• 1,003 replies
    marye
    Joined:
    When our previous topic hit the 1,000-response mark, sleazy behavior by politicians was eliciting a certain amount of non-astonishment.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • tphokie1
    Joined:
    Haven't had much to say
    for the last bit as I've been working crazy hours at work and then by the time I got things taken care of at home have had little time for much else. Got a little time now so I'll give a little input on some of the recent topics. First let me say my thoughts and prayers go out to all those involved in the CO and CA fires. I live in VA and its interesting to me that we have been under warnings of the possibility of severe fires here. That's not the norm here. Its been so hot and dry this summer that the countryside is a tinder box waiting for a disaster. Just one more sign of global warming! Its getting very scary what we've done to the planet. On the issue of burning Korans and free speech let me say that burning any holy book is offensive. This guy in FL is a total wacko and its unfortunate he's gotten the press he has. I heard on some news outlet that he had been dismissed from his previous congregation for stealing money from the church. This probably tells us something about this guy! I'm a passionate defender of free speech as I am terrified of what could happen without it. However, the point is well taken that with freedom comes responsibility and people should think about the impact of their speech on others. If free speech is abused it may be taken away. Its a shame we can't remember to speak with respect for others. Finally, I'll share a personal decision I've made relative to some of what's currently going on. I was watching the movie Gandhi a couple of weeks ago. One of my favorite movies about someone I consider one of the greatest men in history. While watching it and considering the current mood in this country it occurred to me that I needed to actively reach out to the local Muslim community. It took me a while to act on this impulse as procrastination is one of my worst traits. I finally called the local mosque after hearing the FL nut case talking about burning Korans. I've been invited to worship with them and plan to go next Friday. I'm sure it will be a leaning experience for me and will hopefully help foster understanding in some small way. Experience has taught me that those "other" people are always less scary once you get to know them. I'll post results of how this goes. Peace to all! Good to be back!
  • johnman
    Joined:
    Freedom of speech
    As with anything else, should be tempered with common courtesy, and respect for others, both concepts that seem to be sorely lacking in the modern world, and not just in the US . No, Tiger...have been no recent sightings of the winged rodentian thieves, but I suspect they are in collusion with the Nazi frog, who I believe may have left the confines beneath my dining table and ventured into my backyard, which the Mouse has recently rescued from the ever present Northwest Blackberries.
  • TigerLilly
    Joined:
    Woody Allen & Sarkozy(s)
    Sarkozy's wife had a small part in a Woody Allen film, that himself produced-and got the cut??Am finding this combination hard to believe, but funny somehow. French soccer team goes home in disgrace and Prez's wife chopped out of a film. Vive la France! Is this all true CB, or just strange German rumor about our neighbors? ********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
  • gratefaldean
    Joined:
    Wish I could see the vid
    But it's blocked on the computer I'm on. The flip side of the coin for me is the seemingly huge number of people in the world who think that being offended is justification for violence. Slightly offended (Hey, Yo mama!) to profoundly offended (burn my holy book, my flag, etc). It would be nice, for once, to be able to put some of these things in perspective. Here we have guy whose message from God is to protest radical Islamists (and as far as he's concerned, all Muslims are radical) by burning Korans (I have to admit that I am curious as to where he's getting his Korans...I know I don't have pile gathering dust in my house anywhere. And now that he's not going to burn them, what's he going to do with them?). First, why do we pay any attention to ANYONE who claims to receive personal messages from God? That's an instant signal to me to move on. Second, he's got like 30 or 50 members in his church -- those numbers should tell us something. And here we all are, the entire world it seems, giving him the time of day. Huh? Let it go, give it up. Save your indignation for something that's worth the effort....
  • JackstrawfromC…
    Joined:
    "Spoiled kids"
    I like that one Badger!! "The dire wolf collects his due while the boys sing round the fire"
  • cosmicbadger
    Joined:
    Frank says it better
  • cosmicbadger
    Joined:
    freedom's just another word...
    It seems to me that some folks proclaim the magic word ‘freedom’ so much that it has diluted and cheapened its meaning. They end up acting like spoiled kids, using a simplistic interpretation of the concept of freedom to excuse offensive, antisocial, selfish and stupid behaviour. Freedom is a complex concept (as Marye has previously pointed out) and itself needs to have limits. If those limits are not to be set by the State (something I admire as being fundamental to the American way), then it should be the job of responsible citizens to define those limits themselves thorough their own behaviour. For many people in the world freedom has a more fundamental meaning than freedom to act like an attention seeking brat; they seek freedom from fear, oppression, discrimination, dispossession, disenfranchisement and enforced poverty. If Jones wants to give the message that Americans will not be intimidated by radical Islam then there are many more intelligent and productive ways of doing it than burning Korans. Anyway it seems that Jones has found a way out of the corner he got himself in by claiming that God has conveniently given him a message to back off. It’s a shame really, because I was about to stage my own special protest against his idiocy and teach him not to mess with me. By exercising my freedom to rip up a bible and use it to.....oh never mind. I miss Frank Zappa.
  • JackstrawfromC…
    Joined:
    Burning any religous or national symbol (flags)
    Is a direct call for violence. Simple as that. And as George Carlin always said, none of us have rights. Say what you will but you better understand that there is a certain responsibility behind what you say especially when you are addressing the public. Worship whomever or whatever you want but don't push that on me, the list goes on and on.. "The dire wolf collects his due while the boys sing round the fire"
  • TigerLilly
    Joined:
    Indeed Dean
    I learned in law classes in college that freedom of speech stops at directly inciting others to violence-and burning holy books is a pretty much guaranteed going to incite violent reaction. Though the line in this case is still blurry between direct and indirect. And yes, you would think that a self-professed man of God would be conscious of his moral responsibility to others, and try to be a good example as opposed to a rabble-rouser. ********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
  • gratefaldean
    Joined:
    It's a struggle TL
    But I'm in agreement with you. Preserving our rights means allowing idiots to do stupid, offensive things. How this podunk small-time pastor got so much publicity...I guess I mark that down to the 24-hr news cycle, the age of the Internet and instant communication. It's also the age of zero personal responsibility. The guy in question is currently disavowing responsibility for any harm that's come to people protesting his provocative words/intent. And while it's true that the responsibility for violence lies with the people doing the violence (and the violence proves the preacher's point, as far as he is concerned), knowing that your words and actions are certain to result in inciting violence in others...there's a burden to be borne there as well, IMO. You'd think a professed man of god would get that. Personally, if there are objects in the world that I hold sacred, books are at the top of the list. And Beatles records. Really, who would ever stoop so low as to burn Beatles records to make some kind of point?
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Forums
When our previous topic hit the 1,000-response mark, sleazy behavior by politicians was eliciting a certain amount of non-astonishment.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

but the fact is that LDS was a major if not the major player behind Prop. 8. By the way I've met all sorts of Deadheads of various and no faiths but has anyone ever met an LDS head? If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. William Blake
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

I know this fight is not over. This will be appealed but its still a step in the right direction. Everyone should be free to love whomever they choose and have that acknowledged by society!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Barlow is LDS. Not practicing, obviously, but comes from a long line of Mormons. In answer to the question, the Mormon Church and also (to my shame, because I'm Catholic like Barlow is Mormon...) the Catholic Church kicked in a lot of money. But it is also the case that the Bay Area is a relative island, even in California, and there is plenty of religious fundamentalism and just plain bigotry to go around throughout the state. And yeah, there was a lot of stirring up of hate among Latinos and among the black churches as well. Indeed, it was much speculated that the very people who turned out to elect Obama also turned out to pass Prop 8, at least where the black churches were concerned. So it's complicated. But it's also just plain wrong and I'm grateful to Judge Walker for his good sense. My own view is that the state should get out of the marriage business and only do civil unions, being that civil marriage is fundamentally about property and responsibility for children, and let religious, cultural, etc. bodies declare whoever they want in their communions married. And yeah, this includes the fundie Mormons if they stick to consenting adults.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

You've just expressed a point I've made a number of times. The state should get out of the marriage business! Anyone should be able to have a legal union with whomever they choose. Marriage is another matter which is between the persons involved to determine in conjunction with their religious community (if they have one!) My wife of 14 years and I lived together for over 2 years before we were married in a Christian ceremony (which was very important to both of us). The reason was because she was not legally divorced from her first husband because he was an abusive asshole and she was afraid for him to find out where she was! We had committed to each other and considered ourselves "married" before this was officially recognized by the state. This of course meant that previous to our official marriage we had no legal rights or protection. It was not the state's place to determine whether we were "married" or not!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Everybody wants to stake out turf on the marriage issue.
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

have not lived together for over 10 years.....due to irreconcilable similarities......perfect marriage!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 7 months
Permalink

Is going to be playing a GD concert on tv this friday at 11.. found a preview here.. http://video.msg.com/Home/This-Week-on-Music-Fridays-8 I hope they ask the suitestakes question about this show cause that all i'm gonna watch and i would love to win free tickets to the show of my choice at Madison Square Garden http://www.msg.com/contests/music-fridays
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

but, what is a suitestake?
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

sweepstakes....ok....i get it.....of course, if ya actually win, i 'spose ya could call it "sweet"stakes..heeheeee
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

cuz you win a stay in a suite! :-) Would be great if it included a suite with a room full of cookies, eh Johnman?********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

have the cookies?....heeheeee
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

For the 4 years that I've worked in this little town near the Smoky Mtns, a group of folks have had a weekly war protest going on. Rain, snow, or ultra-radiant shine, they are out there on Thurs at lunch time, with signs (e.g. Pro-troops, Anti-war!), the occasional VFW hat, and smiles on their faces. The telling part: my guess is that their avg age is on the north side of 65...NOBODY under 50. As this coincides with my payday run to the bank, I drive by most Thursdays, toot the horn, flash a peace sign, and feel like a complete slug and hypocrite for not being out there with them. God bless them though, they are keeping the spirit alive, and reminding us that yes, there is still a war or two going on....
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

is inundated with smoke from forrest fires. The air is extremely polluted and unhealthy to breathe.Those poor people!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

continues to swell in monsoon rains this season. 1500 are believed to have perished so far in Pakistan.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

In the "Get a grip" category there were two stories in the news this morning: A Jet Blue stew. was arrested at his home in NYC by the SWAT team after quitting his job in a rather dramatic fashion after a passenger hit him in the head with as carry-on the passenger was trying to get out of the overhead bin before the plane was at a complete stop. The passenger swore at him and the stew. proceeded to go on the PA and swore back at the passenger, concluding at the end "That's it, I'm done". He then took two beers off the beverage cart, inflated the emergency exit slide, opened the door and slid to the tarmac. Now he is a national hero on the internet. No copycats, please! Next, earlier this year a woman was pissed-off she couldn't get her McNuggets at the drive-thru and went bonkers fighting with the employees. She ended that altercation by taking a hammer and smashing the drive-thru Plexiglas window. A bit of overreaction there. Fast-food rage? Again,no copycats -- pretty please? You can almost here the Snap! as the gray matter short circuits...
user picture

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

"The dire wolf collects his due while the boys sing round the fire"
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Historical and projected carbon dioxide emissions (in millionsof metric tons) for China, the United States, and the world, 1990–2025. Carbon dioxide emissions (percentage of world total) Location 1990 2003 2015 2025 United States 4978 (23.4) 5796 (23.1) 6718 (19.9) 7587 (18.9) China 2241 (10.5) 3541 (14.1) 7000 (20.7) 9349 (23.3) World 21,223 (100) 25,028 (100) 33,663 (100) 40,045 (100) Remarkable trends: With all efficiency and conservation included, the US is still upping the amount of CO2 emissions. At present, the US and China are roughly equal in emissions. While the US share of world emissions is dropping, China's share is growing at an alarming rate. This amount of emissions is unsustainable. Did you ever wonder how much CO2 is expended to produce all that plastic packaging we throw away each day??
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Its frightening the rate at which we are destroying our beautiful home. Our lifestyle is totally unsustainable but as a group we don't want to accept it. We're already convincing ourselves that the Gulf oil catastrophe was not that bad! Time to take the blinders off people!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

OK, I've beaten War, The Economy, and Ecology to death in this thread. I'm going to start a more positive trend towards really uplifting current events. Hopefully, stuff that will make everybody feel good and leave you wanting to hear more. This has been inspired, believe it or not, by the "Making a Difference" segments of the NBC nightly news. It's hard to find the good, positive stuff because the news, blogs, etc. all slant to the bad stuff. I think it is really important to give light to the better half. Hopefully, to make it on topic, I can find some things that are directly Grateful Dead/Deadhead related. Sorry if if the events I've been writing about has got you down.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Been loving your diligence with posting facts! And that's a fact!********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Hope you didn't take my post the wrong way! Sometimes we need to be depressed, like when the facts are depressing! Please continue to keep us informed.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 8 months
Permalink

Me and lamagonzo put in our time, I guess it's time for one of those folks on the sidelines to get off the bench and join the team! Nothin' left to do but smile,smile, smile
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I enjoy your blogging guys but don't worry about taking a rest. A few of us here put in our time way back and got a bit weary and entered semi retirement. I am sure some new folks will take up the cause.....
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

sometimes I wish Hal and GRTUD and some of the others would come out of retirement though!********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Thanks TL, let's just say I am on summer vacation from the site. Which so far has consisted of a three day Bluegrass Festival, a Little Feat show, lots of hiking, two days of kayaking and of course the garden and visits from relatives. Coming up later Bob Dylan/John Cougar Melloncamp show and a Jesse Collin Young show. Summer's here and the time is right for dancing in the streets. If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. William Blake
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

no beer or cookies?...or beer?
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...is that nobody really argues against left-leaning positions on this site except for, perhaps, Dewlover -- who seems to be on a crusade against Obama. Oh, and one regular here in favor of nuclear power. I enjoy a good debate but we're all pretty much on the same side on most issues, albeit with varying degrees of intensity. I guess opening up your mind via music and "other" things breeds empathy. It really has nothing to do with left or right or center. More like a wish for others to be happy and free of suffering rather than an intense focus on making big piles of money at the expense of others. These days, in retrospect, I see the kind of decisions (stepping on and over others) and the hours (60-80 a week) I would have had to put in to make millions of dollars, and keep them. My best wishes to others who made millions doing/creating things truly useful to others of modest income. So, a toast to those us this summer who took the path less traveled! Saluud! ~ Long may you run! ~
user picture

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

Will your summer vacation conclude with a trip to red rocks perhaps?? Still wishing I could have met up with ya in Portland! "The dire wolf collects his due while the boys sing round the fire"
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

left OR right...i STILL don't trust either side, and i probably never will...that being said, i believe both sides have a right to voice their respective opinions, that's what the first amendment is all about.........cookie, anyone??
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...to you Johnman. I guess cookie monsters get an exemption!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...shows are online now. Over 3,000 of them. You can see the future stars before they got really famous and, of course, all of Johnny's monologues at johnnycarson.com. Thanks for the laughs Johnny and putting a smile on our faces as you tucked us in for the night with your humor.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

No idea how true this is, so nail me if it's just a Chinese legend. I was in a meeting with a (still) well-known "green" architect about a dozen years ago. He was telling us a story about Chinese prosperity and the subsequent implications of expansion of that prosperity. The story had to do with visiting a Chinese village in the dead of winter. There was apparently some kind of permafrost that covered the interiors of their dwellings. In most cases, the frost was, well, white. In a few cases, it was dull grey, almost black. The reason? The prosperous households could afford to buy coal, and burning it left a layer of soot on the walls. So...the expansion of prosperity has come to pass, and the implications he spoke of are becoming reality. But hey, we in the US still have the Chinese beat on a per-capita basis, for now.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...of Chinese dwellings being covered with soot. Very well could be. But as the Chinese modernize their middle class will have windows/walls/floors with seals. The coal factor is the killer. It is their primary source of fuel and they are putting one coal-fired power plant online a week. This is directly reflected in the the upped CO2 output. Per capita income in the US is around $41k a year, 17th the world. In China the pci is around $3.8k. After visiting China (Tibet, actually) last year I honestly have no idea how they sustain. Wearen't#1Wearen't#1Wearen't#1Wearen't#1Wearen't#1!!!!!!!!!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

He was the steward on the plane who quit with 'tude. Now it seems the other passengers are saying he was in a snit the whole time the plane was in the air. There is a definite pivot going on to portray Mr. Slater as negligent and possibly dangerous and callous. I guess we'll never know if he looked out the window to see if anybody was in the way of the escape chute inflating and deploying so no way to tell if there was reckless endangerment. One thing is true, no jury will unanimously convict him. What we do know for sure is that deploying the emergency slide will put the plane out of action for a couple of days and cost Jet Blue millions. I think that is why the press is spinning this. If society makes heroes out of rebels who burn employer millions when they quit it is a problem. I never really noticed it until I lived in Vermont but it is a widespread occurrence. Barns are torched, heavy equipment is vandalized, etc., etc.. If the employer is a tyrant or a cheapskate the employees at the bottom of the ladder know how to grab them by the balls, twist and then get away with it. Often months and years after they quit. Was Jet Blue deserving of the loss in this case? Well, if they had free checked bags, more carry-on bins and gave gate-checked bags back to passengers when they stepped off the plane none of this would have happened. I agree with Colbert, Steven Slater is my Alpha-Dog Of the Week.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Yeah, I don't know if the story is true or not, but it was effective. There was another, called the "cotton underwear bill of rights." If every person on earth had a right to cotton underwear, all of the arable land in the world would be taken over by cotton production, or at least the part that can produce cotton. As cotton isn't exactly the most environmentally friendly crop out there, and as you also can't eat it, that's a problem. Also probably not true, but again, there was a point to be made. Source was Bill McDonough and his partner Michael Braungart. Lots of companies trying to "green" themselves with their assistance have had a falling out with these guys (mine included)...but they are very interesting and entertaining speakers, to say the least.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

That the rapid modernization of the world cannot be sustained? That all industrializing cultures will want the same things? Agree; Agree. Everybody can't have everything and we are in no position to say who can have what. The free market rules. If there is demand, there will be supply. Look at the mess Mexico is in. I think you must work for a somewhat enlightened company to have them hire consultants to become more green. What is the owner's motivation (your company) to become more green? Doing The Right Thing (a warm, fuzzy feeling) or Saving Money (being seen as savvy). Probably a mixture of both. I would have thought all these conservation programs that businesses engage in and such government incentives as the Energy Star program and tax breaks for energy efficient windows, insulation and high-mileage cars would have cut CO2 emissions but the statistics don't bear it out. Frightening. The only thing that will help is a good old-fashioned depression coupled with an epidemic equal to the Bubonic plague. Looks like we're in a vice one way or the other.. Anybody out there want to create a Deadhead Biosphere? Our own self-contained and self-supporting community in a bubble?
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

not that either one is a sound choice, but what is worse for the environment, oil or coal? and aren't they basically the same, from a fossil fuel perspective? I also wish to point out, not every employee who burns their former employer is a hero, some are just disgruntled individuals who cannot accept that they may have been let go for cause, and would rather place the blame somewhere else then accept that they may be at fault. Obviously this is not the case with Mr. Slater, but some people thrive on the attention.
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

peanut instead of macadamia?...for give me for being picky, but i am an avowed peanut addict...heeheee!!!
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

that should have been "forgive".....sorry!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

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.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

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.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

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.
user picture

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

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"
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 7 months
Permalink

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
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

to contemplate...................indeed!!
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

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!