line! Nothing deeper! LOL
Marylin manson, that is not the Manson the comic was referring to as marylin manson was not around then1 I knew Charlie, you wouldn't want to be on his side!!
Kristi C. Sep 30, 2009, 9:52pm EDT
Yeah, No. I'll have to pass on Charlie. LOL
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Kathryn E. Sep 29, 2009, 3:21am EDT
RIGHT ON. The subculture of Christian insanity that is bred from birth to reject faacts..Right on. When I was in Utah, I noticed that the predominant religion, which is actually quite fictional and could be considered actually psychotic, was in some ways not that different from what a psychotic person could believe.

James A. Sep 29, 2009, 8:19am EDT
"South Park" had a great episode on the origins of the LDS church. The guy who found the golden tablets is portrayed as a looney story-teller (i.e. liar).
Kathryn E. Sep 29, 2009, 9:13am EDT
i've seen it....yeah...
Mugg Muggles, "The Man With the Jive" Sep 29, 2009, 7:16pm EDT
"Joey" Smith on South Park? Does Moron(i) make an appearance?
What about the 'magic spectacles' ?
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Kathryn E. Sep 29, 2009, 3:23am EDT
Best line of the video:

You cannot organize village life around the village idiot. And we have a village idiot in this country, the fundamental Christians...
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Kathryn E. Sep 29, 2009, 3:24am EDT
And for this reason, A Mormon will never be president. And hopefully not any other kind of right wing nutjob. Oh we had one of those.
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Jane C. Sep 29, 2009, 7:07am EDT
Republicans may lose power, not to the Democrats, but to the Libertarian party. The Libertarians are poised to take over conservatism. If that happens, the conservative social agenda will be virtually powerless. Which may not be a bad thing.
James A. Sep 29, 2009, 8:20am EDT
Some libertarians have good policies, especially when those policies aren't related to Judeo-Christian "values."
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:01pm EDT
no one whould be able to lump religion and politics together, Talk about denying the constitution!
Bush is to blame, again, in oliver stones film "W" it shows how Bush was NOT at all religious, he kow-towed to the Religious Right to garner votes. He spoke Spanish to garner their votes, but I bet he still treated his Tex-Mex workers like shit.
(Jasper,(Disciple for Christ. w. Dec 3, 2009, 9:52pm EST

A news man was interviewing one of Bush's aids, and ask him if George was a born again Christan, and he said that is a phrase that we don't use around the white house.
Georgiana S. Dec 3, 2009, 10:01pm EST
saw that in Oliver Stone's "W"
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Nancy * ♥ Self-Proclaimed Site Tigger ♥ Sep 29, 2009, 8:13am EDT
I agree with him, but as the man said.... these people deny facts.

There was a time when the church (all of them) believed the universe revolved around the earth and when the facts showed otherwise the church kept denying it. It took several hundred years for them to admit the facts.

I have to agree that those that are not of this culture should move past them and quit trying to argue sanely with people who will not hear.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 7:59pm EDT
They deny facts, so they deny reality so they are dangerous to themselves and potentially to others as well. They need de-programming!
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Purrrrrrrrrrr~Genki dashite~Nantoka naru-yo! S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:36am EDT
Anything that involves christianity or organized religion I have no opinion on since it's all fiction to me~
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 7:58pm EDT
Yay Purr!
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Purrrrrrrrrrr~Genki dashite~Nantoka naru-yo! S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:36am EDT
Thanks for posting to GutterGirls~
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Spartan * Sep 29, 2009, 9:48am EDT
Georgiana, you heathen! LOL When you have grown semi-intelligent adults who believe that Noah lived to be 600 years old, that early humans co-existed with the dinosaurs, and who think "The Flintstones" was a documentary...do you think any of them are going to change their views? LOL Thanks for sharing some sanity!
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 7:58pm EDT
I know Spartan, it is so weird trying to talk to these people like tey are even of the same species as we are isn't it?!
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Donald Hawley Sep 29, 2009, 9:48am EDT
Interesting but self denigrating. All Christians are living in the past just as all Jews are living in the past, unable to "move on." The pathetic aspect of this is that none of them have the slightest idea as to what religion is all about. Just as the Jews of Jesus's day refused to recognize the "sun" that had arisen in the sky, the Christians of today (even this speaker above) are failing to recognize not only the "sun" that has arisen in this day but that -- as Jesus said most emphatically -- arises from day to day, each day being about a thousand years. They are religiously clueless and Christianity is now "outside" of religion and into "me-ism."
Thomas Millington Sep 29, 2009, 11:11am EDT
Donald: Very true, thanks for sharing. Christians, and Jews, and others too, are very good at burying their dead.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 7:57pm EDT
this comment and Donalds, make no sense!
Thomas Millington Sep 30, 2009, 11:00am EDT
They do if you meditate on them for a while.
Donald Hawley Sep 30, 2009, 5:22pm EDT
Georgiana S. What makes sense to someone depends upon what foundation they have laid for what "makes sense." If you have been exposed only to the "norm" of what people around you think and have not come across something else, then your sense of what makes "sense" is skewed by the "group" predispositions. You might reexamine your own ideas of what makes sense.
Donald Hawley Sep 30, 2009, 6:00pm EDT
Thomas: Yes, and this illustrates my point. If you take it literally it means that they had zombies in those days whose job was to dig graves and bury the dead. But if one realizes that by "dead" who do the burying, Jesus is referring to the spiritually dead rabbis and pharisees who He castigated very vociferously in other places, then it makes perfect sense. For those who want to take the Bible literally and then impose their own definitions on what constitutes literal meaning, they are prostituting the words of Jesus and of God. And there is no greater sin than this.
Georgiana S. Sep 30, 2009, 6:59pm EDT
I meant 'let the dead bury their dead' was totally out of context in this thread at that point.

Jesus and God did NO writing. It was men. Why can't anyone see that?

In hindu religions we have the caste of the untouchables burying the dead...
Donald Hawley Oct 2, 2009, 10:37am EDT
marianne K.: In general I agree with you but by what interpretation? What is a "triune God"? Is that a "split personality"? What is meant by "sends God the Son to earth"? We are all the sons of God. God is the Father "Who art in heaven". In the Lord's Prayer, Jesus says, "OUR father" not "MY father". And these are HIS words not mine or yours or some expert clergyman. The Bible does not say that "the Holy Spirit comes to lead all men into Ttruth." Do you, like the clergy for their own interests of self preservation, distort the words of Jesus for your own convenience? Can you imagine a sin greater than distorting the words of God for your own convenience? Instead, in the Bible it says, "Howbeit, when he, the Spirit of truth is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak: and he will shew you things to come." You and others interpret it to mean "the Holy Spirit" which it does not say nor imply. Why don't you listen to Jesus and not the clerics? Maybe you'll learn something. Jesus was speaking to you, not THEM.
Jerry Kays Oct 2, 2009, 12:52pm EDT
Whatever the Bible says should be taken with a grain of salt because though inspired, many writers became confused, and many others intentionally changed words and meanings for their own specific purposes ... the entire history and it's writings have long since been highly polluted and even perverted ...

GOD speaks to each and all of us 24/7 via our INtuition, it's past time to begin paying attention, we need not preachers and their books to inform and enslave us ... the Truth shall set us free ... I know this, it has me.
Donald Hawley Oct 2, 2009, 3:53pm EDT
Jerry Kays: I agree with you as always. But I also suggest that if we use our own God given intuition and insight in studying extant religious scriptures, we can see that the fundamental truths of the original revelations still somehow remain intact regardless of the prostituting efforts of the clergy, well meant or not. However, this is only valid when the individual, such as yourself, keep their minds open and pure through meditation and self reliance in their spiritual personal connection with the Godhead... free from influence from the "experts" and "biblical scholars" who have their own agendas. Through all this mucking about by clerics through the ages (including political interests) the beauty and power of Jesus and the bibilical stoy still remains. But alas, only a few can see "with their own eyes" and "not through the eyes of others."
Jerry Kays Oct 2, 2009, 5:05pm EDT
Donald, I heartily agree with you on that ... above all, we should always seek the highest truth from our intuition ... we may misunderstand it at times, but it will never lie to us ...
Donald Hawley Oct 2, 2009, 11:23pm EDT
marianne K.: As I said -- or thought I said or implied -- I believe in what you call the "triune God" but perhaps in not precisely the way you do. As to "so therefore the Spirit of God is called Holy Spirit..." I think you are dead wrong if you are referrring the St. John quote I cited. Why? For several reasons. First, if "Holy Spirit" was intended then Jesus would have said, "the Holy Spirit" but He specifically said, "Spirit of truth", which to me means that He was speciifying an "appointed" (by God) spokesman for "truth." Second, he specifically stated that this "Spirit of truth" would not speak "of Himself" but "whatsoever he shall he hear, that shall he speak," which means that he specifically is not talking about a spirit (lower case) that will sort of whisper in each individual's ear but a living human being (such as Himself, Jesus) that will speak for God and only what God tells Him to speak. Third, He tells that this personage (He uses the spcific pronoun "he" indicating a personage and not some "spirit" that will somehow appear (probably only to the clergy) and up-date them. That is contrary to the entire history of religion and is why the clergy of Jesus's day rejected Him.
As to "It is Christ alone who is given ALL the credit," you are making the grand mistake of virtually all so called "Christians" in placing Jesus on a level with God. For however wonderful and miraculous Jesus was, He was still the son of OUR FATHER, just as we are the sons of "OUR FATHER who art in heaven." Jesus was God only in the sense that since we are incapable of knowing or understanding or ever "seeing" God, Jesus is our closest "image" of God. Just some ideas for you to ponder.
Jerry Kays Oct 5, 2009, 5:23pm EDT
Of course I prefer to agree where I can, and especially with you Donald, but we must part company on a couple of understandings above, the main one in regards to what the Spirit is supposed to consist of and show itself as ... Spirit is Spirit to me, no manifestation to be had nor expected except in the minds of the people who receive it properly.

I realize that one needs a "certain" interpretation at times to justify their "belief systems" ... in "that" regard, to each their own. :-)
Donald Hawley Oct 5, 2009, 6:42pm EDT
Jerry Kays: I don't think we are as far apart on this as you might think. In regard to my comment immediately above about "the Spirit of truth" referred to in St. John, I don't think -- as most Christians seem to think -- of a ghost spirit or some "spirit" whispering into the internal ear of each Christian person but "the Spirit" as in the dictionary definition, "a pervading animating principle". That is, "The Spirit of truth" in St. John does not refer to the Holy Spirit but to a coming messenger from God Who will enculcate the "essence of truth" and reveal a more complete and understandable and up-to-date version of truth, where "truth" is a perspective of the basic reality underlying all material reality.
Jerry Kays Oct 7, 2009, 5:01pm EDT
I suspect that we only differ around the perceived importance of " the one " who is said to be the holder and deliverer of said truth ... any manifestation being to me anybody that has received it internally from GOD, be that considered via the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of Truth, the Christ Spirit, or even the higher Self called the Soul of the individual ...

The fact that some relative few have become renowned and famous, with books written about them and large, even great, followings, does not to me indicate that they are special above potential others who may have never become so recognized, but who yet may well hold comparable, or even greater, truths.

To me the Spirit is available to everyone direct and INternally, what they then do with it is up to them, personally, I would never want to be so "famous" as to have a "religion" formed around me or even my ideas ... but that doesn't mean that my ideas are not as worthy as many who have had such associated with their name(s) ... IMnsHO
Georgiana S. Oct 7, 2009, 8:00pm EDT
We all have the potential to be teachers, it is the context not the person that should prevail
Donald Hawley Oct 8, 2009, 9:58am EDT
Jerry Keys: Yes, we do apparently differ on this point. But perhaps not so widely after introspection. We agree in general that we have a special quality about us that allows us to probe beyond the obvious through spiritual means. All of us have this. It is part of our "construction" even though this "part" is not materially constituted and does not function as a part of our brain. It is totally separate from our physical form and is timeless and immortal; what most call the soul. But where we differ, I think, is where I propose that there is another life form distinctly different from we ordinary humans (not that we are ordinary),. This life form appears as an ordinary human, just as we appear as an ordinary mammal to some extent but differ. This life form is what are called Rasul, Prophet, "manifestation of God" , etc. Just as a dog, for instance, cannot understand us even though we are animal to some extent, we cannot understand this "form" which appears like us but differs. Jesus was one of these, Abraham was another, Muhammad another, etc. They, and only They (i.e. not"us") get specific instructions and powers from the Diety that we do not get. We have our own connection but we do not get ours as clearly and directly or specifically.

I think that you have done remarkably well in "touching" with the diety and getting an understanding of things that are not as obvious as a "billiard ball." Jesus never said, for instance, "I think so and so..." or "It seems logical that..." or "Wouldn't it be great if we..." No, Jesus simply stated facts which one accepts or doesn't. This is the difference.

I know that you do not see things this way, but I suggest that you think about it and see if this might suggest to you another approach that is equally valid with your own.
Jerry Kays Oct 9, 2009, 3:16am EDT
Donald, I fully understand what you are saying, and of course you could be correct. I myself believed that way for a long time but have since come to my present conclusion.

To my way of thinking, it is the granting of exceptional-ness to these mentioned individuals, that promotes the forming of Religions around them ... which in turn conflicts with "competing" views held by other "groups".
Donald Hawley Oct 9, 2009, 10:57am EDT
Jerry Kays: It is interesting because I think that I "started out" thinking more or less as you do now but coming to the present conclusion of special forms of life that are human in form but distinctly different in spirit. One reason for this is that while I knew or believed that I was more aware of others about many thing (actually, "smarter than the average bear"), I also was, I think, wise enough to recognize that however "smart" I was, I was not a match for the genius of Jesus or Muhammad, for instance. The problem with Christians is that they seldom really listen to Jesus; instead, they form opinions at an early age based on "translated" images of Jesus as given to them by clerical "mentors". And the "clerical mentors" form a "religion" of their own imagination based on half truths, distortions, and "adaptions to the times." They do not know the basic reality of religion and make it into a "reality" of their own fancy. Those who call themselves Christian follow this "fancidied" version of religion in the name of Jesus. The same is true of Muslims. They pick and choose for political and social convenience, emphasizing some of the good aspects but ignoring some of the critical aspects that reveal the true nature of religion itself.

"that promotes the forming of Religions around them" is what I am talking about above. But in reality, they are not "forming Religions around them" but are forming social paradigms under the guise of religion that are suitable to their own perceived (and very limited) view of what religion is about. Others (such as yourself) realize this and unfortunately tend to "throw out the baby with the bath water" by equating these bastardizations of religion to religion itself. The natural consequence of this logically, I think, is to also reject religion as a natural aspect of the universe and the place of man in that universe out of a need to expose those pretenders who stand behind the pulpits in self righteous dignity to "lead the masses into the 'right path'.

To me, it takes a high degree of self integrity and sharpness of insight to pull away from this natural reaction against the obvious denigration of religion as a natural occurrence by placing it squarely in the hands of those usurpers behind the public, thus surrendering to them rather than fighting to wrest the mantle of religion from them.
Donald Hawley Oct 9, 2009, 11:15am EDT
Alexsandralyn S.: I think that your open paragraph just above is much the same as my view. Unfortunately, I am not sure that I understand your explanation of "balances" of types (5). Also, I totally agree with you that "God has never grown in a physical body" as human so, and I also agree that humans do not "grow" in a void. However, to me the real material part of the universe (four dimensional) is an illusion. The only true reality is a non-dimensional "void" that is timeless. Humans do not "evolve" into this void state as I see it but the only real part of them (which is never even a true part since it is not composed of anything, the SOUL) "falls back into it," so to speak, when the physical form "housing" this "some-nothing" disintegrates (dies). That is, we are distinct from other forms of life in that we are more than a corporal part of the material reality, which is an illusion anyway -- and a fleeting one at that, never static. This, of course, does not "sit well" with the average modern "naive realist" because they can only think within the constraints of their immediate surroundings ("if you can't touch it, smell it, hear it, see it, etc., 'it ain't real.")
Donald Hawley Oct 10, 2009, 10:31am EDT
Alexsandralyn S.: Thanks for your explanation. However, right or wrong, it does not coincide with my view of "everything." The space between the Earth and the moon is not a true void. It is filled with non-particulate entities such as muons, quarks, etc. I am speaking of a "dimensionless" reality, no time, no matter, no nothing. That is the domain of God as I see it and it is incomprehensible to us. But it is our true home where eternity and an instant are the same. And to me, calling Jesus a "fairly large Emotion hybrid elemental" is an attempt to reduce something far more elegant and sophisticated down to a "tangible part of our real world." It is typical -- as I see it -- of people entranced by the simplistic thinking of naive realism (Newtonian physics) that has been discounted by the mainstream of ultra modern science but still the focus of the public, who haven't been yet caught up in the revolution that Einstein brought to physics. Contrary to what you evidently think, it is my opinion -- and it is only an opinion, not given here as something superior but only different -- that Jesus was not just a "regular human" with well developed traits we all share but another form of life created by God for the specific purpose of guiding mankind (which in turn is not just another form of mammal but something intrinsically different in ways that go beyond the physical aspects).
Georgiana S. Oct 10, 2009, 10:45pm EDT
A black hole?
Donald Hawley Oct 11, 2009, 10:49am EDT
Alexsandralyn S.: Actually, in part I agree with you in that no one can conceive of an empty void. Since we are a constituted body of sorts, we are part and parcel of the four dimensional universe. Our brain, which does the thinking is also part of that four dimensional universe, an electrochemical device for controlling our body in this dimensional universe. However, we have a soul (I believe) that is not part of the dimensional universe nor a part of our body per se. The fact that we cannot conceive of something does not mean that it does not exist in some non dimensional universe. And now with astrophysicists considering multidimensional universes, this should not be hard to accept even if not perceivable or conceivable. If we define "exist" as being a part of the dimensional universe then God does not exist per se. However, when we realize that there are realities that are not dimensional or are even multidimensional, then we can while God may not exist as we think of existence, He IS in some other sense not conceivable to us. Furthermore, our soul also IS in some sense that we cannot conceive. As to the "dictionary definitions of a Void", that is simply by convention an excepted understanding of what we mean by the word. God does not "fit into" any definition we can contrive since God is separate from all existences even though "He IS."

Of course I understand that this is my own view and not yours. I suspect that you are still trapped in the mental state of "naive realism" that pervaded science until Einstein and is not rejected except by the common view. What Jesus IS or WAS is part of a vastly more complex picture of reality than we are at present able to even think about. But I suggest to you that if you read simply the story of Jesus (not the pick and choose version you were probably brought up by hearing from preachers or so called intellectuals who never read it for themselves, only conjectured in ignorance and predisposition) you can ascertain a wonder that is truly startling and awesome. No Christian today appreciates this even though they profess to. They simply bleat out subservience out of ignorant obedience so as to assuage their sense of insecurity. Just one view.
Jerry Kays Oct 11, 2009, 12:40pm EDT
and if one were to read the story of Jesus they would find no better story than that presented in the Urantia Book.
Jerry Kays Oct 11, 2009, 12:43pm EDT
There is no such thing as a truly empty space (a vacuum) in our universe, any more than there are natural "straight" lines ... all such are but mental concoctions of people.
Georgiana S. Oct 11, 2009, 7:10pm EDT
our never-ending search for symmetry
Donald Hawley Oct 12, 2009, 10:56am EDT
Alexsandralyn S.: "I don't mind being trapped within a wealth of 'common sense'." Exactly. To me -- and this is one opinion, mine -- "common sense" is precisely what I said, that which the brain makes of the complex of our material environment, of which the brain is an integral part and a natural product. The "soul" is not an integral part and a natural product of the material environment but of a non dimensional "milieu". Nothing we can conceive of with the brain relates to this dimensionless "milieu". Hume, the philosopher, pointed this out and it was this statement by Hume which led Einstein to revolutionize science from the epistemological paradigm of naive realism to that of radical empiricism. We must all stop thinking in the way we were schooled (taught) and start freeing our vision up to embrace a much wider perspective.

Oh, and by the way, when you point out that Jesus never wrote anything but was recorded by others, that is true of everything -- or almost everything -- that we know about our history from a long ways back. But that doesn't mean that what was written down wasn't fairly, if not absolutely, accurate. In fact, we know from studying tribes in the remote regions of Africa, that when people have been deprived of the ability to read and write, they often developed remarkable memory recall and could and can commit to memory precise recollections of events and transmit them orally to others, thus passing down information to subsequent generations. Tribes in Africa (especially pigmies) do this regularly. The Koran was not written at the time but was passed down precisely this way and in a concerted way. While I am perfectly willing to admit some amount of "tweaking" to the Biblical stoy as written, I maintain that the story is basically and remarkably accurately as recorded in spite of the "tweaking." My reason: The Bible account (especially of Jesus) is something I read and judged on my own without undo interferrence by the interpretation of others, especially clerics. I am also a writer and what I consider unusually astute. But the story of Jesus, for instance, is simply too profound and too awesome and contradictory to what one might try to "imagine" in concocting a fictitious story that no writer or group of writers are capable of imagining. In fact, to me one of the saddest parts of our modern world Christianity is how little they understand of what Jesus was all about and said. They ignore much of what he said or distort it based on their own predilections. It is stimply too powerful and deep in context to be understood not only "then" but today. So sad.
Donald Hawley Oct 13, 2009, 1:01pm EDT
Alexsandralyn S.: As to Jesus, of course I haven't "met Him". I haven't "met" Einstein either, but I have read him and about him. If you can't get an idea about anybody you haven't "met" then I wonder about your perspectives. I judge Jesus based on not only what was said about Him by others who did "meet" Him but in His own words as written down in the Bible. If you can't learn about Him in much the same way then you will remain ignorant of all human history prior to your birth and then some. You didn't, apparently, live during World War II as I did. I learned first hand and you cannot know the full impact of it as I did by reading about it. But you can learn something hopefully. I don't know what this has to do with your idea of "common sense" even though it does have meaning with my idea as to what constitutes "common sense."
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Aunt Boni H. Sep 29, 2009, 11:39am EDT
Frank Shafer - "Crazy for God'. It's going on my Christmas gift list for one particular friend. He'll love it!
Jerry Kays Oct 2, 2009, 5:07pm EDT
The ones who would hate it need it more ... :-)
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brojer n. Sep 29, 2009, 1:33pm EDT
The Zionists in Israel are supporting James Hagee because he believes the Palestinians should be "Cleansed from the Land" Thus perpetuating the hatred to keep the pot boiling and hastening the "End"

The "Poll" he cites does not give the methodology. Any poll can be skewed by the way the questions are asked. Since he doesn't even name it one should reject it out of hand. As far as the "Birthers" are concerned, Obamas own half brother said he was born in Kenya, and he has spent upwards of $950,000 of DNC money to keep everything hidden, including his years at Occidental College, and his grades at Harvard, you have to wonder whats going on.

As far as Mormon "nutjobs" as you call them. I recall the "Mormon helping hands" giving relief to flood victims in ND,MN and LA. I would sure like to have some of those "nutjobs" next time a disaster happens in my neighborhood. Isn't that what true religion is all about, helping your fellow human beings in time of trouble? You should think twice about a cartoon character saying something and accepting it as truth.
Kris M. Sep 29, 2009, 7:14pm EDT
If you'd only included the third paragraph, that would be such a good comment. The tinfoil-hatness of buying into that birther business, though... that's pathetic.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 7:56pm EDT
Palestinians were there before the Israelis' (jesus of Paestine...) the zionists have taken over someone elses land, they sought asylum and took native people land for religious freedom. Sort of reminds one of the native Americans plight here!
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René Allen Sep 29, 2009, 7:20pm EDT
Hi Georgiana ~ I'm going to be sure to WATCH this. TRUSTING your JUDGMENT, this is NOW FEATURED (sight unseen) in PROPHETIC PULSE ~ A Paradigm Shift!

I'll be back to comment after watching!
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 7:55pm EDT
It is just the facts, ma'am!
René Allen Oct 28, 2009, 9:33pm EDT
Ahahhah!

HUGS to you Georgiana!
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Mugg Muggles, "The Man With the Jive" Sep 29, 2009, 7:21pm EDT
dog bless Rachel Maddow!
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John Knight Sep 29, 2009, 7:41pm EDT
This man is total fraud, in my opinion. The Book clearly and unambiguously speaks of anti-Christs, and Jesus himself warns over and over that great deception will occur, involving false Christs. Who the hell does this clownie think he is, to denounce the teachings of his supposed Lord? And, to call those who don't agree with his personal version of the Book, crazy, as if HE were a great Prophet of God, makes him an anti (in the stead of) Christ.

Looks to me like just another egomaniac, with a messiah complex, tooting his own horn, and hatin' on those who won't bow to him.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 7:54pm EDT
John, you are the nut job that he is speaking of!
YOu still believe literally in what the Bible says, which is not the way to do it1 Whey don't you believe unconditionally in Nostradamus or some other fable. Aesop is always revelent!
Christ was a guy, a reactionary he woeked a crowd well and believed his own infallibility, he did not die on the cross, he was removed way before the normal three or so days it takes to die, suffocate from having all your weight on your arms, he was whisked off to India, where he spent the years between 12 and 29 and then died in Kashmir at the ripe old age of 86.
This can be proved, take DNA from his relics in his tomb. Proof! Not a book written by men some 350 years after the time of Christ.
Marilyn M. Sep 29, 2009, 8:04pm EDT
Georgiana, the Bible is made for believers. When the day comes that you've repented and accepted Christ, you'll suddenly understand. Meanwhile, I'm sure there are plenty of Christians praying for you.
John Knight Sep 29, 2009, 8:19pm EDT
Georgiana,

Honest, someone that believes "channelings from The Group of Forty of various beings, archangels and Mary Magdalne, etc. Lord's Kuthumi and Kirael . . ", is hardly in a good position to ridicule those who believe God can do supernatural things. Obviously, you believe SOMEBODY can do supernatural things yourself, so, your charges amount to nothing more than hypocrisy, as far as I can see.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:25pm EDT
the bible is meant for believers? no Marylin, I think the Bible is an interesting collection of thoughts and stories designed to placate the masses. I have been so far beyond you and your kind of thinkers, those who don't think but have this blind faith in things they are helpless to control.
Think, reason, don't parrot out words you think have some magical power to them, power is only in things of the natural world.
I don't need to repent for anything as it is all part of a persons learning experience. Salvation comes when you realise it!
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:26pm EDT
and JK. I encompass many teachings, many theories, science and the natural world. Crystals have power, elements have power. A guy who has been dead to over 2000 years has no power but to trick!
John Knight Sep 29, 2009, 8:30pm EDT
Georgiana,

"I think the Bible is an interesting collection of thoughts and stories designed to placate the masses."

Oh, well why didn't you say so? I mean if YOU think that, what in the world more is there to the matter? ; )
Dorothy H. Sep 29, 2009, 8:53pm EDT
John, You might google Frank Schaeffer (sp), to learn who he is. He and his Father are/were some of the founders of todays fundementalist far right wing of the Republican Party.

He is not debunking The Book/Bible. In his own book, Crazy for God, and a couple others he wrote, he confesses to the big lie, he, his father, and others perpetrated for political gain of power, etc...

He, over time began to realized the fraud of it, and he rejected what the fundementalists were doing.

He's been attempting to help undue the damage that he helped do to our country, and Chrisianity.
John Knight Sep 29, 2009, 9:35pm EDT
Dorothy,

I have absolutely no interest in who founded any fundamentalist anything. I have never listened to, or cared about such groups, and if Mr. Schaefer did some crazy stuff, I don't consider him an authority on sanity. Maybe he's still crazy . . .

I'm just saying he ain't a follower of the teachings of my Lord, but a ridiculer of him. I don't care what he calls himself, he can't both be a disciple of the Christ in that Book, and denounce what Jesus taught, to my simple mind ; )
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 10:24pm EDT
simple mind, you said it!

Be still and know that I am God comes to mind. That is meditation, not congregating over some pot luck dinner in a brighly lit hall paying $ into a basket to pay for the minister!
Jerry Kays Oct 3, 2009, 1:42pm EDT
For John, if it ain't in "The Book" it is but evil imagination ... it and all else is Fraud. :-)
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Shira C. Sep 29, 2009, 8:07pm EDT
I have mixed feelings about Frank Schaeffer. I do admire him, not only for examining his beliefs and, when he found them wrong, changing them, but also for coming out in public and pointing out which of his PUBLIC actions he believes were wrong and wants to correct.

However, he seems to have fallen into the trap of projecting all his fears -- and all our fears -- on one group of people. For example, in his blog he writes:

Former president Jimmy Carter went on the record to point out that he believes that racism is at the heart of the great deal of the extreme animosity being leveled at President Obama (NBC News September 15). Carter identified himself as a Southerner with an insiders understanding. There's something he didn't mention however: the special culpability of his own religion -- Evangelical Christianity -- for the anti-Obama hyperventilating and furious reaction to our first black president. And that reaction has less to do with race and more to do with the ugliest side of religion.

The fact is that if you're going to blame one group above all others for the willful ignorance and continuing ugliness of the response to President Obama the best candidate would be the evangelical/fundamentalist community. The angry part of the South Carter spoke of is racist because it's dominated by a certain type of "Christian" culture.

Since Carter is also an evangelical Christian (as well as a Southerner) he would have done well to use his evangelical insider status to point to not just racism but to scream bloody murder about a bigger problem today: the hijacking of Christianity as the source of the hate and anger directed against all things "other" by a vocal (and health care lobby-organized and funded) angry minority of voters who are poisoning the American body.


I find it hard to believe the Christian right is in bed with Big Pharma, though I'm willing to believe that corporate lobbyists will grab any momentum they can steal.

More fundamentally, I do not believe that all opposition to Obama or Democrats or, heck, change itself, is orchestrated by an evil cabal of greedy capitalists and priggish zealots.

Call me foolish...

Shira
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:28pm EDT
quite right there Shira. I think Jimmy carter sees this but he still lives in Plains and until he actually needs to spell it out, I don't think he will.
Jerry Kays Oct 2, 2009, 1:16pm EDT
Call me foolish... I might on some aspects such as who really controls our politicians and media, thus us. It's not the "types" you mentioned, but "they" surely exist.
Georgiana S. Oct 2, 2009, 10:55pm EDT
we know that! They are out there!
Shira C. Oct 5, 2009, 4:09pm EDT
Out of curiosity -- who is the "they" who really control our politicians and media?
Jerry Kays Oct 5, 2009, 5:33pm EDT
"They" have great wealth and thus power, far beyond our ability to comprehend, they also desire, and can make sure it takes place, to be anonymous ... if we could point them out they would not be able to get away with it as they do ... they are also probably no less than "pathological" ...
Shira C. Oct 5, 2009, 6:05pm EDT
I see. I was afraid you would say something like that.

Sigh. As long as we persist in "explaining" problems by positing conspiracies "far beyond our ability to comprehend", we will not get far toward solving those problems. This is a VERY old habit in America, as Hofstadter pointed out during the height of the McCarthy madness. His article is still available at http://karws.gso.uri.edu/jfk/conspiracy_theory/the_paranoid_mentality/the_paranoid_style.html

The "paranoid style", sometimes called conspiratism, pops up on both sides of the political spectrum, btw.

In any case, if that is what this discussion is about, I won't be participating further. Much as I disagree with the religious right, I consider them HUMAN BEINGS with human problems they are trying to solve in more or less effective ways. Better to try to solve those problems than to assign blame.

See you around in other discussions, maybe.
Jerry Kays Oct 5, 2009, 8:16pm EDT
The right side of pour comment is missing on my screen ... but I still get the gist of what you are trying to say ... and I will say back, there is little that can or will be done about such conspiracies until the folks conspired against wake up to the fact and truth of the matter ... those such as yourself that wish to dismiss all such notions as paranoia and mental defect are the ones already the most brainwashed ... which amounts to the latter category of "defective" mentally.
Georgiana S. Oct 5, 2009, 9:32pm EDT
Shira,
The "they" are everyone from the Illuminati and corporate whizzes. The white Supremisists see a take over in politics by getting the backing of these FOX nut jobs and are using the Republican party, which has no platform as such, to promote their insane agenda.
Jerry Kays Oct 6, 2009, 12:55pm EDT
Shira, I have now read in it's entirety (plus into links provided within that home-page) the "Hofstadter" writing you linked us to ...

An extremely interesting read I must say ... I love all of the research the man went through in order to come up with that ... reminds me of a "think tank disinformation" project ... which I would not be at all surprised to find that it was/is ... that being a continuing function of those who actually do control us ... it is our own thinking that they seek to first and foremost control, then everything falls into place "naturally" with those such as yourself acting as the "sane" peer pressure that keeps the rest of us in line, your being in effect the "agents" of the "system" ... which is all good and on the up and up to you folks ... unless of course it somehow affects you adversely personally, at which time you may question, but your idealogical convictions will keep you restrained from really suspicioning ...

Naturally the article, as all good ones would, looks at "both" sides of the question and makes some comparisons ... some valid, and many not so valid, it is easy for me to recognize the over-all tone of the claims and especially the "insinuations" intended ... very cleverly done, but never the less disingenuous.

IMnsHO.

PS ... but I did bookmark it to my favorites for future reference.
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Sandre M. Sep 29, 2009, 8:08pm EDT
Georgiana, thanks so much for posting this. It's true it's not going to change any minds in the far right Christian camp (see John's post above), but I was so happy to hear someone say, "You can't reason with insanity. Let's get on with the business at hand." That's the first sane thing I've heard anyone say. And John, just so you know, I believe you are entitled to believe whatever you wish to believe because we live in America and that's the way it works here. By the way, James, I have friends who are Mormon who also thought the South Park episode was hysterical.
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:30pm EDT
YOu can't reason with insanity, but you can poke them with the truth once in a while hoping a glimmer of truth will pervade!
Jerry Kays Oct 2, 2009, 1:18pm EDT
and "hope" is usually about as rewarding as it gets ... especially concerning John.
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FRED R. Sep 29, 2009, 8:14pm EDT
thanks so much
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Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 8:29pm EDT
thank you Fred. You brought this to my attention and I ran with it!
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Lee P. Sep 29, 2009, 8:40pm EDT
I think he's preaching to the choir.
Dorothy H. Sep 29, 2009, 8:57pm EDT
He's revealing the truth of a particular matter, and is encouraging others of the far right wing, as was he born and raised into, to perhaps step out and do some of their own investigating, as he did.
John Knight Sep 29, 2009, 9:58pm EDT
Or, maybe he's always just been an egomaniac with a habit of hating on those who don't agree with him?

The existence of counterfeit money, does not render the logical conclusion that there's no such thing as genuine currency ; )
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 11:12pm EDT
that is a lot like you john, you want everyone to think as you do otherwise they are bullshit, well, I have explored your so-called way, and gone beyond it. Have you explored esoteric studies?
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 11:44pm EDT
Exactly alex.
john and I are old debaters (?) on this subject. He has dug his toes in and sees god and jesus sitting down with a quill and parchment and writing this book! Time lines mean nothing to him either, the world is as old as he can comphend and all sorts of beings, like talking snakes are so much more real than the elements of religions eons older than Christianity!
John Knight Sep 30, 2009, 12:23am EDT
Alex,

"Really, you can't argue with another person's imagination, especially when their imagination is based on a book that they didn't ever write or experience for themselves."

Hey, that's cute; Pretend the other person is arguing based on imagination, with NO EVIDENCE WHATSOEVER in reality-land.

Did you see me do that in your crystal ball, perhaps ; )
John Knight Sep 30, 2009, 6:59pm EDT
Freakin' light-weights . .
Georgiana S. Sep 30, 2009, 9:34pm EDT
John,
We have read the bible, you on the other hand have not read any other literature relating to god consciousness, kind of one sided isn't it?

light weights are lighter than air with is ethereal and not weighted down with mundane things.
John Knight Sep 30, 2009, 9:48pm EDT
Georgiana,

". . you on the other hand have not read any other literature relating to god consciousness"

And you read that in your crystal ball too, O Dreamliver ?
Ron (in complete sheeple overload) W. Sep 30, 2009, 11:27pm EDT
""Really, you can't argue with another person's imagination, especially when their imagination is based on a book that they didn't ever write or experience for themselves."

Hey, that's cute; Pretend the other person is arguing based on imagination, with NO EVIDENCE WHATSOEVER in reality-land."



When you live by the sword....
Ron (in complete sheeple overload) W. Sep 30, 2009, 11:30pm EDT
Alex, you have given me the biggest laugh of my day. ;o)
Jerry Kays Oct 2, 2009, 1:24pm EDT
Or, maybe he's always just been an egomaniac with a habit of hating on those who don't agree with him?

Scratch the "maybe" out and we have a perfect description of John himself ... try looking in the mirror sometime John.
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Ernie Derksen Sep 29, 2009, 11:38pm EDT
Who is God?
Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 11:45pm EDT
Or What is god? It is the spark of energy that set this whole domino effect of the universe, evolution and continued evolution spiralling in the first place. Some people have to name everything! LOL
Kristi C. Sep 30, 2009, 6:48pm EDT
Or What is god?

The "Religious Right" will always associate God with being a who rather than a what. In this way they can personify God and use God to manipulate their own agendas on a personal level.
Georgiana S. Sep 30, 2009, 9:36pm EDT
and keep him WHITE and grandfatherly!
If god had a personage, he would scare the bejeesus out of all of them. The power and energy would be beyond their comprehension.
Jerry Kays Oct 2, 2009, 1:28pm EDT
Metaphorically true, literally it would be a different story (electrical grounding etc.) :-)
Jerry Kays Oct 3, 2009, 1:47pm EDT
I hear you Alex ... agreed. :-)

(I was just laying the groundwork in case any "contested" you from a "scientific electrical position" ... a "realm" I spent my working life in)
Georgiana S. Oct 3, 2009, 5:20pm EDT
so...not electrical perhaps, but sparking?
Georgiana S. Oct 4, 2009, 5:23pm EDT
oh, that burning wire smell, I came across it a lot at one point in my travels through thislife. The Sparn Ranch where Charlie Manson and the crazies that surrounded him was rife withit!
Jerry Kays Oct 5, 2009, 5:38pm EDT
That "live wire" feeling was the most memorable experience I had when in the hospital near death for the better part of 3 months ... everything seemed to reek of it there and then, especially what I remember of the 16 days in ICU ... and some of the people there ...

Now that it is all over and behind me, I figure it was mostly just my imagination ... that's what Satan is anyway, just our imagination (especially John's) :-)
Jerry Kays Oct 6, 2009, 11:54am EDT
Interesting concepts from interesting minds ... my view; if one were to personify (anthropomorphise) God then one would naturally require a "balancing" that called for his opposite, that which Satan or a Devil fills the bill ... A good god called God and a bad god called Satan ... Light versus Darkness ... dualistically, good spirit and bad spirit ... forever in conflict (+/-) fit either and all such contrasts of dichotomy.


Thus I deal with a GOD above God(s) and gods ... one Triune in nature with a neutrality that is UNconditionally Loving, non-judgmentally accepting of each and all (when they seek the truth of it all) ... one thus defined as (+=-) where the Totality ( ) is thus Neutral as is the connecting Spirit withIN (=).

Such a GOD supplies ALL of the necessary potentials, ingredients and even thoughts, that allow us to each come up with our own "chemical/emotional" mix ... being free to experiment for cause and effect understanding, realizing eventually what works the best and what does not ... what doesn't kill us makes us stronger, but even death is but a doorway to further experimentation. To go there with a relationship to a GOD, a God, or god(s) will give an associated experience according to ones thought expectations ... to each their own.
Jerry Kays Oct 6, 2009, 12:39pm EDT
PS ... because it is so succinct, I added the above comment to my own article:
"" GOD, ultimate truth ... God and god(s), less and lesser truths.""
for those interested in more, seek there. :-)
Jerry Kays Oct 7, 2009, 4:48pm EDT
Yes Alex, on the same materialistic plane, there is love at the one extreme and fear at the other ... the problem though is that is a dualistic dichotomy of opposites, expressed as (+/-) and they can never seem to "get together" across the "void" (gap, divide or chasm) of the (/) between them ... thus there are "strings" (conditions) attached, such as "I will love you when you are like me or you deserve it by my standards" ...

The preferable Love is the UNconditional Kind found in the very center of every natural truth (a Trinity or Triad arrangement) ... on the scale just mentioned, that "center" is where the symbol of the cross crosses, intersects, where the divine Love of the GOD above INterconnects with the balance point of unconditional Love experienced by humans seeking to bridge the gap (/) with their common Spirit (=) ... as in (+=-).

Jerry Kays Oct 9, 2009, 3:22am EDT
That would fit well into my belief system in that my awakening assured me that I need not fear death ... I thus welcome it when my time arrives, believing that it will only happen in accordance with the greater plan of my Soul needs.

I also beleive that I had a Spirit granted "preview" of what a death could consist of ... and it was a bliss state beyond words.
Georgiana S. Oct 9, 2009, 6:58pm EDT
I was about 20 minutes away from death once. The nurse had told me and asked if I had any messages, an incredible calm came over me, probably due to low blood pressure as my spleen had exploded, but you just stop fighting, it was near bliss.
Jerry Kays Oct 10, 2009, 2:29pm EDT
The "Awakening" experience that I had, I later found upon reading of them, had many similarities with the Near Death experiences as reported by those who had them.
Georgiana S. Oct 10, 2009, 8:41pm EDT
Ales,
I too was raped, and strangled, back in '83. It is a bitch isn't it? I still remember those cold eyes, all about control, not sex. Very off-putting!
Georgiana S. Oct 11, 2009, 9:26pm EDT
Mine ws 13th June 1983. It was a total stranger, which was frightening as I couldn't guage him at all. I later found out he was wanted in connection with the Laurel Canyon murders, the Eddie Nash, John Holmes crowd! He was awful, I can still see his Sid Viscious type of looks, with the ugly beng predominant. big scar on his cheek and no front teeth! He came back some months later and broke in and I shot at him and got arrested myself for firing in city limits! He was a true bad seed!
Georgiana S. Oct 13, 2009, 12:14am EDT
Yes, the cops used the 'there is nobody on the street..." I simply said,"well, I called you before I shot him, I guess a bullet near his vitals and the ten minutes you took to get here gave him pause!"
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Duffy E. Sep 29, 2009, 11:45pm EDT
Have you ever noticed that most arguments with the religious right, (and trolls generally) tend to follow the same trajectory? The first response tends to be a rather huffy denunciation of what you believe in, based entirely on the points it contradicts what they believe. What ever your response to that is, they will counter with an attack on you personally for having the temerity to actually try to refute their precious version of the truth. And finally at the end it all comes down to some version of that old PeeWee Herman taunt, "I know you are, but what am I?"

Georgiana S. Sep 29, 2009, 11:48pm EDT
Duffy! I was going to use that in response to some comment or other just the other day! It is quite the way it sounds most of the time. Also, while the religious right are copying their scriptures out as though that was related at all to the subject, we have gone on to some other idea of the moment! It is all rhetoric and gets boring after a time. We know what is sane, and the loonies keep on getting crazier!
Georgiana S. Oct 3, 2009, 5:26pm EDT
Watching Bill Mahar last night, it was being discussed how the so-called Religious Right are really jsut white supremisc