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    marye
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    When our previous topic hit the 1,000-response mark, sleazy behavior by politicians was eliciting a certain amount of non-astonishment.

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  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    The Indus River continues to flood...
    ...in the Swat Valley of Pakistan. More than a million are now homeless with thousands killed. The flooding from the monsoon is unprecedented and due to global warming. Those poor, poor people.To it's credit, Israel is helping Pakistan in this emergency. Perhaps there is hope for the world after all. The greatest security risk on the planet now is global warming. More moisture as the greenhouse effect takes over means vastly more precipitation in the form of rain or snow in increasingly ferocious storms. Massive dislocation of populations across national borders is now imminent. Will the snow be six to ten feet deep this winter where it was usually 3"-6"? I certainly hope not but we are far into the soup now that anything is possible, including that scenario from the movie about ecological catastrophe called The Day After Tomorrow. How could our country, the leader of the free world, obfuscated on this issue for so long? The corporate propaganda machine took over and still churns out a mass of bullshit and their bought and paid for lackeys in Congress won't pass a bill to cut CO2 emissions. This is total insanity. (Sorry, can't find any good news except the Jews helping the Muslims in Pakistan)
  • Hal R
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    the dream team
    gratefuldean, that was quite the team. I attended a meeting where Amory Lovins met with members of the Iowa Legislature (back when I lived there) about energy issues. This must have been about 20 years ago. If only his dreams and plans were undertaken. I remember he was also acting as a consultant to some branch of U.S. government or maybe even military to look at energy issues to decrease our dependence on mideastern oil and our involvement in the mideast issues as a national security issue and to save money and lives. But we had an oil president for 4 years and then an oil vice president (Gore) for the next eight. Brower was a great inspiration to me. The man did much to build the environmental movement and protect wild places. Young at heart even when he was old. Glad I was able to meet him on occasion, his spirit rubbed off on me. Keep it wild and free! If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. William Blake
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    Wow! Great conversaton today!
    Thanks for the interesting back and forth everybody. Guess we have to set aside a separate plate of CC cookies for Mr. Dean. No problem!
  • tphokie1
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    heavy words indeed
    I live among a lot of folks who seem obsessed with the book of Revelation. Funny how they seem to have overlooked that part! Most of them seem to think the Earth was put here to be used up!
  • johnman
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    heavy words
    to contemplate...................indeed!!
  • starsleeper
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    pollution solution ?
    Now please don't get angry but I just wanted to point out that in the Book of Revelation, chp. 11, verse 18,it says that God will "destroy them which destroy the earth". I've wondered how Saint John could have foreseen that one day mankind would be capable of destroying the earth when they didn't even know how big the earth was back then. I guess you could say God is the biggest environmentalist of us all. Let it be known There is a fountain That was not made By the hands of man Many blessings to you all
  • JackstrawfromC…
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    Coal, oil, natural gas, nuclear energy
    They all have detrimental impacts to the environment. You could make a case for pros and cons to each of them. "The dire wolf collects his due while the boys sing round the fire"
  • tphokie1
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    Coal vs oil
    I don't know a definitive answer to this either but I did live in the coal fields of VA for almost 8 yrs. Coal is a huge environmental hazard at the point of production. The entire area becomes covered with coal dust. Stores, houses, cars etc. The streams in the area are very polluted and some stink. They smell of sulfur etc. When mountain top removal mining methods are used things are even worse. Mining is very dangerous for the health and well being of those who do it. We've all heard about the recent catastrophes in WV, but this is a drop in the bucket to the miners who die or have a miserable quality of life from black lung and rock dust disease. Rock dust is the stuff they spread in the mines to keep down the coal dust and prevent explosions but this dust can be just as bad for the lungs of the miners as the coal dust. I'm not sure how the carbon footprint numbers compare for oil and coal which would be more relevant to answering johnman,s question, but I do know that coal production has a horrible impact on the environment surrounding the mines.
  • gratefaldean
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    Doing Well by Doing Good
    Before we got spun off, we were owned by a company whose chairman had an environmental epiphany in the mid-90s. Long story, but he assembled an environmental "Dream Team" to work on making the business sustainable in the true, and not greenwashed sense. The effort was completely sincere -- I believe that unequivocally. The team included Paul Hawken, whose book, "The Ecology of Commerce" prompted the epiphany; Amory Lovins, who is just a genius, I think; David Brower; Jon Picard; and a couple of others that I can't recall. McDonough was part of that team, but got dropped over some licensing issues (the money part), I believe. Those were very fun, very inspiring times for a traditional manufacturing plunderer of the earth. We're still carrying the torch, but this economy sure ain't making it easy. Chocolate chip cookies here, if you please... Oh yeah, the point was exactly that: if the entire world behaved as Americans do in terms of consumption...well, there just ain't enough world to go around.
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    I don't know which is worse, J'man
    Somehow I'm guessing coal because it is so dirty at the point of production. Not that oil isn't, just less so, I imagine. Maybe somebody has a definitive answer. And yer absolutely right that not all employees are justified at getting back at their boss. That is the other thing I notice living where I do. The amount of abysmally stupid people doing abysmally stupid things. If it's that bad in the rest of the country then I would say the Idiocracy is in full bloom. However, there is a law being drafted that would make a civil workplace mandatory and I say let the lawyers feast when the bill is signed. Owner/bosses would no longer have the right to bully, yell and belittle their employees in the workplace and I say it is high time for that. Past high time. There are a lot of businesses that have been passed down from parent to child where the habit of the parent becomes the habit of the child. That is, the bad habit of abusing their employees. I am extremely passionate on this subject. If the boss/owner can't control his mouth then let the wrath of shyster lawyers rain down on them like a tropical downpour. WE ALL DESERVE A CIVIL WORKPLACE and shouldn't have to put up with incivility from bosses, customers or other employees. Really. And no twinkie defense either (It was the junk food I ate, yer'honor. I really have no control when my blood sugar rises). Speaking of blood sugar J'man - I'm only giving you lo-cal cookies from now on. Here are some peanut ones.
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When our previous topic hit the 1,000-response mark, sleazy behavior by politicians was eliciting a certain amount of non-astonishment.
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Ahh, savor your victory! Too bad the 'snow' cup didn't make it to Barcelona, but I'm sure the party will go on...
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I meant "Plow" in my other post. Jeez, I'm losing it!
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You gotta love Chicago. The Daily mayoral machine, Skokie nazis and the Cubs! Now handgun legislation that makes sense too. Not familiar with the story? In a nutshell, there has been a law regulating handguns in Chicago for 28 years that was recently struck down by the Supremes. Chicago turned around and passed another law that said "Yeah, you can own the gun, but you can't come outside the house with it." I like that law! Wish we had it right here in Vermont. It would stop my crazy neighbor from emptying his pistola in 2.3 seconds in his own backyard. The chances of Vermont passing a law like Chicago's are exactly 0 (zero). If we outlaw criminals only handguns will have criminals. And, as always, support your right to arm bears!
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500,000 gallons a day between the time the old containment cap came off Saturday and the time the new one is put on some time this week. Frightening, isn't it? Y'know, it strikes me that it was rather hard to buy an American car that got more than 30 mpg combined until last year. How could the car industry have been that screwed up for that long? The simple answer is that they wern't screwed up. They were the alternative to every other manufacturer in foreign countries where gas costs more money. Finally Detroit got it that people want well made cars with great gas mileage that could go 300,000 miles if you took care of them. I hope they new containment cap captures 95% of the oil until the relief wells are dug. I hope they are making contingency plans for when a hurricane whips the spill into a hell froth.
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74 soccer fans dead in Uganda, after a rugby club was hit by bombs, where these poor people were watching the World Cup final. An organization, Al Shabaab that is opposed to the Uganda government and claiming ties to al Quaeda took responsibility for having carried out the attack, and threatens to continue with other such bombings in Uganda and Burundi; until US-friendly peacekeeping troops are withdrawn from Somalia.********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
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Apparently they were targeting the Ugandan government's decision to send those peacekeepers. Somalia and Yemen and almost the entire land of Arabia is a hotbed of Wahhabi ideology. One American died in the bombing.
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It is possible that within 36 hours all the vents will be closed and the leak will be stopped. Although BP sucks for what it did in the name of profit and the whole industry is culpable for doing this kind of drilling without having adequate emergency response, they do deserve some credit for working as quickly as possible and maybe getting this thing capped in 90 days. If this were Nigeria they would have done next to nothing. An elite makes all the oil money over there and they don't rock that boat. Different story here though. Maybe some good will come out of this -- namely a greater awareness of of our codependent relationship with Big Oil and and the realization that the status-quo is not sustainable. Or maybe the understanding that it's really too late and you might as well buy a used Hummer, Denali or Yukon and go out in an orgy of fossil fuel gluttony. Make sure to top off the freon yourself and kill the ozone layer. As well, top off the tank to the last drop and let a gallon or two evaporate into the atmosphere... Ye Gods! We are so screwed on this planet!
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Let's cross our collective fingers that the vents will be closed and the leak stopped.********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
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I was in the store today to buy Stephen King's new novel. It's 1074 pages long. I was really feeling guilty about buying this book. The planet can't afford to lose even one more tree. Should I use a kindle? I don't even know what the energy footprint of a kindle is. How long it lasts, what is made of etc.. Does anybody out there reading this use a kindle? Do you like it? Can you really bring one to the beach without ruining it (by getting sand in it or something)? Is it more environmentally responsible to use a kindle rather than a scarce resource like wood? I'd love to hear what other people think. I'm never the first to jump on new technologies but I really want to do the responsible thing... Maybe this was my last book purchase.
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Love him or hate him, you had to respect him. "That path is for, your steps alone."
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whether electronic devices for reading books are really more environmental than books. First of all we can recycle paper, and electronic things we cannot. If we no longer buy real books-we put printers out of business, and take food off people's tables, and the printing industry is already heavily damaged by online media. There are really plusses and minuses for both, but is hard to conceive (for me anyhow) that a hand-held device would be as emotionally satisfying as turning the pages of a book. A book that we can pass along to a good friend, or if it sucks-do what my father does and tape photos into them in lieu of other forms of photo albums. Or recycle them. ********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
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...about books being more friendly and familiar. I never even thought about jobs at printing companies being lost because of Kindles. I've heard that some authors have been hoodwinked into losing royalties on e-books (mostly books that were published before the advent of this technology). Good point about recycling, never thought of that. Now I'm wondering about eye strain with a Kindle.
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Obama has really opened up a presidency by committee and the Clintons are a pretty integral part of that committee. Bill & Hillary are everywhere on Earth these days, doing the empire's bidding. Not that I'm complaining. If there was ever a time when our country needed smart, seasoned people it's right now. I give Chairman Obama high marks for his stewardship thus far. There are a lot of open question marks for the future like Afghanistan, the economy, the national debt and such but I would be very sorry to see this commission go out of business in four years. I never thought I'd say that about Democrats but looking at Bush's legacy I am truly horriified that we almost lost our country to a bunch of neo-cons. Barak is an acceptable alternative to that. (now waiting for appearance by scathing dewlover)
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I for one am tired of everything going electronic. At work we don't use paper at all, everything and I mean everything is done on the computer. Wow now I have tendonitis in my wrist from all the mousing around. At least it is not carpal tunnel I guess. Speaking of eye strain, I had to get glasses this year after having better than 20/20 my whole life. Damn computers! I'm falling apart! These things sound good on paper but then you find out during execution that it wasn't such a good idea. "Lazy lightning you say you never strike the same place. I want a double dose in any case" ... "You got to hear my supplication. Got to hear me now. A little bolt of inspiration"
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The NAACP is a profit-mongering organization deserving to be thrown on the ash-heap of history? NOT! Not all tea-party activists are racist. Many of them are well-meaning fiscal conservatives but they have created the space for the frightening flaming freaks of the right wing. You know, the people who stay up late at night sharpening the weapons of hate. What is truly frightening is that they could field a sleeper candidate for the presidency. Less frightening but all-to-real? Derailing the Obama presidency. This latest knee-jerk attack on the NAACP is beyond the pale. They are revealing their true colors. All the NAACP is asking the tea party to do is repudiate the racists within their ranks and they won't do that. Substitute jews for blacks and we see these extremists for what they really are -- fascist-like Nazis . Beware and vote. If good, decent people don't vote then the crazies might win..
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we have electronic recycling in Oakland, both city-approved places that take the stuff for free and assorted recycling fairs sponsored by various organizations.
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"Lazy lightning you say you never strike the same place. I want a double dose in any case" ... "You got to hear my supplication. Got to hear me now. A little bolt of inspiration"
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...bring your electronics to a place that will responsibly reuse as much as possible and dispose of the rest instead of throwing it in the general trash. Though it would be nice to just blip it out of existence with a keystroke, less time and fuel cost n'all that.
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Weak and watered down. Obama is hollering victory and it is better than nothing but not nearly enough. The banks are already crying and threatening to cut off free banking. Take a listen: 'All this will mean that banks will impose fees on existing consumers to try to make up for cash they need to store as capital or spend on levies, and consumers who cannot pay the fees will have to give up on banking services, Bove said. He estimates that "at least 10 million people" will lose banking services in the US after the new financial regulations come into force, because "they just won't be profitable for banks and banks won't keep them." ' -- Dick Bove, Rochdale Securities Want to bet this doesn't happen? If you're not part of a small community bank with conservative lending values maybe you should consider bailing from the big boys who are the only ones likely to impose the above measures.
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I believe is done all over California (depending on where you live) Goodwill takes the TV's, etc & does whatever to them. Yuba County has a great recycling program....haven't investigated So. Cal, but they most likely do......thanks, Marye 4 the Oakland info
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Recycling electronics! I had the two words inversed! "Lazy lightning you say you never strike the same place. I want a double dose in any case" ... "You got to hear my supplication. Got to hear me now. A little bolt of inspiration"
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4:50pm -- The Weather Chaninnel confirms that NBC confirms what everybody can already see on the spillcam. It's over. And yeah GTed, BP's stock surged almost 4% today. To think we could have had it when it was circling the drain at 27. I thought long and hard about it and even was told point blank to buy it but I'm just not a slimy bottom-feeder making money off the misery of others and watching as BP hires every unemployed insurance claims bunghole in the Southeast to stonewall Gulf residents on legitimate claims.
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BP finally plugging the hole had no emotional relief to it. Just a sense that the bleeding had stopped because the temporary bandage was now in place. The bandage could slip any time before the stitches (relief wells) are applied. At least the oil is stopped even if a hurricane causes them to cease operations again for whatever reason. I get indigestion just thinking about the amount of oil in the gulf -- approximately 809,423 barrels of oil (x 42 for the gallon amount). I know I have been forced to look very hard at how I can reduce my oil consumption by 75%. That would bring me in line with what the average European uses... which is just too frightening to think about.
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...For dancing in the streets. Yahooo! The whole fam damily will be in town for Gathering of the Vibes in Bridgeport, CT at the end of this month. That means Furthur & Rhythm Devils, plus a whole lot more. Maybe they'll all get on stage and jam!! This is going to be great time as long as it's not hot as hell. Even if it is you can still jump in the ocean to cool off. It's like 100 yards from the stage. Have a great weekend everybody! Endless summer is in full swing!
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If there are aliens flying around outer space they must be looking down on Earth in disbelief. They must be wondering how living organisms could so easily destroy their own home? I just laughed (an angry laugh mind you) when they came on the news all excited about plugging the leak like they had just won a gold medal in the Olympics or something. Maybe instead of patting themselves on the back they should spend their time thinking of ways to proactively prevent another disaster like this. The Earth can only take so much of this crap! "Lazy lightning you say you never strike the same place. I want a double dose in any case" ... "You got to hear my supplication. Got to hear me now. A little bolt of inspiration"
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The Louisiana coastline will need a lot of work to remove the sludge and continue rehabilitation efforts of wildlife: beaver, birds, muskrat, nutria, otter, fish, crabs, oysters, shrimp and the plants and micro-organisms they feed upon....
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I hear you man, you are exactly right. Everytime I see a poor bird coated in oil I want to jump through the tv set and save it then kick BP's ass. I would think, as you mention, that the basic life forms, the food for all the critters we love so much, would be the most negatively impacted. "Lazy lightning you say you never strike the same place. I want a double dose in any case" ... "You got to hear my supplication. Got to hear me now. A little bolt of inspiration"
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Leggo recap was cool. Like the sliding, tripping and slo-mo goal.
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The US military in Afghanistan suffered a rash of suicides in the last month, 31 in all. It is more than alarming that an average of over one per day is occurring. The question of WHY must be asked. If the mission is just and this is an all-volunteer force why is morale so low that soldiers feel compelled to take their own lives? I have asked several vets and they all say the same thing: They don't know... If they don't know then the military must be having a hard time mounting any response to this problem. And this has been a problem for quite a while, years in fact. I guess conjecture is in order here, though any from a non-vet is a shot in the dark. Obviously the stress and tension of war must be great. The difficulty of the weather and the terrain must also weigh in. But these are all factors that soldiers have faced in all wars. So what is different about this one? I would suggest the obvious -- the glaring contradiction between the rationale for war laid out in the propaganda and the actual reality on the ground.
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I was just watching a movie last night about how the US contributed (certainly didn't start, but added greatly to the problem) to the chaos in Afghanistan-after the Soviets invaded in 1979. How there was a behind the scenes gathering of funds and weapons to supply the Mujahideen (predecessor to the Taliban) because they were fighting the communist Soviets. Another instance of America backing the wrong horse. A horse that comes and bites them in the ass later!********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
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Don't understand why they waste their time on this site. I don't even undertsand why they do it at all, you have to work really hard at it. The links have to stay up long enough and people have to hit on them. I wish people wouldn't encourage them by hitting the links.
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Seepage from the floor of the Gulf has been detected, as well as other problems, and the US is telling BP to submit a procedure for opening the cap back up. Though the flow rate has not been determined it is estimated that over 184,000,000 gallons have spilled into the Gulf. This is a nightmare that never seems to go away. It is depressing and disheartening for people all over the country who have an iota of empathy, not to mention the people who have to live on the Gulf Coast. One bright spot -- no hurricanes on the horizon.
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Thanks Gonzo, for your interesting and continuous posts in here. You are great at keeping us current on world events!********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
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I'm only throwing stuff out there for conversation openers.
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No need to go out and use more energy so the USA is #1 again. This is not good news. The Chinese see no need to put the breaks on it's consumption as long as the US does nothing to reign it's piggery. Legislation to limit energy usage is shot down continually by a cabal of repulsivecan senators. The problem, as I have pointed out several times, is that more than 60% of the Chinese power comes from dirty coal-burning power plants. The superpowers are in a clinch and nobody wants to given an inch. I won't state the obvious here, it's too depressing. Unbelievable, really, as we experience climate change symptoms such as record rainfalls that are flooding major US cities on a regular basis.
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...What? Was soliciting a good job in exchange for the candidate of their choice in the US Senate from Illinois a crime? I guess this shows that you don't have to be smart to be elected the governor of Illinois. It also shows that Blago is the ultimate media whore.
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p 38 of the new Rolling Stone...Justin Timberlake wearing a SYF (THAT'S ok, but)...the blurb says "He hopes to collaborate with Umphrey's McGee on a new Dead-themed mash-up record: RippleSex/JerrySounds". Justin, Justin, Justin... It can't be that bad that you have to dump this on us. I hope Marye is right and this is just RS's lame attempt at humor after being had by Stanley McChrystal.
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In a recent post I mentioned the high rate of suicide among US soldiers. I alluded to the reality on the ground there as being different then the propaganda. Well, here is some of what they are seeing. A couple of days ago The Himalayan Times had a story about the Royal Gorkhas of the British Army. They are Nepali mercenaries. They have a small knife known as a kukuri. It looks like a very sharp boomerang. It is their national weapon. So, a week or so ago, a Taliban commander had been killing some NATO troops and the word was put out that they wanted the Taliban commander. If that person was killed in battle they wanted some proof. So a gorkha soldier killed him but couldn't drag his body off the battlefield. Heeding his commander's wish, he cut the Taliban commander's head off and brought it back to the British officer. Who was, of course, horrified at this violation of the Geneva Convention. The Gorkha was recalled to Britain to possibly face charges. Shit happens in a war zone. Stuff that is very hard to sleep with in a land faraway from home.
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I have read of Gurkhas removing the head of an enemy as proof. The Kukri is a national Icon in Nepal and is used as an all around tool. It is 16 to 18 inchs in length and kept razor sharp.
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it IS kind of hard to deny that when someone presents you a guy's head that he's most likely dead. It's also pretty obvious who he is. Irony alert I can barely imagine the horror one feels when being presented with someone's head, disconnected from their body. ********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
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...over there it seems ridiculous to single out a Gurkha for this action. Gurkhas are the cream of the cream of Nepali warriors. They can basicaly run over mountains since that is their native territory. They are fiercely loyal also. That is an excellent description of a kukuri, Johnman. My Nepali wife has one in the kitchen drawer and whips it out to cut up whole chickens. She also brings them back as presents for people. I always caution people to put the thing on a high shelf if they have young kids.
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you don't bring in the Gurkhas and then complain when they do their job well. Sheesh. Dude deserves a medal, not harassment.