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News Briefs 06-03-2007

One of the first websites I found when I first got online was TDG. This site has come a long way from that first year when Greg was posting one or two news articles a week.

  • In Athens, archaeologists discover a very large 4th or 5th century B.C. marketplace with shops and a religious center.
  • Forgotten necropolis: An unknown lakeside civilization reveals its hidden treasures.
  • Richard Nixon and ‘Bob’ Haldeman: When archivists deal with power players.
  • The US and the Mideast – 230 uneasy years: A review of Michael B. Oren’s Power, Faith, and Fantasy, the first comprehensive history of America’s military, political and religious involvement in the area. Amazon US & UK.
  • Was there a ‘before’ the Big Bang?
  • Multiple Dimensions: Between Superstrings and Parallel Worlds.
  • DeLorean Tremens: Hold onto your flux capacitors – time machines have nearly arrived.
  • After 40 days of Holy Ychudim (unification with One), spanning the period from 1/7/2007 to 2/22/2007, I have received the following message from The One.
  • Religious surge in once-atheist China surprises leaders.
  • Darwin’s God: In the world of evolutionary biology, the question is not whether God exists but why we believe in him. Is belief a helpful adaptation or an evolutionary accident?
  • Cloned beef: It’s what’s for dinner.
  • US Patent Office gets a clue!
  • Making water out of thin air.
  • Build inland: Scientists propose worldwide ban on construction on coastal land that is less than a metre above high tide, so as to avoid some of the worst impacts of climate change.
  • Is China’s soot print changing weather?
  • Insulating houses can significantly improve health and well-being, according to a new study in the British Medical Journal.
  • Researchers link near-death and out-of-body experiences to arousal system disturbances in the brain.
  • People who ‘fly’ in their dreams are more likely to experience sleep paralysis.
  • NE1 WAN2 DO PRECOG RSRCH?
  • Researchers make progress in hunt for genes involved in the development of Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Severe stress may physically scar children’s brains.
  • Gen Y’s ego trip takes a nasty turn.
  • Study shows psychological torture is as bad as physical torture.
  • Oil innovations pump new life into old wells.
  • What they didn’t want you to know: 59 intriguing facts disinterred via the UK’s Freedom of Information Act.
  • A new Edwardian age is dawning.
  • The Bush administration has accelerated its Internet surveillance push by proposing that Web sites must keep records of who uploads photographs or videos in case police determine the content is illegal and choose to investigate.
  • The Must-Do List.
  • A two-part interview with Robert Kane Pappas, Director and Producer of the film Orwell Rolls in His Grave.
  • Waste not, want not: In Dharavi, a £700m a year recycling industry is helping 250,000 claw their way out of poverty. So why has the government begun demolition, and sent in police to force out inhabitants, leaving thousands homeless?
  • They said a reunion would be an act of insanity. So what changed their minds? Under intense interrogation, the Police break down and confess all.
  • With a gritty period realism, and actully shot in the forests of England, Robin of Sherwood portrays Robin Hood as a devotee of an underground pagan survival that worships Herne the Hunter. The DVD set of the first two seasons debuts in the US on March 13th.

Quote of the Day:

I really can’t abide anyone who claims to be a pagan. This goes double for “witches”, “wiccans” or anyone who spells “magic” with a “k”. Mostly this is because I grew up in Canberra which, along with public servants and lesbians, has a disproportionately high number of smug hippies who seem to regard recycling as an act of religious piety (come to think of it, the three things frequently overlap)

I have come to the conclusion that pagans are evil — not because they get in touch with the devil or warp the minds of the young or are responsible for more bad heavy metal art than anyone else, but because they have such appalling taste. I mean, sure, get in touch with the Great Spirit, run through the woods and kill a goat. But do you have to do it while wearing crushed velvet harem pants, Robin Hood shoes, pentagram jewelery and a purple satin cape?

Brendan Shanahan, in an editorial titled Bring back the witch hunt in Oz’s The Daily Telegraph.

  1. After many years I’m still here …
    Dear Kat, Like you, I too found TDG early on. I lurked for quite some time before posting and then when I finally did, I got a terrible welcome, the guys wanted long harangues of pontification. Me, I was just making a one sentence comment. Which evidently ticked them off enough to ask me to not post. Plus they made snide comments about my “name” and in general were quite nasty. So, for another long period of time I didn’t post, continuing to lurk quietly in the dark. Then I thought, why allow them to bully me and I decided to change my name and I started posting again and let the hate filled comments just roll off. That was when Simon Cox was here hawking his wares regarding RLC and I, being a chump, bought it. I stuck around all through the Phenomena ordeal and saw a lot of disturbing changes as well as backbiting and infighting. Very pathetic and silly as it was very ego based blather.

    So, that was and is why I tried to be friendly and helpful. Granted, the help was not wanted nor needed and that took me a bit of time to grasp fully. I went out of my way to welcome newbies and foster a more congenial atmosphere. Went out on a limb when some posters became so obnoxious that I was getting emails asking me if I could do anything about them. Puzzled as to why I was being asked to take care of the problem I asked them to express themselves on whatever matter occured that was disturbing. Human nature is fun to watch. It’s sort of like a barrel of monkeys here sometimes. Through it all I have made some online friends who are very dear to me. I basically call this place my online home, I talk to you and others candidly and openly about current events as well as personal aspects of my life.

    Greg gave us a nice place to come to in order to learn about topics that mainstream media is only now beginning to embrace. The best part of all is that it has not only survived, it has thrived. Thank you Kat for the news you so diligently bring to us and for reminding me how far this place has come since the late nineties, when I stepped into another dark place and wanted to talk about NDE’s and conciousness. I found answers and a lot more. Love, Pam —————————–Truth is stranger than fiction.

      1. gone gone
        I don’t know Richard, at least that is where I met you and we did have some great little discussions on that forum. I enjoyed it while it lasted. Found a bunch of links for them (something like 782 if I can remember correctly) and really tried to learn proper protocol and proceedure for forum posting. But it’s gone now. Your wisdom has helped me many times. In fact I have just emailed, yesterday, some of your thoughts you posted here on TDG because your words expressed what I was attempting to say far better than I could! So many thanks for everything over the years. Love, Pam —————————–Truth is stranger than fiction.

    1. pontification – it was a good thing 😉
      >>the guys wanted long harangues of pontification.

      That’s one of the main things I liked! haha

      I showed up about 7 years ago. I was still so dazed and confused by my traumatic brain injury, it took about 3 months of daily visits before I noticed there were comments. But when I finally found all those comments, I went back through the entire archive to read every one of them.

      You’re right about those comments being very long, and occasionally pontificatory — that’s how I ‘got to know’ the various people who had posted them. At the time, my memory and attention span were so bad, I had to read them all over and over, in order to sort out who was who, and remember each person’s thoughts on a wide variety of topics.

      Then, just at the point when I felt like I was finally starting to get a grip, Greg went and did one of his yearly website ‘freshenings’, and with a wave of his and David’s magik wands, he’d made all those older comments suddenly disappear. I was horrified, traumatized, agast — it felt like he’d just inexplicably ripped out and burned the first half of my favorite book, and there were no copies to be found anywhere.

      Without any help, I’d been teaching myself to use my old computer, and at that point I still hadn’t learned how to ‘Save’ anything. But since the change was unannounced, it wouldn’t have done any good anyway. I asked Greg if he could send me a copy of the old TDG, and he very kindly had David send me zip files of it. But those zips didn’t include the comments sections, which was the part I most wanted.

      At some point over the next couple of years, I finally figured out how to save things. So when Greg announced another ‘freshening’ was about to take place, at least I had the presence of mind to save some of the most interesting things, including all of ‘Jameske’s Rants’, and the 500 or so comments posted under Greg’s post-9/11 editorial, ‘Interesting Times’. Quite naively, I thought by saving all this stuff, I’d managed to emotionally prepare myself for any upcoming site-changes. Then a day or two later, we all showed up, and found ourselves temporarily blinded by the new black on white ‘theme’, which Stella nicely summed up for practically all of us by screaming, ‘My EYES!!!’

      After facing years of steadfast resistance by us monkeys in the peanut gallery, with this latest freshening, Greg has finally achieved his heart’s desire – a new TDG logo. Well, three of them, actually. For me, personally, at least, resistance wasn’t futile – because at some point during the past year, I finally figured out the old logo’s symbolic story.

      Nostalgia aside, there have been some great additions – Sub Rosa, interviews, the blog section, the RSS feeds, etc. I really appreciate even the seemingly small additions, like being able to tell when new comments have been posted. But as I’ve said so many times, and in so many ways, that, no doubt, you’re all tired of hearing it – I still sorely miss those long discussions that used to take place here in days of yore.

      Kat

  2. Darwin’s God
    “Is belief a helpful adaptation or an evolutionary accident?”

    You forgot a third possibility: that we believe in “god” because the desiger(s) programmed our brains to believe in “god.”

      1. Then again again
        since there is no fifth possibility, perhaps could it be a sixth may be because, like our similar no-sensical beliefs in OBE’s (both kinds), oxygen and UV-index reports, it dare-say has some experiential basis?

        They always leave that one to the sixth. I don’t know why. Probably some deep-seated dimensional shakral kabbalistic resononossiance reasononascience harmonic or something.

        “I have here a harmless looking shoebox, but it is infact a small portable battery-powered microwave radar range much like the one you use every day to reheat your coffee at home. Those who believe this is not a real microwave cooker, step forward and please put your eraser inside … or your banking card … or your hand …

        I’m wrong way too often to ever become an evolutionary biologist, but it does seem to me that prior experience could very often be a determinant factor in hesitation, and expectation often be a key element in con-man schemes.

        1. Evolutionary biology
          Matter of fact, even though we don’t tend to realize it, we do have all the experience of biological evolution.

          It is not empirical science that dictated the way we physically evolved but cellular consciousness and a science that you might want to call the science of creation, not creative science.

          In the end, we are both the product and the process of that science, a science that does not belong to the ego but that proceeds from the very process that made us what we are, of the very process that we are.

          We are looking for answer from without because we have not become the masters of our within.

          It is the within that has the answers because it is the within that knows and wills the process.

          Our level of insecurity is so great that we are afraid of what we know, therefore of what we could say, and that could, most definitely would, be challenged by common sense.

          Therefore, we think before we speak, always filtering our own intelligence for the benefit of common sense, of the collective unconscious, of the psychological state of humanity.

          We know a lot more than we think and erroneously believe that what we know should be understood.

          Understanding is the limit of our imagination, not the limit of our reality.

          So, in a sense, an Evolutionary Biologist you are.

    1. As usual, “god” is something of a disappointment…
      Don’t you find it a sad comment on the “designer(s)” that he/she/it/they would have had so little confidence in their handiwork that they felt the need to build belief into their pawns?

      It’s not hard to see how a belief could serve to unite the members of a group and it’s pretty easy to see that a united group would have a better chance for survival than a band of rugged individualists, so belief, in a limited context, would be a good thing.

      Trouble is that we’re a gregarious species and while we are sometimes united in groups by what we hold in common what we hold in common is quite often a dislike or outright hatred of some other group. Thus, in the larger context, the “designer(s)” would have been doing everyone a favor if they’d bogged off somewhere and left Creation to random chance.

      And that, of course, is the point, that Man’s behavior is rather much more readily understood as the result of random chance than as the result of divine intervention because if Man is the best that the supposed superior being could do, he/she/it/they should be doing some soul-searching about just how superior they really are.

      Cheers

      Good News: There’s a guiding force at work in the Universe. Bad News: It’s Irony.

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