Re: Las Vegas Shooting Experience - Concerned
Posted: Tue Jan 23, 2018 7:11 am
I do it everyday and never apologizeBlessed wrote:I went off into left field again, sorry about that.
"The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1)
https://discussions.godandscience.org/
I do it everyday and never apologizeBlessed wrote:I went off into left field again, sorry about that.
!!!??? Alex Jones, Richard Hoagland, Dr Deagle, etc....RickD wrote:Seems Stu has been watching too much Alex Jones.edwardmurphy wrote:That's a hell of a claim. Citation, please.
It was reported. What was also reported is that Russian troops had already occupied Crimea at that point. A referendum - even an apparently clear one - is suspect when it takes place under the guns of foreign troops. The situation in Crimea is complex, same as everything else.Blessed wrote:All ballots should be paper. 90%+ of Crimea voted to leave Ukraine and go with Russia. 100% paper.
No Diebold voting machines. Huge voter turnout. EU and US did not care the people voted. No reporting this facts by the MSM that I saw. Only Indy Internet sources.
It seems, the Pope is reading your posts !Philip wrote:Well, the reality is that there ARE conspiracies and conspirators. But the problem is, there are those who see such things in every uncertain or mysterious thing, because there are so many perpetrators of these, that when a real conspiracy has occurred or is ongoing, no one tends to believe it because "it's just another conspiracy theory." So, we can't always dismiss some things until we have more facts - but that works in the opposite direction as well - don't buy into something without adequate knowledge, see what the established facts reveal, as well as what they do or can not show us. But with some people and organizations claiming whatever, given their history of similar type claims, we should know to be exceptionally skeptical. Many things are totally plausible, but that aren't necessarily true - the great danger of circumstantial evidence in hands and mouths with agendas.
Ah, more like he's not taking my advice. And don't you just love that an army of supposedly celibate and cluelessly unmarried clergy are advising married people how to go about marriage. The CC needs to sanction married priests - just like the Bible DOES!Philip wrote:
Well, the reality is that there ARE conspiracies and conspirators. But the problem is, there are those who see such things in every uncertain or mysterious thing, because there are so many perpetrators of these, that when a real conspiracy has occurred or is ongoing, no one tends to believe it because "it's just another conspiracy theory." So, we can't always dismiss some things until we have more facts - but that works in the opposite direction as well - don't buy into something without adequate knowledge, see what the established facts reveal, as well as what they do or can not show us. But with some people and organizations claiming whatever, given their history of similar type claims, we should know to be exceptionally skeptical. Many things are totally plausible, but that aren't necessarily true - the great danger of circumstantial evidence in hands and mouths with agendas.Hamster: It seems, the Pope is reading your posts !
Hey Phillip, you could be the Pope's next adviser on religious mattersPhilip wrote:Ah, more like he's not taking my advice. And don't you just love that an army of supposedly celibate and cluelessly unmarried clergy are advising married people how to go about marriage. The CC needs to sanction married priests - just like the Bible DOES!Philip wrote:
Well, the reality is that there ARE conspiracies and conspirators. But the problem is, there are those who see such things in every uncertain or mysterious thing, because there are so many perpetrators of these, that when a real conspiracy has occurred or is ongoing, no one tends to believe it because "it's just another conspiracy theory." So, we can't always dismiss some things until we have more facts - but that works in the opposite direction as well - don't buy into something without adequate knowledge, see what the established facts reveal, as well as what they do or can not show us. But with some people and organizations claiming whatever, given their history of similar type claims, we should know to be exceptionally skeptical. Many things are totally plausible, but that aren't necessarily true - the great danger of circumstantial evidence in hands and mouths with agendas.Hamster: It seems, the Pope is reading your posts !
I did not see the vote % reported on the MSM. Neither CNN or Faux News. I thought the Russian troops occupied Crimea after the vote. Not before or during. If so, I was not aware of this fact. Are you sure they were there before or during the vote? Sorry I did not see anything about this important detail on the news.edwardmurphy wrote:It was reported. What was also reported is that Russian troops had already occupied Crimea at that point. A referendum - even an apparently clear one - is suspect when it takes place under the guns of foreign troops. The situation in Crimea is complex, same as everything else.Blessed wrote:All ballots should be paper. 90%+ of Crimea voted to leave Ukraine and go with Russia. 100% paper.
No Diebold voting machines. Huge voter turnout. EU and US did not care the people voted. No reporting this facts by the MSM that I saw. Only Indy Internet sources.
But sure, paper ballots would be fine.
Actually, the one thing I'd advise him to keep the same - the hats - gotta admit, they are pretty cool.Hamster: Hey Phillip, you could be the Pope's next adviser on religious matters
Well, you know how the CC claims Peter to be the first Pope ( ), and yet the Bible states that Pete himself was nagged constantly (was married!) - so, go figure. But seriously, you deny people a God-given outlet for their sex drive, and well, we can see how that has driven so much sexual abuse in the CC (BTW, Catholic clergy are by no means the only ones). It's the same reason why solidly heterosexual men and women often "go Bi" during their stints in prison.Hamster: It's interesting to note that priests can marry in the Greek/Eastern Orthodox Catholic religions. Why not the Roman Catholic church?. At least the Pope is considering it....https://thenewdaily.com.au/religion/201 ... d-priests/
It's called sarcasm, not snarkiness. And it's never gotten Rick into trouble, except with just about everyone at some point.