Remember the good ol’ days of oobleck. I think oobleck is one of the most romantic things out there. It melts in your hands, just like two hearts in love. When you add stress it binds together, like two lovers should.
In essence this is a scrapbook of my mind's musings. Please feel free to start reading, or click there -> to read about me. Then ask me a question.
Remember the good ol’ days of oobleck. I think oobleck is one of the most romantic things out there. It melts in your hands, just like two hearts in love. When you add stress it binds together, like two lovers should.
I find it quite interesting that “The Medical Research Council,” who partnered with Nestle and the University of Southampton in November 2011, has written a paper titled:
or the see bbc article:
Not to mention Sian Robinson is a Principal Research Fellow of the Epidemiology Unit at MRC, and a professor at University of Southampton. Oh, and this “new evidence” is apparently “from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Epidemiology Unit.” How coincidental.
It is found in the paper that:
The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Being funded by Nestle would in my book be a competing interest.
Note: All underlined are linked text, which will take you to the implied information.
I want the marine mammals to see this video… maybe they’ll get some ideas.
Like a sunny day spent inside this blog has gotten away from me. I started it as a way to encourage my creative side. It became a one tracked, activist oriented, soap box. There is nothing wrong in that, but that was not what I intended.
Further In my pursuit of righting wrongs, I came upon a surprising - to me - conclusion. I found that there is no sense in fighting for a world in which freedom actually exists. It is common to see the quote:
You can kill a man but you can’t kill an idea.
- Medgar Evers
That is just it, the quote is bidirectional, we can’t kill the idea of oppression, we do not have the power to do that. Yes, it is possible to make freedom more prominent, but abusive people will continue to take advantage of everything. But that is their weak spot. Humans may not be able to exploit that weak spot. But nature can, because these parasitic people are exploitive they are not sustainable. They are in a fight with evolution. No one wins a fight with evolution. In other words, there is a reason ants are small and essentially at the bottom of the food chain (ants have very similar social structures to humans).
Sure, you could help evolution along, but I guarantee you evolution does not need help. Note that I am not saying stop being an activist. It is important to voice injustices, because there still are plants, animals, and people being raped, killed, or otherwise subjected to atrocity. These injustices are still hurting people, plants and animals there is no sense in letting go unanswered. When you get down to it what I am saying is:
Don’t worry and learn to love the oppression.
The oppressors are made of protoplasm like the rest of us and in a farmer’s almanac from about 2000 years ago, “for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap” (Galatians 6:7).
-Joe
Senator Frank Church (D-Idaho) noted a decade ago how “every kind of conduct by a foreign government that we view as mischievious ends up in some kind of penalty provision that is attached to the aid program.”
- Lars Schoultz, “US Foreign Policy and Human Rights Violations in Latin America”
“US Foreign Policy and Human Rights Violations in Latin America” is a very good read for those who think the u.s. is a generous country when it comes to aid.
Great video of a great man.
[TW FOR RAPE, RAPE JOKES, RAPE APOLOGY]
I get it—you’re a decent guy. I can even believe it. You’ve never raped anybody. You would NEVER rape anybody. You’re upset that all these feminists are trying to accuse you of doing something, or connect you to doing…
Chapter 1
Little Bessie was nearly three years old. She was a good child, and not shallow, not frivolous, but meditative and thoughtful, and much given to thinking out the reasons of things and trying to make them harmonise with results. One day she said —
“Mamma, why is there so much pain and sorrow and suffering? What is it all for?”
It was an easy question, and mamma had no difficulty in answering it:
“It is for our good, my child. In His wisdom and mercy the Lord sends us these afflictions to discipline us and make us better.”
“Is it He that sends them?”
“Yes.”
“Does He send all of them, mamma?”
“Yes, dear, all of them. None of them comes by accident; He alone sends them, and always out of love for us, and to make us better.”
“Isn’t it strange!”
“Strange? Why, no, I have never thought of it in that way. I have not heard any one call it strange before. It has always seemed natural and right to me, and wise and most kindly and merciful.”
“Who first thought of it like that, mamma? Was it you?”
“Oh, no, child, I was taught it.”
“Who taught you so, mamma?”
“Why, really, I don’t know — I can’t remember. My mother, I suppose; or the preacher. But it’s a thing that everybody knows.”
“Well, anyway, it does seem strange. Did He give Billy Norris the typhus?”
“Yes.”
“What for?”
“Why, to discipline him and make him good.”
“But he died, mamma, and so it couldn’t make him good.”
“Well, then, I suppose it was for some other reason. We know it was a good reason, whatever it was.”
“What do you think it was, mamma?”
“Oh, you ask so many questions! I think; it was to discipline his parents.”
“Well, then, it wasn’t fair, mamma. Why should his life be taken away for their sake, when he wasn’t doing anything?”
“Oh, I don’t know! I only know it was for a good and wise and merciful reason.”
“What reason, mamma?”
“I think — I think — well, it was a judgment; it was to punish them for some sin they had committed.”
“But he was the one that was punished, mamma. Was that right?”
“Certainly, certainly. He does nothing that isn’t right and wise and merciful. You can’t understand these things now, dear, but when you are grown up you will understand them, and then you will see that they are just and wise.”
After a pause:
“Did He make the roof fall in on the stranger that was trying to save the crippled old woman from the fire, mamma?”
“Yes, my child. Wait! Don’t ask me why, because I don’t know. I only know it was to discipline some one, or be a judgment upon somebody, or to show His power.”
“That drunken man that stuck a pitchfork into Mrs. Welch’s baby when — “
“Never mind about it, you needn’t go into particulars; it was as to discipline the child — that much is certain, anyway.”
“Mamma, Mr. Burgess said in his sermon that billions of little creatures are sent into us to give us cholera, and typhoid, and lockjaw, and more than a thousand other sicknesses and — mamma, does He send them?”
“Oh, certainly, child, certainly. Of course.”
“What for?”
“Oh, to discipline us! haven’t I told you so, over and over again?”
“It’s awful cruel, mamma! And silly! and if I — “
“Hush, oh hush! do you want to bring the lightning?”
“You know the lightning did come last week, mamma, and struck the new church, and burnt it down. Was it to discipline the church?”
(Wearily). “Oh, I suppose so.”
“But it killed a hog that wasn’t doing anything. Was it to discipline the hog, mamma?”
“Dear child, don’t you want to run out and play a while? If you would like to — “
“Mama, only think! Mr. Hollister says there isn’t a bird or fish or reptile or any other animal that hasn’t got an enemy that Providence has sent to bite it and chase it and pester it, and kill it, and suck; its blood and discipline it and make it good and religious. Is that true, mother — because if it is true, why did Mr. Hollister laugh at it?”
“That Hollister is a scandalous person, and I don’t want you to listen to anything he says.”
“Why, mamma, he is very interesting, and I think he tries to be good. He says the wasps catch spiders and cram them down into their nests in the ground — alive, mamma! — and there they live and suffer days and days and days, and the hungry little wasps chewing their legs and gnawing into their bellies all the time, to make them good and religious and praise God for His infinite mercies. I think Mr. Hollister is just lovely, and ever so kind; for when I asked him if he would treat a spider like that, he said he hoped to be damned if he would; and then he — “
“My child! oh, do for goodness’ sake — “
“And mamma, he says the spider is appointed to catch the fly, and drive her fangs into his bowels, and suck and suck and suck his blood, to discipline him and make him a Christian; and whenever the fly buzzes his wings with the pain and misery of it, you can see by the spider’s grateful eye that she is thanking the Giver of All Good for — well, she’s saving grace, as he says; and also, he — “
“Oh, aren’t you ever going to get tired chattering! If you want to go out and play — “
“Mama, he says himself that all troubles and pains and miseries and rotten diseases and horrors and villainies are sent to us in mercy and kindness to discipline us; and he says it is the duty of every father and mother to help Providence, every way they can; and says they can’t do it by just scolding and whipping, for that won’t answer, it is weak and no good — Providence’s way is best, and it is every parent’s duty and every person’s duty to help discipline everybody, and cripple them and kill them, and starve them, and freeze them, and rot them with diseases, and lead them into murder and theft and dishonor and disgrace; and he says Providence’s invention for disciplining us and the animals is the very brightest idea that ever was, and not even an idiot could get up anything shinier. Mamma, brother Eddie needs disciplining, right away: and I know where you can get the smallpox for him, and the itch, and the diphtheria, and bone-rot, and heart disease, and consumption, and — Dear mamma, have you fainted! I will run and bring help! Now this comes of staying in town this hot weather.”
I proposed this question to the SAT people. I am still waiting for a reply. Let me know if you see it on one of their tests.
Cancer is to humans
as humans are to:
a) Society
b) Pregnancy
c) Earth
b) Amusement parks