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Demons: let's try again (Read 45137 times)
Lucy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #75 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 7:38am
 
I remember reading, as a child (reading about saving the Lipizzaners in WW II) that Greorge S>. Patton, Jr.  1) believed war was a necessary evil and 2) he was good at fighting because he has reincarnated as a soldier so many times. I guess the fact that he talked about this in the time period he did just reflects his toughness (he died this time in 1945).

I found this statement about him on the web:

Patton, along with many other members of his family, often saw vivid, lifelike visions of his ancestors. Patton was a staunch believer in reincarnation, and much anecdotal evidence indicates that he held himself to be the reincarnation of the Carthaginian General Hannibal; a Roman legionnaire; a Napoleonic field marshal; and various other historic military figures.

http://george-patton.biography.ms/

There must be a book that has more detailed information on why hw thought that.

oh here is another anecdote
http://www.corrystuart.com/GeorgeSPatton.html

Oh I guess they discussed this in the Goerge C. Scott movie about Patton. Patton wrote a poem about his remembered experiences? I think a copy is here:

http://www.tasigh.org/kordite/glass-afterword.html

So if he wrote this poem before 1945, how come few took his descriptions seriously!

interesting lines:

So as through a glass, and darkly
The age long strife I see
Where I fought in many guises,
Many names, but always me.

And I see not in my blindness
What the objects were I wrought,
But as God rules o'er our bickerings
It was through His will I fought.

So forever in the future,
Shall I battle as of yore,
Dying to be born a fighter,
But to die again, once more.


I like this line!---
We used teeth before the sword.
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Rob_Roy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #76 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 9:07am
 
Lucy,

"It is hard to resist asking what you might be doing abut this? in the spirit of Robin Hood/MacGregor/Pretty Boy Floyd, of course!"

Increasing my self-knowledge, lucidity, and assististianability (sp). That's all I'm supposed to do at this time. More later.

"And to comment that as a part of our culture, we are the government! Democracy is a culture, not a government."

Thanks for the information. Having lived in one for fourty-one years and having read numerous books on the subject, I had no idea I was missing the obvious. But thanks for commentiing on it. Roll Eyes

"The worst thing our government has done...I am reminded of Mr. Lincoln's words about fooling the people....those in government have figured out how to fool the people, and we let it happen. That is the worst thing that has happened. Now that sort of foolery is embedded in the culture. We get distracted from the real issues by other things."

According to the definition of democracy you just reminded us of, we are fooling ourselves. So I suppose the first place to protest is in our own mirrors.

"I thought warfarin had to be ingested to be effective? Is it also effective when applied locally?"

An enema is the most effective means of application as it places the Warfarin closest to the body center and allows for its rapid absorbtion into the bloodstream.  Another unpleasant secret our government is hiding from us.  Wink

I was hoping the counter would come up on "666" for me but I got "777" instead."

It's broke. It just came to me that Aleister Crowley is trying to contact you. May I recommend the Toth Tarot?

All in jest.

Love,
Bob

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Lucy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #77 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 10:45am
 
sorry I didn't mean to insult your intelligence! The part about democracy being a culture...

Sometimes it is important to state the obvious....over and over.

A recent alumni news from one of my alma maters informs me that at least one professor has made a career out of studying what makes up the culture of democracy. This is in the context of ...when other countries try democracy, why does it work in place 1 but not in place 2?

The identified components of successful democracies are :

tolerance
legitimacy of democratic institutions
belief in the political equality of all people
questioning authority
education.

Do Bush et. al understand that maybe Iraq doesn't embrace all these components? what an uphill battle.

We ourselves have problems with those 5 components. But at least we can cite them as cultural values.

I think the problem for exporting this is obvious, but I also think we have trouble remembering to honor these in the homeland. Questioning authority is one we don't do enough. I mean, one of the elected members of the school committee once told me that he just defers to experts on matters of education. How do we raise so many "No brain, no pain" people???

Tolerance is hard, as we sometimes demonstrate here. We start out disagreeing on issues...that's ok that is part of questioning authority in my book...but someone it degenerates into name-calling. Not so good on the tolerance.

Of course, we have evolving challenges to these principles. Is my dislike of seeing instructions given in foreign languages a form of intolerance or a legitimate concern about colonization and loss of these 5 cultural elements? How much tolerance can we extend and still maintain what we are? I don't know.

This is too much of a digression from afterlife! But maybe you don't need demons to still get alot of problems.
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Rob_Roy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #78 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 1:33pm
 

"The identified components of successful democracies are :

tolerance
legitimacy of democratic institutions
belief in the political equality of all people
questioning authority
education."

--------------------------------

To this I would add civilian control of the military ('He who has the guns makes the rules').  All physical power in any government ultimately resides in it's monopoly on the use of force and the means to enforce it. A person can believe and protest all they want. A bullet that costs less than a dollar will end the argument. So it's important that that power is controlled by the elected representatives of the people and not by an outside force that cooperates for its own interests (which can change).


" Do Bush et. al understand that maybe Iraq doesn't embrace all these components? what an uphill battle."

Insurgencies usually are uphill battles. As to whether or not President Bush shares your understanding (or you his) is not a question I can address.

"I mean, one of the elected members of the school committee once told me that he just defers to experts on matters of education. How do we raise so many "No brain, no pain" people???"

Did you ask him? I don't expound at lengh on certain matters because, in the eyes of most people, I will never be an expert until I have the proper credential. Is he an expert on education? What exactly is an expert on education? Someone with the appropriate credential and hopefully some experience. Does he have these? No? Then I expect that most people will not give weight to his arguments, even if they are true. So why should he bother? Worse, should he present arguments that lay outside of his field of expertise, he risks being embarassed by someone who has the proper credential. This would damage his credibility accross the board.

That's not to say that there aren't good reasons for listening to those who are experts. But just being right is often not enough to get people to really listen to you and give the weight to your arguments that they deserve.

As for tolerance, I have often found that the people who demand tolerance are often very intolerant themselves. If we could love each other like we should then we wouldn't have these problems. What we CAN do is focus on what we should be doing, step back and let things be, and live first of all by simple trust. Focusing externally helps us avoid focusing within where our real issues are.

BTW, when I was in Germany they had an expression: If you speak three languages you are trilingual. If you speak two you are bilingual. If you speak one you are an American (or a Brit). Smiley 

Bob

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Steve_ED
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #79 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 1:34pm
 
About all of the biotoxins that are in use today:

I believe the human body is very capable of developing a resistance to toxic elements such as uranium and government run mind control methods.  In a free reality, a free body should have the right to rebell against unwanted control from by selfish entities, just as the entities and people have the freedom to push their mindcontrol on us out of freewill.  However if ones freewill is obstructing the will of another, there seems to be a paradox of sorts but who am I to say that slavery is not one of life's lessons too?

If you remember Star Trek's Borg, and how they addapted to nearly any threat they came across, I believe a similiar adaptation concept at the spiritual and physical level would help our race out a lot.  This would make external dictatorship nearly obsolete given the ineffectiveness of brainwashing and forced control.

Unfortunately, "LOVE OF MONEY & POWER" is a blinding pursit that, many in this world nearly, or fully worship.  The mindset "I gotta' keep working, gotta' keep making money!!" is sad because it's missing out of the central focus of life and places stress upon one's beling.  For example, travel to outer space and see just how powerful your money is there on another planet.  Wink

Making money is NOT evil and I do not condemn it as evil itself, but making it the purpose of life is blinding, and loving it at the exclusion of all else, starts many problems.

Looking at the ingredients of many foods today, many processed foods are stuffed with mystery brews and verbose chemicals that I am wondering if our government should be held guilty of biological warfare against it's people.  TV Dinners are by far some of the worst with over 50 ingredients for a semmingly simple dish.  This is one reason I shop at Trader Joes and specialty stores now.  I don't feel like eating a science experiment for dinner or eating MKULTRA for desert.   Grin (Joking a bit)
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dave_a_mbs
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #80 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 4:12pm
 
Rob-
I don't think it's political. What I strongly suspect is that the issue is one in which we see differences rather than similarities, and then set out to "fix things".  That leads to politics, but it also leads to cures for the common cold. But if your fix differs from mine, since we're both good people, we reach a dilemma in which definitions fail.

For your Good, since I see it from a different perspective, I will find something coresponding to my Bad, and vice versa. If we stay in the same reference frame, we might reasonably get into a major hassle. OR, if we look at it differently, we might find that it's all a matter of viewpoint, and there are no absolutes. Everybody is right, but not necessarily compatible.

dave
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Rob_Roy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #81 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 5:47pm
 
Dave,

I can usually argue both sides to just about any argument I care to participate in. I often will argue whichever position I think is needed to bring someone back to the center. It usually doesn't work!

I am against the war in Iraq and George Bush. My views are based on first hand experience. Accordingly, I have earned the right to say whatever the hell I want to say about that issue. Having said that, my loyalty in actual practice is intact, in keeping with my committment.

I have to really swallow the urge to browbeat those armchair analysts who haven't been inside the t.v. and think they know enough to lecture me on Iraq. Believing and knowing are two very different things.  But aside from that politics and religion happen to be my two favorite subjects which means I don't usually take the opinions of others personally and I assume they are Good people until they show me otherwise.

I would agree with the proposition that EVERYTHING is relative, and that our starting points and our perspectives heavily influence our conclusions. That is, when I remember to consider this!

Bob
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Lucy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #82 - Oct 8th, 2005 at 9:55pm
 
The Declaration of Independence is written in English.

Not being able to speak a second non-English language may be a mortal sin, but having to post information in non-English languages because the ones who are here to partake of the bounty have failed to learn the language of the Declaration of Independence hints at even deeper problems.

Obviously whatever great transformation is to occur must be something that enables us to get past this issue of he (well it usually is male) who has the gun rules. Can PUL be greater than physical force? Having to have clergy in the military always seemed like a failure of religion to me.

You have first-hand experience of Bush???


"Everybody is right, but not necessarily compatible. "   So how do we live together?
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Rob_Roy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #83 - Oct 9th, 2005 at 9:23am
 
Lucy,

It's my assumption that most of the souls who come to the US are carrying out their life plans.

As for learning English, it is one of the more difficult languages to learn, right up there with Arabic and Mandarin Chinese. I wouldn't be so quick to judge. Now one would expect after several years an immigrant would have a good grasp of our language. But that still takes years. Ever try to learn Arabic??

We have a very large Hispanic population. We are already a bilingual country, and we are in denial. Everything should be in both languages, especially in the Southwest, California, and Florida. And New York City.

As long as we have laws that allow immigration and we don't enfore our borders, then it naturally follows that we will have to deal with language issues. So there we are. By the way, we are practically married to Mexico, historically and demographically. That's just the way it is.

BTW, the word "American" does not signify a particular race, unlike: Jew, Irish, Mexican, Japansese, Thai, Arab, need I go on?

I have first hand experience of Bush's policies, and I did work under him, so the short answer is yes.

I will be gone for a few days anyway.

Bob
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« Last Edit: Oct 9th, 2005 at 7:27pm by Rob_Roy »  
 
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LaffingRain
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #84 - Oct 9th, 2005 at 5:12pm
 
Lucy, just wanted to say..quote: "We used teeth before the sword" I am meditating on that endlessly....reminded me of how a baby, a new spirit here,  bites to either defend itself or just testing it's power...hmmmm.
well, we might have a new topic pretty soon Grin
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Kardec
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #85 - Oct 10th, 2005 at 11:40am
 
Quote:
The Declaration of Independence is written in English.

because the ones who are here to partake of the bounty

Lucy


I felt the need of saying that:

I’ve spent some time to learn English but it was for fun I enjoy communication.

I’ve my own bounty here in My Country I’d like to say that I really don’t need to partake of yours. Of course if I would invited I would thank you all.

Be careful! Things change really fast now a days. No one knows tomorrow.
I might have (for instance) to learn a foreign language all of the sudden because I’ve noticed that nature doesn’t minds about language.

I promisse I'll stop with this kind of umpleasant post. (I promisse)
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My hope is to get there whatever does "there" mean...
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Lucy
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #86 - Oct 10th, 2005 at 12:20pm
 
Kardec

Your post was not the least bit unpleasant.

I can celebrate the diversity in the world. I can celebrate your command of a language other than your mother tongue. I don't worry if you don't embrace the Declaration or English.

We have internal situations in this country that I don't agree with but if you are not here that doesn't apply to you.

If I go to another country I expect to have to function in the language of that country.

Of course, I understand English has ben exported quite well and so this conversation may look different from another perspective. When my son went to Spain with the Spanish club last year, I expected him to practice his rudimentary Spanish. But everyone there wanted to speak in English! The Claymore style souvenir sword he spent all my money on in Toledo was purchased in English!

There is a problem here with so many Spanish-speaking people who won't learn English. I don't want this to be a country where it is OK to use Spanish in official documents (I don't care what language anyone uses at home). But in a way, we are a multi lingual country (But I still think English should be the official language). I rode the subway train into town this AM. The Chinese looking guy across the aisle was reading a newspaper in Chinese. The Indian looking guy next to me was reading the Metro (in English) , which carried an ad about learning to speak Herbrew. A trip to the ER to a city hospital last year taught me that information is available in ..at least 17 languages. People are entitled to ask for a translator if they speak one of these languages. I don't know how many languages for which there are translators in the court system...probably not 17, but at least several. We speak many languages here. I still think people should be able to read English before they can get a drivers' license.
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Kardec
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #87 - Oct 10th, 2005 at 1:07pm
 
Lucy,

You said: “...But in a way, we are a multi lingual country (But I still think English should be the official language)...”

I also love my own language so I can easily understand your point and I agree with you.

You said: “…If I go to another country I expect to have to function in the language of that country…”

Unfortunately the thousands of English people who travel to Brazil as tourists doesn’t seem to think akin you… Fortunately we are a humble people and we tend to look up to every one who comes from abroad so we really strength in order to understand and help then.

You said:”.. I don't worry if you don't embrace the Declaration or English…”

Lucy we have our own “declaration” here so of course that it’s the one I embrace. Unfortunately I still hadn’t had an opportunity to get in touch with yours, sorry.

I’m done – from now on I’ll behavior like a good boy I promise.
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My hope is to get there whatever does "there" mean...
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Re: Demons: let's try again
Reply #88 - Oct 10th, 2005 at 1:19pm
 
ha! Lucy, yes, it would behoove us  no end, that at least an immigrant know to read a stop sign, as cannot imagine that the gov would make a stop sign in two languages! is funny image.
I do admit I get a little frustrated when the instructions to something I assemble here in America come in 6 different languages and I realize I'm trying to read dutch.
America has always been the melting pot of the world and I think part of the frustration is concerned with  we take care of our immigrants but don't seem to give ourselves enough credit for feeding and assisting others to work programs and such. we believe so much in equal opportunity that America is respected all over the world, at the same we are despised for the same politics.  somewhere I came across somebody's projection of a world where we will make English the official language; perhaps in the united nations? this I discovered, the same as you, when I was in Germany as well Holland, they all spoke english ?? I guess it is taught in their schools. it amazed me. In France, it was a mix of french and english which had some funny results when conversing. in Italy, conversing with an Italian market propriator, he knew the word American Express card Grin   One universally adopted language and one form of commerce would tend to unify the world into a community rather than a bunch of separate countries trying to maintain patriotism and traditional values. so whatever, I continue to melt when appropriate and solidify when necessary, but oh, how I wish I could be here to observe a unifed peaceful world which considers communication within a common language a necessity and alternative to shoot first, ask questions later. maybe I am a dreamer then. because this language can only be formed within the heart and we are just not there yet in a universal sense. love to all, alysia
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