Ciprian-necula Pure Opinion Ciprian-necula Pure Opinion

Thursday, February 14, 2013

If There Is a Devil and If That Devilish Person Lived In the US, He Wouldn't Be a Republican

If There Is a Devil and If That Devilish Person Lived In the US, He Wouldn't Be a Republican

 
I found it quite interesting that when President Bush was in office that many of the left-leaning neoliberals called him the devil, and even likened him to Adolf Hitler. That was totally uncalled for, and not only was it mean-spirited and demeaning to the Oval Office, it was a far cry from the truth. There were not very many similarities between the leader of Nazi Germany back in the day, and President Bush (G.W. Bush) but the Democrats tried to make the correlation, and they used all sorts of fancy words, and hacked journalism pieces to try to make it seem as if there were similarities.

Make no mistake that Adolf Hitler was a socialist, and road into power under the Labor Party. He was a nationalist socialist who made himself king. The world will never be the same because of that man, and as I watch the changes here the United States I hate to think that as we lean closer towards socialism we see similar strategies, and many more similarities than we ever would have thought to attribute to G.W. Bush. Suffice it to say, if there is actually a devil, and I'm not one to fall for any of that religious superstitious nonsense, but if there was, and if that person lived in the United States, he could only be a Democrat Socialist.

When we look at other socialist leaders, we also see similarities. Consider if you will the former Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and the current leader of Argentina. The Socialists work very hard to control the message, to curtail the media, to hijack the economy, and to promise the people they are one with them, all the while they destroy the economy, currency, and borrow up a storm. When the country can no longer survive without filing for bankruptcy, they renege on their loan payments, and continue to promise more to the working man, to the poor, but in the end, it's always the same. Whether the country has anything left to go to war at that point is another story.

Still, by that time they've already gone to war with half of their population, and as they run out of other people's money to spend, promising the poor more and more as they take from those who have garnered wealth, it is the middle class which is destroyed, and all the gains of the country plundered. I can think of no greater evil onto human societies and civilizations than that of socialism. So let's set the record straight a free-market thinker such as G.W. Bush is about the furthest thing from a tyrannical socialist dictator, but on the other hand a Democrat Socialist busy hijacking industry, and spending money they don't have, promising people things they cannot deliver, and taking away their rights as they move their ball forward towards their own agenda is nothing short of evil Machiavellian character.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

An Ageing Killjoy?

An Ageing Killjoy?..

Just one of the things the Frenchman in me has never been able to understand about the English is how such a pragmatic, no-nonsense people, masters of understatement, and so mistrustful of words beyond two syllables in length could have so systematically incorporated into their daily vocabulary such a vast array of hyperbolic adjectives (frequently reinforced by ' absolutely' or 'utterly') to qualify what barely emerges from the mundane.

Last week, for example, I had lunch with a friend in an English pub. The waitress, a breezy, not unattractive young lady brought us the menu, came back five minutes later, took down our order, and then departed after gratifying us with a sweet smile and a mystifying 'Wonderful!' If, by this, she wished to compliment us on our choice of fare, I have yet to understand what she could have found so extraordinarily remarkable about steak and kidney pie, peas and chips.

And only last week I was having a friendly chat with my next-door neighbour who'd recently taken the wife and kids on a Sunday outing to Blackpool, of all places. As we'd had rain at home for most of that day, I asked him if they'd had a spot there, too.

'Not at all,' he replied, 'the weather was absolutely superb, and the view from the Tower was simply awesome.'

Now, don't get me wrong. I've got nothing against Blackpool, really. What with that huge amusement park and all those hotdog stands, it's fantas... sorry, it's all right for the kids. But I wouldn't be seen dead there myself. And having been up the real thing in Paris, I've no desire to contemplate the sights from the top of its Tower. What's more, however far you stretch your imagination, the sky couldn't have been as cloud-free as he was trying to make out. After all, the north-west coast of England is not the Côte d'Azur. But, without really knowing why, what I took most exception to was not so much his choice of 'absolutely superb' to qualify what could only have been a fitful sunny presence, but his use of 'simply awesome' to describe the view from Blackpool Tower. Perhaps it was just the straw that broke the camel's back.

Mind you, I am aware that a living language is in constant evolution, and I did ask myself whether the meaning of 'awesome' had weakened over the last couple of decades. So, before making any final judgement, I decided to look it up in my latest edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. And here, to my great satisfaction, what I more than suspected was officially confirmed: that applying a word normally associated with the sublime or grandiose to a stretch of dirty-looking sand and greenish-coloured sea was, in any man's language, pushing things a bit too far.

You know, I'm inclined to think that this propensity to verbal excess is yet another blight which has been blown in from the States, and which is inexorably turning what we are now obliged to call 'British English' into little more than an American dialect. But I'd be the first to admit we can't blame the Yanks for everything. And I can't help thinking that those at the B.B.C can be faulted, too. Why, only the other evening I was watching a passably interesting documentary on some of the more notable beauty spots in and around the British Isles. After three or four minutes, however, I began to be so uncomfortably aware of the stubborn use of 'fantastic' that I resolved to conduct a personal count on the frequency with which it was being pronounced. Before you could say Jack Robinson, between the commentator and the three or four people he interviewed, I'd already reached 20. Hasn't all this got to such a point that if you don't effuse about all or nothing you can even find yourself giving offence?

In contrast to this unbridled Anglo-Saxon enthusiasm for all things great and small, the Gallics seem to paint a far truer picture of how things really are. During my bachelor years when I lived at home, I once invited a French friend to come and stay with us for a few days. Now since Jean-Paul was an English teacher in France his English was above all reproach. I distinctly remember the first family meal we ate together. It was a Sunday lunch and, in order to give him a taste of traditional English fare, Mum had prepared a succulent joint of beef accompanied by three or four vegetables, Yorkshire Pudding and gravy. The speed with which Jean-Paul transferred the generous contents of plate to stomach seemed to indicate that Mum's culinary efforts had not been in vain, and - certainly fishing for compliments - she enquired rather insistently whether he'd enjoyed the meal.

'Yes, it was fine,' he replied.

The fleeting look of disappointment which crossed Mum's face was enough to convince Jean-Paul that somehow he'd not quite said the right thing. But he didn't for the life of him know why. So afterwards, when we were alone together, he asked me whether it wouldn't have been more judicious to use that other four letter word so ubiquitously applied by the English to anything vaguely pleasant. I replied that it would perhaps have been better to use the word 'nice', but not so much because of its meaning, which is more or less the same as 'fine'. For such are the intricate mysteries of the English language that the main advantage of 'nice' is that it can be preceded by 'very'. 'Bien,' retorted Jean-Paul, 'ça y est, je comprends!' I should have said 'It was very nice!' Even though this would have been more acceptable, I retorted, if he had really wanted to play it safe a duo or even a trio of 'verys' would have gone down a treat - though four was going a bit too far. But, I added, if he wanted to avoid this kind of unimaginative repetition, the choice was certainly not lacking, and the use of a single word like 'marvellous', 'fabulous', 'amazing' or 'stunning' would have more than done the trick.

Mind you, my disapproval does admit one exception: I've always sympathized with those who spend their professional lives pretending to be other people - usually larger than life - and I can understand their off-stage inclination to embellish humdrum reality with one or two enthusiastically-chosen words. But now, every Tom, Dick and Harry seems to be at it. I mean, I've no recollections of such generalized verbal extravagance in my, admittedly, dim and distant youth. Or am I just an ageing, backward-looking killjoy who's lost all zest for life?

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Shamanic Out-Of-Body Experience and the Computer

Shamanic Out-Of-Body Experience and the Computer..

Altered states of consciousness have various descriptors including trance, hallucination, or hypnotic state. Whatever the description there are certain identifiable traits or characteristics. As a shaman travels to another realm, he or she may experience any number of these characteristics. Chief among these are the following:

Different sense of time

Change in emotional expression

Dissolution of the boundaries between self and environment

Visual imagery

A sense of the ineffable.

Out-of-body experience

This last characteristic of an altered state of consciousness has made international news. Contemporary researchers claim they have developed virtual-reality avatars to simulate out-of-body experiences (Feb. 17, 2011. The Guardian, UK). The group successfully 'projected' people into digital avatars that could move around in a virtual environment. According to the group's report, the participants experienced the digital body as if it were their own. The study did not address the altered state of consciousness created through hypnosis to allow an out-of-body experience. Nor was there any indication of an emotional change in the participants.

The Telegraph (UK) (Feb. 18, 2011) reported "Out-of-body experiences are just the product of a confused mind and that scientists now claim they have dispelled this myth by artificially creating an out-of-body experience using computers and cameras."

Neurologist, Olaf Blanke of the Brain Mind Institute of Ecole Polytechnique Federal de Lausanne, Switzerland, reported the study at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Even though both reports are interesting, neither expose the fact that the participants were aware they were using a computer program, and this may have impacted the assigned results. There is room to raise significant questions about the claimed role of the senses, particularly those of sight and touch in creating an artificial illusional world.

The shaman while in an altered state of consciousness senses his movement from one plane to another. Persons going through an out-of-body experience sense personal physical movement. When it is a shamanic created altered state of consciousness, however, all the senses come into play.

Advances in 3D production techniques and the availability of 3D television do not create the same experience as a shamanic trance. In the 3D experience, the person is the observer and is affected visually, for example, ducking because it appears something has been thrown at him. In this experience as in the experiments carried on in the Blanke study, there is no operative control by the participant. The shaman, however, is in control and directs his involvement. There is one additional difference between the computerized experience and the shamanic experience. The shaman seeks answers to a question for help with a person who is suffering, whereas the other, entertains.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Could Terrorists Hide Among The Homeless?

Could Terrorists Hide Among The Homeless?..

The defense of this country is only as strong as its weakest link. In most large cities there are many homeless people. How easy could that situation be exploited by terrorists? Homelessness, in most of the larger cities like in New York and Los Angeles, has become a way of life. No one seems to even notice the man sleeping under the bridge or in the cardboard box. No One Notices the person pushing the old battered shopping cart down the street.

If the Republicans get their way with the economics of the United States, it will in all likely hood create more homelessness. Cutting the safety net of the poor will only give terrorists easier access to the larger cities in this country. By having this third world like population of people in our country, we are creating a large security hazard in the largest population areas in our country. If terrorists ever decide to they can be in every city in this country, that does not do anything about homelessness. If I can think of this possibility, I'm sure so can others. It's just a matter of time before terrorists will do what I fear they will.

In New York the terrorist could be right now hiding in the subway or tunnels under the city planning their next attack. A man, who looks to be sleeping on a bench or in a cardboard box, could be getting information so that they can plan their next attack. That person, pushing that shopping cart, could be moving a bomb into place to later set off. To hide, among the invisible people, would be something that is easy to do. It has been done before, people who don't want to be noticed have done it. People who the police were looking for hiding in plain sight and it was never noticed.

What can you do about this possibility?

Make it so there are no homeless in the city where you live. You can do that by making sure the city where you live has programs that give shelter to the homeless and a place for them to live. Many of the homeless are without a home, because they suffer from mental illness. So good mental health care services are important to reducing homelessness. Drug use is another factor leading to homelessness, programs to reduce drug use will lower the rate of people without a home. The lower amount of homeless, the harder it would be for terrorists to hide by acting homeless.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Reincarnation Is Not for Everyone

Reincarnation Is Not for Everyone..

A Reincarnation Experience

Hovering over my last body, that of a man of around 45 years of age, the one thing on my mind was a job that had still to be done. Then in the spirit and with the Great Spirit of the Universe my next life was shown as a line stretched out ahead of me. It had ups and downs throughout the length of it and the age of 45 as a special time was marked out.

New Life Given

Standing then above my parents one month before my birth was impressed hard into my mind. The memory brought with me of these experiences has helped in the job that is now drawing to a close. It entailed understanding how the spiritual links work to protect the Children of the Spirit from harm and how it has brought them to the end times through unbelievable trauma, death on many occasions, and horrors.

The Day of the Lord

As matter can neither be created nor destroyed so the spiritual survive to go into different bodies and be reborn throughout what is described as the Day of the Lord. They have made enemies of religious dogma throughout this time and have many times been killed under horrible circumstances. Some burned alive, some tortured to death, and some taken by natural events along with the loss of children have all been part of their burden to bring them through to the end.

The Plan of God

These things have been laid out in prophecies that religious organizations have dismissed. Yet they spell out the plan of God. The blueprint for that is to make the Children of the Spirit worthy of their continuing existence and to make them better servants of the power they have within. So they, and they alone, reincarnate and continue on. The others who are not of God will all fade away.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Why Do People Tell Lies?

Why Do People Tell Lies?..

Affecting the World

It's a question a lot of people are asking right now. With the economy in the doldrums and many countries struggling to stay afloat, including the USA, the role of liars in world affairs is more important than ever. But wars, pollution, corruption, drugs, overpopulation and just about anything else affecting our survival can virtually be put down to a lie as a provocation.

Blatant Liars

Most folk believe what they are told, especially in a face to face situation. Blatant lies are worked on and refined until they sound feasible, even credible. Politicians are particularly adept at this kind of tactic to win voters and gain office. Reporters have also been known to work on a lie to make it sound truthful.

Scandals Sell

The hint of a scandal about someone in the limelight sells and there is big money to be made. Chasing celebrities for a shot that might go with such an exaggeration is what sends the paparazzi after them. Few people have regard for the effect on the individuals in question. Some pursuits can even lead to death when there is a hint of a good story.

Done for Reward

These cases make it seem like money and reward is at the center of the lie, and it is. People lie because they expect it will profit them in some way. Even children who are lied to about Christmas and the Easter Bunny are giving their parents satisfaction because they show their pleasure at the magic of having something suddenly turn up. So lies are also a part of the magician's toolbox.

Forgiveness by Religious Hierarchy

Some religious organizations forgive people their lies without penalty. They even go along with some of them, such as Christmas and Easter, and have their own tales of the divine to cover over.