Archive for August, 2010
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010
The Novi wedding that my husband-to-be’s family were looking forward all year long to was ready for the take off. I flew in earlier than my husband because he was yet to take his leave from the commercial airlines he worked as a pilot. I worked in Detroit as a resident physician yet everything had to take place in the beautiful Novi county.
It could just not be Detroit. I hate to think that my garden wedding was in no way going to find the lush green gardens that both my future husband and I planned for a very long time. Novi was a quiet county which could house a decent and solemn garden wedding, although I was on the guard on making it all too simple. Every woman wants to make headlines for all the right reasons upon tying that knot.
We had to resort to the expertise of a Novi wedding magnate, who was quick to tell us to our face that the luxury we are looking for is nowhere to be found in Novi. She drove us for a short trip to a place called Castle Farms and she blatantly asked, ‘is this what you want?’. I failed to answer because I was already affording myself a tour around the castles that could house my very own wedding. I could not wait to tell my Prince Charming of this great find, yet from that one phone all I could sense his excitement.
Posted in Events •
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Friday, August 27th, 2010
The interest in natural cures is on the rise. More today than ever before. Just as “going green” is the big buzzword for clean energy, and organic is the buzzword for fresh food, natural cures or natural home remedies are just as big now.
Below I have listed 9 basic health problems that can be treated using natural, clean energy that can be obtained from pyramids. Before you think that I am a new age freak or some sort of a kook (I might be a kook, kooky-freak, freaky-kook, etc…) for believing in pyramids, please hear me out.
First, everyone knows that natural sunlight is good for us. We also know that certain types of light, like ultra-violet light actually kills bacteria and that electromagnetism promises health benefits as well.
Pyramid energy over the years has shown to be beneficial to mankind in many ways. It has to do with the solar activity, electro magnetism, the benefits of prismatic or UV light due to the slope angle of the walls or architectural design of pyramids.
Pyramids can preserve meat, turn milk into yogurt, sharpen knives and offer many other benefits as well that fall under the (more…)
Tags: Corona Discharges, Kook, Pyramid Energy
Posted in health •
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Monday, August 23rd, 2010
2008 Economic stimulus plan is a one-time shot in the arm of the economy. The stimulus plan will not provide long-lasting benefits simply because distribution of free money is not an economic stimulus. If distribution of free money were indeed a stimulus for the economy, there would have never been economic recessions and depressions. Just print paper money and drop bags of money from helicopters.
Every 10 years – plus or minus a year or two – we have economic downturns. There have been downturns at about 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000. The next downturn is scheduled for 2010. That is how economic cycle works.
Economic cycles correlate with activities of our banking system. When banks make loans, people invest money to build houses, to start businesses, and to expand production. Demand goes up, jobs are created, and Gross Domestic Product increases. That is an expansion part of the business cycle.
When most of the people and businesses have already made desired investments, demand for loans will decrease. People invest less. Economy will slow down. An economic downturn is knocking on the door.
We all have seen how the banking system reduced interest rates and created a (more…)
Tags: Dirty Politics, Economic Recessions, Paper Money
Posted in Politics, News & Issues •
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Monday, August 23rd, 2010
This article will take you on a journey through the history of chocolate and will reveal the mystery surrounding this food which is a staple of most people’s diets nowadays. It will reveal how this food is part of our life and how it has impacted on civilizations around the world both socially, economically and spiritually.
When looking at the history of chocolate we need to start during the times of the Mayan Indians and Olmec Civilizations found in Central America. The word cacao was part of the Olmec language almost 3,000 years ago and because the climate in this region was hot and humid but shady because of the tropical rain forests, cacao was able to grow there perfectly. The Mayan Indians believed that the cacao tree was owned by the gods and the pods produced by the tree were a present from these gods to us (man), and because of this the pod became a symbol of fertility and life in their society.
However, by the 18th Century, a botanist from Sweden called Linnaeus began calling the cacao tree “Theobroma Cacao” (which translates into “Drink of the Gods”). (more…)
Tags: History Of Chocolate, Noblemen, Symbol Of Fertility
Posted in news-and-society •
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Monday, August 23rd, 2010
Around the globe, different political forces of different orientation and affiliations have put up their own respective political and economic agendas on how to tackle primary issues and have been tryring to formulate in building up political and economic future that is truly subservient to the interests of the whole citizenry.
To date, no one has ever succeeded. (One may oppose my personal claim, though history speaks loudly for itself).
I shall not try to include any of the worlds’ leaders in my attempt to formulate an appropriate political and economic strategies that may be far superior than that of the present ruling system.
No matter how hard I tried in the past to understand the application of the supremacy of the concept of “One Man Rule ” as the format of our government, and the obedience and subscription of both the capital and labour to the concept of Capitalism, still I am not convinced that these 2 above stated politcal and economic aspects in our society are best yet to serve the future of mankind.
At present, I do not expect one to join me with my observation since this could sound too radical and unacceptable.
The present set up of government’s democratic processes (more…)
Tags: Citizenry, Obedience, Social Equality
Posted in Politics, News & Issues •
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Sunday, August 22nd, 2010
Alan Greenspan’s The Age of Turbulence contains a chapter titled The Modes of Capitalism which is full of revelations which Mr. Greenspan unfortunately failes to recognize. The chapter describes the various forms Capitalism has taken in a number of countries, mostly North American and European. Of course, that such various forms of Capitalism have been implemented in different countries is not news. But what Mr. Greenspan fails to notice is that similar chapters could not be written about physics, chemistry, geology, meteorology, astronomy, physiology, botany, astronomy, etc. but could easily be written about Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and even astrology. The point is, science does not have sects, but ideologies do. Of course, economists shun the word sect, preferring instead the euphemism school in an attempt to gloss over the non-scientific nature of economics. Mr. Greenspan’s modes of Capitalism are nothing more than sects, and no endeavor that is comprised of sects is a science.
Mr. Greenspan’s attempts to explain the existence of these sects begins to reveal just how unscientific economists can be. He writes, “To me, the degree of willingness to take risks is in the end, the major defining characteristic that separates countries into the various (more…)
Tags: Economists, Fleck, Sect
Posted in economics •
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Saturday, August 21st, 2010
A brief history of the USA
Europeans have been fascinated by the lands in the West for eons. Let’s take a look at the history of that fascination and how the current American nation came about.
Historians claim that 15,000 years ago, the first settlers came into the present-day USA, crossing the Bering Strait from Siberia
into Alaska (the first Americans thus essentially being Russians). These peoples were to become the ancestors of all Native Americans most of which would were to be semi-nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes but also some tribes that were settled in one place in civilizations based on agriculture.
Around the year 1000, a select group of Norsemen, or Vikings, visited America
as described in a set of old Icelandic stories called “The Sagas of Icelanders”. The stories tell of one Leif Ericsson who took a crew of 35 men and sailed from
Iceland to a newly discovered land in the West, staying there for the winter and returning to
Iceland with no permanent settlement having been established. The area where he landed is generally thought to be in Newfoundland,
Canada, but some believe it could also have been further South in later New England. (more…)
Tags: Civilizations, Icelandic Sagas, Norsemen
Posted in Arts & Humanities •
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Saturday, August 21st, 2010
I have got some good Clearwater medical malpractice attorneys I can tell you. You see I am pursuing this case against a doctor who gave wrong medications over a span of 2 years to my cousin causing him liver and kidney problems and in the end, it was discovered that his condition was just a simple case which should not have been given those medications, and even at high dosages. So we knew something was up and we had a strong case in this one, and we wanted the best Clearwater medical malpractice attorneys so we contacted this site we have always been hearing about in this area called clearwater.malpracticefloridalawyer.com. It was a group of lawyers which had many successful cases over the past year, and they are even highly recommended by my uncle who is also practicing law in New York and told me I can rely on these people to help me with the case. I wanted to get back at this doctor because my cousin is now in a critical condition and he happens to have 2 kids still who are still studying and imagine the distress their family is undergoing due to the negligence of this doctor. So with a case like that, the lawyers agreed to take it on and file a case against him, and I am pretty confident we can get this one as they are the best in this field of medical malpractice in this area of Florida.
Posted in Politics, News & Issues •
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Saturday, August 21st, 2010
I was having a hard time with my diet and many other things related to my heath and most of the treatments I tried did nothing but help me increase my problems so I was getting quite desperate I should claim when one day I came across this book by don colbert entitled I can do this diet, and since I have heard the name of don colbert before and I knew this was a famous guy, I tried to check it out and what his books told about diet so I went online to this christian site called www.nestentertainment.com and tried to see if this will be a good answer to my problems. And as I read up the book as soon as it got to me, I tried applying what he said to my diet and my life per se, and then slowly little by little I started noticing good changes in me overall. I never thought reading books like this could be of help to me but it did and now I am really so happy I decided to buy all of his books online to see if they would all work out fine for me and knowing fully well that his first book was of use to me, I know the others might too like the bible cure series. He is such a great man and a great author I should say and I would like to really thank him for being able to help me with his words.
Posted in Arts & Humanities •
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Monday, August 16th, 2010
They called World War II the war to end all wars. They called Hitler the worlds ultimate bad guy. The horrors that nazi Germany committed against the Jewish people were inexcusable. Needless to say, the world is a much happier place without Hitler and his kind, even though dictators much more ruthless than him have come and gone in this time. This war was the last war to have the over whelming vast majority of the country behind it. It showed what a well trained, dedicated military machine can accomplish when properly motivated. Likewise, Auschwitz was the biggest and most notorious concentration camp the Nazi’s used. A huge number of the victims of the holacaust entered this camp… and never came back. Why the allies didn’t destroy this place is unclear, but its continued existance serves a purpose.
I will never forget the day that i visited this place while i was stationed in Germany in the U.S. Army. The hair on the back of my neck stood on end as i walked through the gates; being somewhat of a history buff, i was well aware of the (more…)
Tags: Incinerators, Vehement Denial, World War Ii
Posted in Arts & Humanities •
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