Archive for October, 2009

no no nanette no girls in the guggenheim

Monday, October 26th, 2009

No No Nanette: No Girls in the Guggenheim?

Writen by Jennie Rosenbaum

Where The Girls Aren’t by Jerry Saltz: The programmatic exclusion of women is partly attributable to the art world’s being a self-replicating organism: It sees that the art that is shown and sold is made mainly by men, and therefore more art made by men is shown and sold. This is how the misidentification, what Adorno called a “negative system,” is perpetuated. I have been watching the trends on this with alarm, it is a true fact that women are under-represented in the art industry. The reasoning seems to be automatic response as mentioned in this article, but I wonder if there might be something else involved. Something at the core of womanhood.

Art is incredibly personal. women, generally being more in touch with our feelings, tend to create more personal art with less detachment than a male artist. That means that there is more invested emotionally, making it hard to then put a piece up for others to see, it is like being naked in a way, it’s very exposing.

Some of you have heard me refer to my paintings as babies. This is not an uncommon sentiment. the creation process is borne from deep within and lovingly created over time. It makes us laugh and cry and grow very attached. I do this that there is a reluctance sometimes among women artists (myself included) to sell their babies.. I mean pieces - will it go to a good home? will it be treated well and loved? and what is that curator doing with my baby?

Women are by nature just as competitive as men (and I will challenge anyone who says otherwise!) but I wonder if our personal attachment to our paintings may be creating some of the issues. I don’t think this is a bad thing, it creates a both and an empathy to the works that really comes across to the viewers. maybe we need to set aside our fears and worries about our babies and send them off to the galleries with a packed lunch, cry and then be proud that something we gave birth to is doing so well.

A lifelong passion for the human body, Jennie has studied anatomy and many aspects of Art and history. She has long felt a drive to create in everything she does, however it was a debilitating car accident that renewed her passion for art and has been a therapeutic escape while bridging the gap between a hobby and art. She works continually with her passion for the human body exploring contemporary styles and Media. Jennie also uses art as a cathartic release to explore her feelings about the car accident and her new disability. Her art is rich, frequently confronting and varied in style, context and meaning

Jennie was born in the USA and moved to Australia with her parents while young. She spent key years studying with her artist grandmother and excelled at art and design at school, winning several awards. Jennie has studied art and design at a university level and has worked in the design industry as well as in Information Technology and Project Management. Jennie now works as a full-time artist from her home in Melbourne, Australia.

can work ever be funny

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Can Work Ever Be Funny?

Writen by Peter Arkwright

Sometimes work can be the worst thing in life, it is generally viewed as nothing more than a means to an end. Most of the time the only thing that you really think about is, what am I going to do when I get out of this damm place. Then every now and again something very funny happens in work, and it changes your attitude, you realise work sometimes really can be enjoyable.

The following extract is a true story that happened about 5 years ago.

I worked as a vehicle engineer in the Army; I had slowly progressed through the ranks and eventually after 18 years had reached the rank of Staff Sergeant. I was responsible for the day to day repair of about 200 vehicles and 20 tradesmen.

One morning I was called into the ASM’s (Boss) office, he must have been bored as he informed me he was going to test the guys engineering and adaptability skills, I could feel myself starting to daydream. He had decided to test out the guys skills by having A Great Egg Race. The idea was for the tradesmen to manufacture a self powered machine, that must not contain anything metallic, that would carry an egg the furthest distance across the shop floor.. I tried to appear keen, however deep down I was wondering who would be in the snooker club that night.

The next morning I went into the ASM’s office and found him covered in cardboard and tape, “I will show the boys who can design a machine” he said, I left him to it. All day his meetings were cancelled and I was told not to bother him.

I must admit to being surprised how much interest The Great Egg Race had attracted. The young tradesmen had been split into groups of 3 and were busy designing and manufacturing all sorts of wonderful inventions. I went into the Boss’s office he was sat behind his desk with a smug look on his face. “It’s ready” he said, he opened his locker and showed me this cardboard ‘Thing’. He smiled so much I was sure he had fallen in love with the contraption, “That’s the winner”, he exclaimed.

The day had eventually arrived, morale was high as the afternoon would be spent drinking beer, also, the race was eagerly anticipated. After lunch the beer was flowing. It was nice to see the guys enjoying themselves. A few hours later the ASM called all the entries forward for the race. I must admit although not taking part myself I was very impressed by the intricate designs of the self propelled machines. The boss disappeared into his office, and came out beaming holding his baby. He was sure to win, a lifetime of engineering experience surely he would win the race. The eggs were issued to team captains. I will go first said the Boss this was greeted by moans from everyone. His egg was placed in the cardboard cockpit; it looked like a cardboard drag racer, powered by a very strong elastic band. The band was fully charged and we were ready. The time keeper screamed, “Stand by.GO”.

The boss released the beast, the cardboard wheels nearly set on fire they were spinning so fast, however the machine stayed stationary, eventually the ‘Beast’ did move, it flipped upside down and cracked the egg.

I tried for a second to control myself, however it really was no use - I fell on the floor laughing, I simply could not control myself. What made it worse was when the Boss started screaming he was having another go. He was however informed his rules stated contestants were only issued with one egg.

Eventually for fear of repercussions a new egg was issued to the boss, he would get another go at the end. Take 2 for The Beast, this time the rubber band was charged even tighter. With a new egg strapped in the cockpit the fully charged machine was released. This time it jumped forward and the took off, in fact it screamed forward, all I recollect of the second attempt was this thing screaming across the shop floor being chased by over 50 people, in the middle of them was the boss, jumping up and down like a schoolboy screaming “Go on you beauty”.

The rest of the afternoon was spent drinking more beer, every time I looked at the boss’s beaming face I cracked up with laughter. This small incident reminded me that I should not really take work so seriously, at times it can actually be fun.

http://www.bizseller4u.com

  • Interested in selling your business?
  • the dating game

    Sunday, October 25th, 2009

    The Dating Game

    Writen by Robert Baird

    Lord Renfrew, Disney Professor of Archaeology at Cambridge University states: “Archaeologists all over the world have realized that much of prehistory, as written in the existing textbooks, is inadequate. Some is quite simply wrong. What has come as a considerable shock, a development hardly foreseeable just a few years ago, is that prehistory, as we have learnt it is based upon several assumptions which can no longer be accepted as valid..”

    We are not sure about many things at this juncture. The date of the Tarim Basin culture seems to have radio carbon dates as well as other data that could place it anywhere from before the Ice Age to 2000 B.C. The same can be said for many things in Peru. Poverty Point might be the origin of the Iroquois that the Canadian Encyclopedia took all the way back to 4000 BC. but we have many experts who won’t go further back than 1700 B.C. for this location. Thankfully Jennings is more in line with our proposed history that makes it a Stonehenge-era artifact when he says it does not fit in the Archaic Period. The matter of mounds that start in 5500 B.C. as burial chambers in L’Anse Amour certainly is in keeping with the New Grange complex that was used for more than funerary purposes. Mounds may have become Pyramids and certainly the Cahokia and Caral (Peru) pyramids were for more than funerary purposes.

    Yonaguni has the base of a pyramid and people lived on it just as the Caral site people did near Lima. It may be as old as 17,000 years and is certainly over 9,000 years old as we will see in a later chapter. Dating games are frequent in the jungle of academics and the Pyramids in Egypt have been dated by the American Research Center in Egypt in ways the ‘official’ Egyptologists like Hawass are never reporting. The Pyramid known (falsely) as Cheops is 450 years older and even older than the step pyramid of Zoser according to their data.

    The Olmec have been found in the Caribbean as far back as 5,000 B.C. even if they didn’t build huge centers at that time. My research puts the earliest Mu people coming to Mayan lands around 6500 BC. and recent archaeology has found a site through satellite photos that dates to 400 BC. When I was there in 1993 the Mexican government was stating the Mayan civilization was not earlier than Christ and few if any remained. Despite all these differing dates you will be able to make decisions. Some of those decisions will reflect on the nature of the academic morass that gets funding from the people who are directing our beliefs. In the end we hope the newer technical equipment that Dr. Robins worked on at the Getty Institute in Santa Monica after writing his book The Secret Language of Stone will enable more ancient dating just as Dr Thorne’s team has done with the Mungo Man and Nanking man. It was exciting to hear these biological remains can now be dated and analyzed to the extent that we now know Neanderthal had refined drugs 90,000 years ago.

    The ziggurats may be the source of the colloquial saying that has certain descriptions of excrement flowing downhill. The nobles certainly joined the priests near the top of these urban dwellings. Is there a greater library the world has ever known than the Great Pyramid at Giza, because of its mathematical and construction precision? The astronomical and other placements, such as being at the center of the earth’s land masses; and then we should consider Time and measurements of all variety are here as well.

    There is so much to be learned from all these structures and the civilizations that lived on them and in some cases (Not Giza) used them to maintain the spirit of their departed loved ones. However, the following article from May 27, 2001 in the Toronto Star gives us insight into the way academia ’spins’ the artifacts to make it seem they are finding things that add to their existing perception while fighting for their own personal glory rather than honoring the greats of human history.

    “Lima, Peru

    A stunning archaeological find in Peru–the ruins of what researchers believe to be the oldest city in the Americas–has sparked acrimony in the international academic community. {Nothing like the fraud of the University in Colorado who got funding to ‘discover’ Savoy’s Gran Pajaten or Villaya ruins that were already in the local tourist guide books.}

    A team from Peru’s San Marcos University has painstakingly excavated the arid hillocks above the River Supe north of Lima to reveal the sacred ruins of Caral–a city with six ancient Pyramids, an amphitheatre and residential complex dated to as early as 2627 BC. ‘In these structures of stone, mud and tree trunks we find the cradle of American civilization,’ says Ruth Shady, who is leading the excavations.

    The operation is being hailed as the most exciting digs in Peru since 1911, when Yale archaeologist Hiram Bingham stumbled on the ruined Inca citadel of Macchu Picchu hidden in the clouds of the craggy Andean highlands.

    Anthropologists working at Caral believe the windswept ruins 20 kilometres from the Pacific Ocean will provide a glimpse of the birth of urban society in the Americas and may challenge theories that the earliest civilizations settled by the sea.

    They say a priestly society built the stone structures without the aid of wheels or metal tools almost a century before the Egyptians erected the Great Pyramid at Giza.

    The remains, 200 kilometres north of Lima in a coastal desert between the Andes and the ocean, predate Macchu Picchu by three millennia and are some 1100 years older than Olmec in Mexico, the oldest city in the Americas outside Peru.

    Shady accuses U.S. anthropologist Jonathan Haas of Chicago’s Field Museum of trying to steal the credit for seven years of her hard work.

    ‘The problem is that he has presented Caral as his discovery, when my team has been investigating here since 1994, sleeping on the ground and working tirelessly to uncover it,’ an irate Shady says in her cluttered Lima office.

    Haas helped Shady carbon-date reed matting from Caral last year after he became interested in the site in 1996. The two co-wrote a paper in the April edition of ‘Science’ magazine.

    ‘I think there has been a misunderstanding,’ Haas told Reuters by telephone from Chicago, adding that U.S. media had played up his role. ‘I never wanted to take any credit from Ruth for her discovery.’

    Up to 10,000 people may have inhabited the 65-hectare site at Caral, archaeologists believe, and its construction suggests a regional capital with urban planning, centralized decision-making and a structured labour force.

    For a nation subjugated by 16th-century Spanish conquistadors, who ransacked its rich indigenous culture in a frenzied lust for gold, such discoveries testify to the long heritage before the arrival of Europeans in what they dubbed the “New World.”

    ‘I hope this will help Peruvians understand their history,’ says archaeologist Rodolfo Peralta, 31.

    ‘Otherwise, people will think our history is just a tale of being conquered by the Spanish.’

    One of the many riddles confronting archaeologists at Caral is why the inhabitants abandoned the settlement. Like all pre-conquest civilizations in Peru, the inhabitants left no written records and the Caral settlement was too early even to have ceramics or more than the most basic tools.

    ‘One theory is that a drought produced a famine which forced the city dwellers to move on,’ says Peralta, noting that the residents painted many buildings black in the final stage of habitation, {This fits with the quarantining of plagues such as the Marmot to rat-carried plagues known as the Black Death that cycled through the Altaic regions for millennia per modern research, and per the work of William of Rubruck who knew how to stop the plague years before the Catholics he reported to brought it to the Americas. Churchill acknowledges it was used as a culling societal tool.} after originally colouring them white for purity.

    It appears the inhabitants of Caral believed the buildings were divine, dotting their homes and temples with tiny alcoves, filled with dried-mud figurines. {’Buildings were divine’ is a stretch. The reality of earth energy and the spiritual world was better known to these people than the archaeologist who wants to make them seem backward, I suggest.}

    Subsequent civilizations never occupied the site but apparently revered it, leaving gold and silver at its perimeters.

    South America’s most advanced pre-conquest civilization, the Incas, built temples on its outskirts. {The Incas had great doctors who did brain surgery and their government was the template Bacon used for his utopian ideas. However they are not the builders of Tiahuanaco and other huge constructions including 500 Ton rocks. The Spanish encouraged them to make such claims, including the Easter Island statues. It is a total fabrication as we will see. It involves very horrific deeds and genocide in the not too distant past on white people in Easter Island.}

    As with the Mayans who ruled Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras around AD 300, the construction of religious pyramids at Caral– including one that stands 20 metres high and a staggering; 150 metres long–suggests the existence of a theocracy.

    But the inhabitants of Caral differed from the Mayans by living in their ceremonial centres, Peralta says. {A debate exists on this point, in my mind. If he had been to Chichen Itza and if he saw the obvious markets and sports or entertainment centers, or read Thomas Merton’s descriptions; would he say this?}

    Rooms and courtyards on top of the terraced mounds suggest they had both religious and administrative purposes. Varied housing also suggests a stratified society, with separate residential areas for the priestly and labouring classes. {But why not commercial and trading people rather than priestly? What real evidence for the constant sacrificial and overt religious dominance presented exists? The ‘Devoted Ones’ of the Bible as presented in Gifts of the Jews by Cahill, which was backed by various Christian churches, says they are sacrificial victims. Sacrifice of the young was common among Phoenicians and Roman women had the right to decide the issue of whether to raise a child or not. What we call abortion is not new or far different than sacrifices. The ancients often respected the soul of the child going to their death better than we do, by rituals of freeing the soul.}

    There are also signs that Caral had the earliest known system of crop irrigation in the Americas. Coastal artefacts, including 32 pipes made of pelican bones and copious anchovy and sardine bones, suggests their residents may have traded their cotton and fruit crops with fishing communities in return for food. Researchers expect to learn much more about the daily lives of the people when they uncover the city’s cemetery. ‘You can tell a lot from a culture from the way they bury their dead.’ Peralta says. Excavations already have exhumed a skeleton from the walls of one home, where it was buried. Researchers say it was not a human sacrifice.”(1)

    You can also tell a lot about a group of people who dig up the graves of the past and project their current immoral views of reality upon past civilizations. The matter of putting people in buildings has a long history. When we say putting people in buildings we mean just that. The person, who would ritually give their life to consecrate an edifice for posterity, may often have vied for the opportunity.

    In other books I have reported various results or explorations in South America by the likes of Gene Savoy and the Heliopolitan religion his people are re-energizing. This most recent find adds to many most intriguing South American sites that need integration in any true world history. The Heliopolitan Druidic ‘travelers’ that are the Chachapoyas and elites of this region were all over South and Central America. This recent discovery adds to the work of the great discoveries of Gene Savoy as well as what is yet to be opened for international study at the Madre de Dios pyramid complex in Brazil.

    “They found a plaza with ceremonial doorways aligned to Machu Picchu, which can be seen in the distance, across the Aobamba canyon. They also found a two-storey temple, which faces the rising sun.

    The team believes one part of the site was a sun temple, like that found at Cuzco. They found a ceremonial passageway that seemed to have been aligned precisely on the sun and the Pleiades star cluster, used as a seasonal indicator for the planting of crops.

    The only previous identification of the main part of the site had been by Hiram Bingham, the American explorer, in 1912, but he gave an inaccurate account of the position of the “Inca fortress”.

    The Thomson-Ziegler expedition both re-located this sector of several square kilometres, which is much bigger than Bingham realised, and also identified as many as five sectors spread out across a hillside, making Llactapata a settlement of some magnitude.” (2)

    REFERENCES:

    1) The Toronto Star, May 27, 2001, by Daniel Flynn of Reuters, ‘Scientists Squabble over sacred ruins’, pg. F7.

    2) From the telegraph news in the UK on November 7, 2003 we have an excerpt from an article by Science Editor Roger Highfield titled Explorers find the lost ruins of sacred Inca city.

    Author of Diverse Druids
    Columnist for The ES Press Magazine
    Guest ‘expert’ at World-Mysteries.com

    read this article if you want to hunt the spotted owl

    Sunday, October 25th, 2009

    Read this Article if You Want to Hunt the Spotted Owl

    Writen by Lance Winslow

    There is a growing number of Americans who are sick and tired of the Sierra Club’s attack on the country and their incessant lawsuits. One of the biggest jokes out West is when people talk about the Spotted Owl. The spotted owl was on the endangered species list for years and each time a business wanted to cut down a tress for timber or to expand a business or build a log cabin, the Sierra Club would sue if they did not include in their Environmental Impact Report EIR they effect this would have on the spotted owl.

    Many a construction project, much need pipeline, utility power poll or road was not build due to the effect this might have on the hunting grounds of the Spotted Owl. Recently I was in a coffee shop and I was discussing with a friend the abusive lawsuits and junk court filings of the spotted owl. He asked me if I knew what those spots were for?

    I told him know, that I assumed it was like a Zebra or any other species which had such markings, it may have had some evolutionary reason for attracting a mate or possibly to blend into the scenery like camouflage to aid in hunting or to keep from being hunted. He said no silly. The real reason that those owls have spots is so you line up your rifle sights on them. They are like targets he explained.

    Well we both had a laugh, but then he said well we are going to have to kill them anyway. I asked why? He said they are very prone to be carriers of Bird Flu. Not sure if that is true but it kind of makes sense. Think on it.

    Lance Winslow

    many senators are said to be closet homosexuals news report cannot be true

    Saturday, October 24th, 2009

    Many Senators are Said to be Closet Homosexuals; News Report Cannot be True?

    Writen by Lance Winslow

    Recently I read reports on the Internet and then I met another person at a coffee shop and both of them had confirmed that many senators are said to be closet homosexuals. In fact many lobbyists are known to be gay and they are actually prostitutes hired by corporations and the main goal is to get with the senatorial staffers in a very personal way.

    Often Senators and their staff will go to strategic planning meetings, which is a simple name for going out of the local pub in charging drinks on taxpayers money using government credit cards. At these meetings they will be joined by gay prostitutes hired by corporations as lobbyists and work very hard to get something straight between them on a particular issue that the Senator will be voting on.

    Many senators are said to be closet homosexuals and one has to ask if these news reports are actually true. Many people who work in Washington D.C. say that they are. My personal opinion; I do believe that many senators are closet homosexuals and I know their staffers to be because you can tell when you call them on the phone by their lisps.

    It is unfortunate that the homosexual community is only 2 percent of our population yet seems to represent a huge percentage of the number of Senators and the number of people on their staff and the incredible number of them who work in Washington D.C.. It would make sense that if two percent of our population is gay, then two percent of the people who work in Washington D.C. would be homosexuals, we need to demand fair and equitable ratios, after all isn’t that what the liberals preach?

    We seem to have a problem in Washington D.C. with the ratio of homosexuals to straight people and straight people seem to becoming a minority there, this is not fair. In fact something needs to be done about it. Please consider this in 2006.

    Lance Winslow

    ten things to worry about and ten not to worry about lets make a list

    Saturday, October 24th, 2009

    Ten Things To Worry About And Ten Not To Worry About; Let’s Make A List

    Writen by Tom Attea

    In these worrisome times, we note that we’re inclined to become so occupied with worry that we lose sight of our obligation to set aside a prudent portion of our lives to be glad we’re alive, so when the trip is over, we can think, Gee, I’m glad I was born. Now, I can croak with a smile.

    In an effort to help free our minds for a reasonable amount of worry-free time, we thought we’d make a list of things we ought to worry about, but with discretion. And, since dire events seem determined to occupy a certain part of our thinking time, we’d like to note, even more importantly, ten indications of the things we don’t have to worry about.

    First, ten things we should take at least some time to worry about.

    1. The Debac in Iraq

    2. The Israeli-Hezbollah-Hamas Triangle

    3. Osama Bomb Laden

    4. America, Bushwhacked

    5. Global Warming, Especially Thunderstorms On The Weekend

    6. Mortgage Payments, Credit Card Bills, And Tax Audits

    7. Child And Adult Molesters

    8. Dumb Movies That Make Millions

    9. Songs People Love That Say Nothing

    10.Books That Reduce Your Intelligence

    Second, here are ten things we don’t have to worry about, at least, not that often:

    1. Brad And Angelina’s New Baby

    2. Donald Trump’s Hair

    3. Who Will Be The Next Miss America

    4. The New TV Season

    5. Whether Or Not GM Will Ever Make A Car That Can Compete With Toyota

    6. Whether Or Not Bill And Hillary Still Make Love

    7. Whether Or Not George And Laura Still Make Love

    8. How Much More Weight Dennis Hastert Will Gain

    9. Whether Or Not The Theater Can Recover From Its Monetary Bent And Imbecilic Critics

    10.How Much Muck We Have In Our Coronary Arteries

    Tom Attea, humorist and creator of NewsLaugh.com, has had six shows produced Off-Broadway. Critics have called his writing “delightfully funny,” “witty,” with “great humor and ebullience” and “good, genuine laughs.”

    the biggest hairstyle nightmares ever

    Friday, October 23rd, 2009

    The Biggest Hairstyle Nightmares Ever

    Writen by Suzie Springer

    Hideous, horrifying, horrendous - we are talking about some of the biggest hairstyle nightmares ever. Styles that make you go, “eeks, what was she thinking” or worse, “did he just got out of the bed for the party”. Here are a few of the most talked-about hair disasters:

    Worst 3 Female Hairdos

    Diana Ross: Ain’t no hairstyle high enough? One look at her and we can’t help but wonder, “hasn’t she heard about a scrunchy?”

    Pink: Unbelievable as it sounds singer Pick has got a huge male fan following. They will do anything to have a date with her but more than a candlelight dinner they would rather take her to a salon. Ok fine, we understand there is a personal style statement to make. But a combination of a hedgehog-inspired hairdo with the color pink goes kind of overboard.

    Jordan: Is this model the industry ambassador of peroxide? And why did she have to offset the hair with a tan? We are still figuring out that.

    Worst 3 Male Hairdos

    Prince Charles: There are many out there who would like Prince Charles to succeed to the throne. At least that way, he can hide his hair-like-thing underneath the huge crown. But sad even if he succeeds to the throne, he just can’t let his hair down!

    Tom Hanks in Da Vinci Code: Do we need to say anything about this? It must have made Dan Brown twinge with horror. Tom, Robert Langdon = professor = nerdy = long hair makes a wrong equation.

    Donald Trump: He can be unarguably the most wanted model for all makeover shows. After all, all you need is a couple of snips here and there and you have the easiest, most inexpensive makeover ever possible.

    Other celebrities like Li’l Kim, Christina Aguilera, Cherie Blair, Camilla Bowles gave our top 3 winners hot competition in the female category. The male category saw a fierce battle where the winners tossed aside David Spade, Sean Penn and Eminem.

    Thanks for reading. If you found this article helpful you can get more tips, information, and more articles on my website: http://www.sizzlinghairstyles.com

    the dill weed battle

    Friday, October 23rd, 2009

    The Dill Weed Battle

    Writen by Joanne Robbins

    I was making a simple fish recipe for supper and opened my spice cupboard for the salt, etc which the recipe called for. A shadow just left of the paprika and moving toward the dill weed catches my attention and behold a shiny black cricket is caught in the glare of my fluorescent ceiling light.

    This is up-close and personal - not the sit back in your easy chair and watch the Discovery Channel type of educational encounter. This bug was looking back at me with his tiny beady cricket eyes! It was almost a double-dog dare you stare down!

    He quivered and twitched running headlong into the lemon-pepper rebounding against the chili powder, but I was quick too. With moves Jackie Chan would be proud of I pounced on that bug using dill weed as my weapon.

    He’s a wily character, taking advantage of my fear and loathing by creeping under the spice rack, leaving one twitchy foot exposed. Throwing the spice rack to the kitchen floor and using perfect wrist action I managed to crunch and mangle his left side. The cricket just laid there whimpering and doing the one shoulder, twitchy-chirpy thing until the dill weed struck again leaving him in smaller parts and pieces - and well on his way to that great bait shop in the sky.

    Days later, in the dark, far cabinet corners and stuck under the spice rack, there are small reminders of the cataclysmic meeting of a cricket, the dill weed, and me.

    Joanne Robbins has published a wide variety of articles off-line. Robbins current project, slated for December 2006, will address the needs of senior citizens and those who buy for them. Watch for http://www.Boomer-Gear.com

    great history of the thai royal family

    Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

    Great History of the Thai Royal Family

    Writen by James Bukovsky

    Thai Royal Family - Thai King

    We will take you from the present Thai King to the former great Thai Kings that can be found in the history books of Thailand.

    The Thai King is the ceremonial head of state in a constitutional monarchy. Thailand has been a constitutional monarchy since 1932 just following a government overthrow.

    The present Thai King, His Majesty King Bhumibol, ascended the throne fourteen years later, after King Ananda Mahidol, his older brother, passed away. King Bhumibol is the longest reigning king in Thai history and the longest ruling monarch in the world.

    Respect for the Thai King

    Thais show great deal of love and respect to the Thai king. No one insults or talks negative about the Thai King and the Thai Royal Family as any criticism the Thai monarchy will result deep offense to Thai people and can cause legal actions.

    It is not permitted under Thai law to speak in a negative way of the Thai Royal family and especially the Thai King. This offence can carry a maximum sentence of seven years in jail which is a horrible sentence considering the poor state in which Thai jails are.

    The majority of Thai households have pictures or paintings of the Thai King and even his predecessors in their homes. Many Thai people meet up in the famed Sanam Luang Bangkok Park each December when the Thai King has his birthday at which time they celebrate this national holiday so as to honor their beloved King.

    The Thai King holds a much anticipated birthday speech each year and the King is known for speaking his mind and having his speech not being affected by political influence of any current government.

    The former government of Prime Minister Takshin has been the focus of a recent speech and soon after his government was overthrown during a coup d’etat..

    King Rama IV - King Rama V

    The royal Chakri dynasty has held the power ruled Thailand since 1782. King Rama IV and that King’s son, King Rama V, has been very popular and beloved Thai King’s alongside with the present Thai King, King Bhumibol.

    King Rama IV and his son have been credited with the modernization of the Thai Kingdom in the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries.

    Royal Thai King Rama V’s changes included for example the 1st hospitals that were available to all people and for building an extensive Thai rail network. More importantly, King Rama IV was also the Thai monarch that finally got rid of slavery which has been a blemish on Thai history.

    You can read more about this history of the Thai Royal Family at the authors website. Please visit Thai Kings section of the Bangkok Guide for the remaining half of this article.

    ml chi zadok and the making of gold

    Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

    ML - CHI - Zadok and the Making of Gold

    Writen by Robert Baird

    ATOMIC HIGH-SPIN TECHNOLOGY: - In 1950 B.C. there was a priest-king in Salem who understood the ‘highward fire-stone’ according to Gardner in ‘Genesis of the Grail Kings’. His name was Melchizedek, and there is a secret or inner sanctum group of Mormons who follow his lead. The Mason (Joseph Smith was a 33rd Degree Mason, Brigham Young was a Mason too.) who founded this religion followed a path tred frequently in the expansion of esoteric manipulation. It continues to this very day with the OTO offshoots, Scientology and many other cults who believe in some very ‘freaky’ things. Most of the lay people will never get to know the ulterior motives of those who lead such organizations. The whole of the United States is one of their experiments according to many authors who have done excellent research in the matter. We will leave that portion of the issue until the next segment even though it isn’t much of a ‘mystery’. There are many things a reader should consider before jumping (or attempting to) across that chasm.

    “As to why the fire-stone was called ‘highward’ by the ancient Mesopotamians, we shall now discover as we enter the realm of high-spin metallurgy. {Solomon was a very adept person in metallurgy and other things of this order known as Rosicrucianism or Christian ‘mystery schools’ of the Masonic ‘octopus’. I use ‘octopus’ as a way of trying not to have to list names and titles that would fill this book.}

    THE TRANSMUTATION OF GOLD

    Before commencing this section, it must be stressed that because of the potentially dangerous nature of an enterprise which deals with high-spin atoms, the explanations will be purposefully veiled and guarded. The following is, therefore, presented as a general overview, without detailing specific weights, temperatures, conditions or laboratory burn-times. This will prevent any ill-advised experimentation by unqualified enthusiasts and will avoid the contravention of prevailing international patents which govern the practice. {Yes, Modern science is able to do the alchemical ‘Great Work’ as a purely physical thing now.}

    To begin, we should consider statements concerning the Philosophers’ Stone made by the alchemists Lapidus and Eirenaeus Philalethes: ‘The Philosophers’ Stone is no stone, but a powder with the power to transmute base metals into gold and silver,’ (25) and,

    The stone which is to be the transformer of metals into gold must be sought in the precious metals in which it is enclosed and contained. It is called a stone by virtue of its fixed nature, and it resists the action of fire as successfully as any stone - but its appearance is that of a very fine powder, impalpable to the touch (imperceptible, like talcum powder), fragrant as to smell, in potency a most penetrative spirit, apparently dry, and yet unctuous, and easily capable of tingeing a plate of metal. The stone does not exist in nature, but has to be prepared by art, in obedience to nature’s laws. Thus, you see our stone is made of gold alone, yet it is not common gold. (26)

    Each of these testimonies refers to the enigmatic stone being, in actuality, a fine powder, and in talking of the precious metals within which the stone is contained, modern practitioners refer not only to gold and silver but also to those metals which comprise the platinum group. These metals, along with platinum itself, are palladium {Remember this when we get to cold fusion, under the Lithium heading.}, iridium, osmium, rhodium and ruthenium - and because of their ultimate strengths they are used in surgical, optical and dental instruments, crucibles and thermo-couples, machine-bearings, electrical switch contacts and all manner of precision devices down to the tipping of needles and pen-nibs.

    The metal that, in jewellery manufacture, is commonly known as ‘white gold’ is an alloy of gold coupled with palladium, which is said to have been first discovered in Brazil, California and the Urals in 1803, and was named after the asteroid Pallas in that year. Iridium, osmium and rhodium are also given the same date of discovery, with ruthenium following in 1843. However, the platinum-group metals were not truly discovered in the nineteenth century, this was at least one of them, namely iridium, was rediscovered, for iridium was originally a key fire-stone of ancient Sumer. Because of its bright silvery colour and the then non-invention of its latter-day name (applied in 1803 by virtue of its iridescence), the mysteriously described shining metal was long presumed from the old records to have been tin.

    Iridium is a very rare element on Earth, but geologists have discovered its existence in quantities up to thirty times the norm in crust layers where extraterrestrial meteorites containing the substance have landed in the distant past. (27) Iridium is, therefore, not so uncommon outside our own planet {He later notes that rhodium and iridium make up 5% of the brain’s clarified weight and suggests our alien ancestors needed it to maintain their power or Divine nature. This is one reason for eating live animal pineal glands to enhance psychic ability. If those ‘animals’ have some of their own DNA it is better; so you might know why they harvest fetal material from Scarlet Women now.} The Sumerians and ancient Egypt clearly knew about the properties of gold and of how to alloy it with other noble metals. The Master Craftsmen were adepts too in the workings of iridium, which just like gold, could be taken to the exotic ‘highward’ state of the ’shem-an-na’.

    This means that they not only knew and worked with these metals, but that they understood the science of atoms and nuclei - for the ‘highward’ state of the white powder is only achieved through knowledge of the high-spin metallurgical experience. Only by understanding this part-physical and part-metaphysical science can one take a physical something and turn it into nothing by applying the principle of 0=(+1) + (-1). {The IO Torus, Logos and Harmonics are all associated}Interestingly, the high-spin powder of gold has a distinct effect upon the pineal gland {See entry on Thalami} and its increased melatonin production, while the equivalent powder of iridium has its similar effect on the serotonin production of the pituitary gland.

    Although the current names of the platinum-group metals are relatively new to us, the metals themselves are far from new. Recent tests have shown that, by dry-matter weight, over 5 per cent of our brain tissue is composed of iridium and rhodium in the high-spin state. (28)

    So, what precisely is the highward or high-spin state which converts these noble metals into an impalpable white powder? A normal atom has around it a screening potential - a positive screening produced by the nucleus. The majority of electrons going round the nucleus are within this screening potential, except for the very outer electrons. The nucleus goes to the highward or high-spin state when the positive screening potential expands to bring all of the electrons under the control of the nucleus. {Refer to Solid State chemistry and the work of Don Robins as it relates to ’scavengers’, microphages in the genetic structure also have an effect that may be similar. Can the meta-mind attune these electrons and bring their forward and reverse spins into conjunction?}

    These electrons normally travel around the nucleus in pairs - a spin-forward electron and a spin-reverse electron. But when these come under the influence of a high-spin nucleus {Is this a conscious act?}, all the spin-forward electrons become correlated with the spin-reverse electrons. When perfectly correlated, the electrons turn to pure ‘white light’ and it is impossible for the individual atoms in the high-spin substance to link together.” (29)

    Whether or not they can do these things today: they (Alchemists or Rosicrucians of the Great White Brotherhood of Master Craftsmen) certainly have done such things in the past. Did they learn the process from the remnants of a previous ‘modern’ human? That seems more likely to us than the alien explanation they want us to accept. Was there a program to keep these things super secret? There certainly should have been. In Morning of the Magicians Pauwels and Bergier tell about a meeting they had with Fulcanelli as well as a presentation he made to the Paris Academy of Sciences. One of these authors was a member of Heisenberg’s team of scientists working on splitting the atom and the other was the editor of ‘Earth’ magazine. Fulcanelli warned about the dangers of the atomic forces that science was about to unleash and he explained how the Cathedrals were constructed to include the knowledge they were seeking. I’ve read his book which purports to include the keys to this knowledge. It is extremely cryptic in nature but I think if one was to be able to create the green vitreole of the stained glass windows (no easy art, but available in other places) then it might be true.

    If these things are the explanation for Sodom and Gomorrah, or the vitrified rocks then we have some real concerns to address about our leaders and their willingness to do one thing and say another. It is very unlikely that this knowledge has not been the object of secret agents and the desire of monarchs and others’ concerns for many millennia. We know Crowley, Hitler, and guys like Barrett (’Secret Societies’) join the likes of Bacon and Dee in these quests. Truly power does corrupt and we know that when a few people have the power to do these kinds of things, it will eventually become a factor. The present situation seems to indicate that many people will have access to terrific uses of technology and we must not be as na