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Messages - eSineM

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31
Off-Topic / Re: Is President Obama a leader?
« on: August 21, 2010, 02:20:58 am »Message ID: 223816
C'mon dude Clinton built something? He also bombed the middle east while he was in office. He, much like Obama, was pitched as a celebrity more than a president. America concentrating on entertainment more than politics, liked this.. They like Obama and Clinton for many of the same reasons. Comedians like Chris Rock even joke about Clinton being the first black president haha, a player of women and even the sax.  But what exactly did Clinton do that was great? And if Bush did so much wrong, why did Obama renew the Patriot ACT? Why does he send even more people to IRAQ/Afghanistan? Why does he not only continue the Bush policy, but further the agenda by actually making it worse? These are the reas questions that dont get answered, instead we hear about Michelle and Barak on television shows, or drinking beer with a policeman. haha Focus on personal life and not the politics,just like tiger woods or some *bleep* haha. Those who really speak out against him get to be labeled racist which is a nice bonus for those trying to brainwash the masses into believing Obama is a GOOD and trustworthy politician with power.

32
Off-Topic / Re: Is President Obama a leader?
« on: August 16, 2010, 11:08:49 pm »Message ID: 221815
Thanks. :)

33
Off-Topic / Re: Is President Obama a leader?
« on: August 15, 2010, 09:28:33 pm »Message ID: 221210
I do wonder if Obama was white would all these negative comments be made.  The man is trying to help the country from going down a hole, the same thing Bush should have been doing before he left office.  Bush left this mess for Obama to clean up.  You all are always comlaining about the amount of vacations he and his family take , well he didn't take as many as Bush and for all your complaining and bitching you really don't know where Bush was really taking all his vacations.

Why don't all you nay sayers take a real look at Bush's record before continuing to blame Obama for everthing to include your chipped nails.  Bush cheated his way into the white house and lied at each step, why didn't you complain then?  Enough of trying to blame Obama for all the financial misery out there.  The funny thing about all this is with all the billions given to the banks and car dealers, the exectuives were still giving themselves million dollar bonuses and taking vacations on their yachts and guess what they were all white.

If Im not mistaken it was the Obama policy that allowed these white people to give themselves these bonus's and bailed out these billionaires when they made bad decisions that effected the majority of America.

As for messes to clean up, that is Obama's job, and why he was hired.. its not an excuse for failure. Bush had a mess to clean up, every president has a mess to clean up.. Bush was terrible, so is Obama.. Easy way to judge? Compare what they do, how is the economy? What did Bush do to help? bailouts... well whats this CHANGE Obama does? bailouts... wait... change?? Then there is the wars... failing miserably and he promises to bring the troops home.. in no time, he sends even more troops to war... Thats the opposite of bringing them home BTW.  Its funny how people use Bush as a judge of character, why not just compare Obama to hitler? At least Obama isnt gassing the jew's! So he is a good guy!  Doesnt make sense does it? Same as it doesnt make sense to compare him to a horrible man like Bush. The main thing is they both run the same policy, war and bailouts...

Obama is almost as bad as Bush in some ways, and worse in others. He is just a much better speaker, and sells dopes "hope on a rope" haha. meanwhile war continues, and he wont even do something as simple as abolish the Military Commissions act or Patriot ACT which is clearly against the Constitution! He wont even condemn torture, instead he will promise to close a single place where it is carried out... as if the place itself is the criminal, not the acts done there and many other places.. Its just a sick joke to think that any President has your best interest at heart, you dont pay his bills! Your not the one who got him in office! It was the big budgets of the big business, and he must do his job working for them.

34
Off-Topic / If Gambling’s Good, Why Not Pot?
« on: August 15, 2010, 04:58:09 am »Message ID: 220832
Taken from 420girls.com

Quote
I spoke to Kevin Krueger recently to ask him to explain the difference between his party’s voracious criticism of gambling expansion (in particular online wagering) while in opposition and the fact it is salivating as it expands gambling like no other government in North America.

During the conversation, the Kamloops-South Thompson MLA and tourism minister compared government involvement in cyber-casinos to the failed prohibition experience of eight decades ago.

“There’s no going back,” he said of government’s foray into gambling. “It’s like alcohol. Prohibition ended up benefitting organized crime and government changed its mind.”

Based on that view, I asked, why shouldn’t marijuana — or any other illegal drug, for that matter — be legalized? It’s a fact prohibition benefits criminals and, the stricter the prohibition, the more money flows into the pockets of the underworld.

Krueger mentioned the fact the legalization issue is a federal mandate (true, though provinces can take stands and push for needed change); argued marijuana is a gateway drug (actually, alcohol is the pre-eminent gateway drug); and that he has heard reports of dealers lacing marijuana with stronger, addictive drugs to create a repeat customer base.

The last claim is hard to believe, considering the $7-billion-a-year marijuana industry hardly needs anything more than the plant to maintain customers.

And, for argument’s sake, even if it were true, that’s more reason for government to legalize, regulate and tax pot. Government did so for alcohol and I would suggest treating teens for drinking bad Budweiser and busting stills in the hills are rare events indeed for police and physicians.

Seriously, if Rich Coleman — the minister responsible for gambling in B.C. — can essentially argue B.C. can’t beat them, so it is joining them in the $100 million residents allegedly spent annually on offshore gambling websites, why wouldn’t he and the Liberals push for the same when it comes to the question of marijuana?

Why? Because this is the way it has always been. Because Canada has a prime minister who follows the failed U.S. war-on-drugs mantra in lockstep, a leader who makes embarrassing comments, such as pointing to the thousands of murders in Mexico as a reason not to legalize pot — somehow missing the fact those thousands of murders occur precisely and only because pot and other drugs remain illegal.

Opponents often argue legalization will legitimize pot-smoking. Well, why shouldn’t it be legitimized?

Is there an iota of difference between a person unwinding after work with a scotch and soda and a person unwinding after work with a joint, aside from the fact our silly society labels the latter a criminal for no apparent reason?

Opponents often charge legalization’s road to legitimization will result in more young people trying marijuana.

Baloney. Ask your average teenager to get you a case of Heineken and ask another teenager to get you a bag of weed. Guess which one will find it near impossible to deliver your goods?

That’s because legalization has dropped the price of alcohol to levels that have eliminated organized crime and the need to make your own, while regulation has made it appropriately difficult for minors to get their hands on booze.

Pot? It’s everywhere.

It’s more available illegal than it ever would be as a legal, regulated substance.

In 2002, the Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs called for the legalization of marijuana, noting that prohibition of marijuana has done little to reduce its use despite vast amounts of money spent on law enforcement, that marijuana is not a gateway to harder drugs like ******* and ******, that marijuana is not generally addictive (less than 10 per cent of users become addicted) and that pot is less harmful than alcohol.

The very fact marijuana is illegal is the reason organized crime, violence and sky-high prices are part of the equation.

Add to that electrocutions and fires (caused when growers mess with hydro connections) and one has to wonder why the powers-that-be cannot see that legalization is the answer that makes the most sense.

• Chris Foulds is managing editor of Kamloops This Week, a Black Press newspaper.

35
Off-Topic / Re: Is President Obama a leader?
« on: August 14, 2010, 03:41:36 pm »Message ID: 220622
I have a hard time believing that our President is a leader.  I really truly believe he is more of a follower than a leader.  Who else out there agrees with me?  If there is one place in this country that needs a leader, it's our Commander-in- Chief.  What do you all think?

I think that they dont hire people who are leaders to be the president for a reason. He is not the leader and does not have the power, so his job is to be able to rally people, turn the left and right against each other to keep the divide between the people. Talk a whole lot of nothing that just leaves you with more questions than you started with, and never any answers. Tell you what you want to hear, and if your a good actor sounding sincere than all the better.. but its only second, after all your emotion doesnt stay on the record, your speeches do.

36
Off-Topic / Re: Shaq A Big Leprechaun
« on: August 14, 2010, 03:30:38 pm »Message ID: 220620
He is gonna slow them down just like he did the Cavs.. he demands the ball to much!

37
Off-Topic / Re: 10 reasons to drink Aloe Vera Juice
« on: August 14, 2010, 03:29:35 pm »Message ID: 220619
Type in keywords on Google you may find some answers

Here is what we buy
http://www.walmart.com/ip/Aloe-Vera-W-99.8-Aloe-Juice-1-gal/10314798
been using it for 3 years, and it has been totally effective

38
Off-Topic / the Biggest Medical Breakthrough Since the Discovery of Antibiotics?
« on: August 06, 2010, 05:06:18 am »Message ID: 217124
"Is this the Biggest Medical Breakthrough
Since the Discovery of Antibiotics?"
Harvard Researchers are saying this miracle ingredient which helps keep your blood pressure in the normal range, helps your heart health, and better controls the aging process could be the biggest medical breakthrough in 30 years.*

WATCH VIDEO

Some Harvard-educated researchers believe they’ve discovered a proverbial ‘fountain of youth’.*

They’re talking about resveratrol, calling it a miracle ingredient, and the greatest discovery since antibiotics.*

Resveratrol is a compound found in the skin and seeds of grapes.

Researchers have been mystified for years about how the French can smoke cigarettes and eat high-fat foods, yet still have extremely low rates of cancer and heart disease. They call it the French paradox.

Harvard researchers Dr. Christoph Westphal and David Sinclair conducted genetic research to investigate the French paradox.

Until now, scientists believed drinking red wine had health benefits*… but couldn’t put their finger on exactly why.

Now they believe the resveratrol in wine activates cells into behaving more youth-like in a number of ways.*

The biggest hurdle with resveratrol is finding a way to consume the large concentrations required to provide you with a benefit. You’d need several bottles of wine per day to get the anticipated benefit from resveratrol. Drinking large amounts of wine or other alcoholic beverages will increase your insulin levels, which will eventually have a negative impact on your health in a number of ways.

I’ll tell you in a minute how you can get your highly-concentrated resveratrol without the alcohol, sugars and calories of red wine.

But first, let’s discuss how to control your free radical levels…

Read more here

40
Off-Topic / Re: Evil and God
« on: August 05, 2010, 07:35:13 pm »Message ID: 217043
Great article, thanks for posting  :o and the source :D

42
Off-Topic / L.E.D> Light fun
« on: July 31, 2010, 08:05:45 pm »Message ID: 214563

43
Off-Topic / Long List of Banned Books
« on: July 31, 2010, 08:03:44 pm »Message ID: 214562
http://prernalal.com/banned%20books/?C=M;O=A

for all you wannabe revolutionaries..


all downloadable in pdf i think
includes works by chomsky, icke etc
articles on globalisation, mind control, U.S Military interventions etc

44
Off-Topic / Is Rock music satanic? mwahaha
« on: July 31, 2010, 08:02:18 pm »Message ID: 214561
I copied this from another forum...thought it was pretty interesting
Quote

In the following  statements,
rock musicians testify of an    outside power that has taken over them
while writing and performing  rock    music. Some of them have actually
identified this power as demonic:


In Smash  Hits
magazine, Bon Jovi says: ". . . I'd kill my mother for      rock and
roll.  I WOULD SELL MY SOUL."

Robert
Plant and Jimmy Page of     LED ZEPPELIN both claim that they don’t know
 who wrote their occultic  song    Stairway to Heaven. Plant testified:
“Pagey had written the chords and  played    them for me. I was holding
the paper and pencil, and for some reason, I  was in    a very bad mood.
 Then all of a sudden my hand was writing out words. …  I just    sat
there and looked at the words and then I almost leaped out of my  seat”
(Davin    Seay, Stairway to Heaven, p. 249).

“I’ve
always considered that    there was some way where we were able to
channel energy, and that  energy was    able to be, from another source,
 if you like, like a higher power or    something, that was actually
doing the work. I’ve often thought of us  just    being actually just
the earthly beings that played the music because  it was    uncanny.
Some of this music came out extremely uncanny” (Bill Ward of  BLACK   
SABBATH, cited in Black Sabbath An Oral History, p. 7).

“It’s
amazing, ’cause  sometimes    when we’re on stage, I feel like
somebody’s just moving the pieces.  ... I’m    just going, ‘God, we
don’t have any control over this.’ And that’s  magic” (Stevie    Nicks
of FLEETWOOD MAC, Circus, April 14, 1971).

ANGUS
YOUNG, lead guitarist  for    AC-DC, is called the “guitar demon”; and
he admitted that something  takes    control of the band during their
concerts: “...it’s like I’m on  automatic    pilot. By the time we’re
halfway through the first number someone else  is    steering me. I’m
just along for the ride. I become possessed when I  get on    stage”
(Hit Parader, July 1985, p. 60).

“We receive our songs by   
inspiration, like at a séance” (Keith Richards of the ROLLING STONES, 
Rolling    Stone, May 5, 1977, p. 55).

“I was
directed and commanded  by    another power. The power of darkness ...
that a lot of people don’t  believe    exists. The power of the Devil.
Satan” (LITTLE RICHARD, cited by  Charles    White, The Life and
Times of Little Richard
, p. 206).

JIMI
HENDRIX’    girlfriend, Fayne Pridgon, said: “He used to always talk
about some  devil or    something was in him, you know. He didn’t know
what made him act the  way he    acted and what made him say the things
he said, and the songs and  different    things like that … just came
out of him. It seems to me he was so  tormented    and just torn apart
and like he really was obsessed, you know, with  something    really
evil” (sound track from film Jimi Hendrix, interview with Fayne 
Pridgon,    side 4, cited by Heartbeat of the Dragon, p. 50).

“You
can’t describe it  [playing    rock music] except to say it’s like a
mysterious energy that comes  from the    metaphysical plane and into my
 body. It’s almost like being a  medium....”    (Marc Storace, vocalist
with heavy-metal band KROKUS, Circus, January  31,    1984, p. 70).

“They
[The Beatles] were like    mediums. They weren’t conscious of all they
were saying, but it was  coming    through them” (YOKO ONO, The Playboy
Interviews with John Lennon and  Yoko Ono,    Berkeley, 1982, p. 106.).

“[Of his
 music JOHN LENNON  said]    “It’s like being possessed: like a psychic
or a medium” (The Playboy    Interviews, p. 203).

“I
really wish I knew why I’ve     done some of the things I’ve done over
the years. I don’t know if I’m a  medium    for some outside source.
Whatever it is, frankly, I hope it’s not what  I think    it is—Satan”
(OZZY OSBOURNE, Hit Parader, February 1978, p. 24).

Jimmy
 Hendrix
once    said, "I can explain everything better through
music. YOU HYPNOTIZE  PEOPLE...    And when you get people at their
weakest point you can preach into the     subconscious what we want to
say.  That's why the name "electric  church'    flashes in and out."

Led
Zeppelin (From the song    Houses of the Holy): "Let the music
be your master, won't you  heed the    masters call? OhSatan"

“It’s
amazing that it [the  tune    to ‘In My Life’] just came to me in a
dream. That’s why I don’t  profess to    know anything. I think music is
 very mystical” (John Lennon, “The  Beatles Come    Together,” Reader’s
Digest, March 2001).

“I felt like a hollow temple   
filled with many spirits, each one passing through me, each inhabiting 
me for    a little time and then leaving to be replaced by another”
(John  Lennon,    People, Aug. 22, 1988, p. 70).

“The
music to ‘Yesterday’ came  in    a dream. The tune just came complete.
You have to believe in magic. I  can’t    read or write music” (PAUL
MCCARTNEY, interview on Larry King Live,  CNN, June    12, 2001).

“It
happens subliminally. It’s     the music that compels me to do it. You
don’t think about it, it just  happens.    I’m slave to the rhythm’
(Michael Jackson, explaining the reason for  some of    the filthy
sexual gestures during his concerts, during a 1993 Oprah  Winfrey   
interview, The Evening Star, Feb. 11, 1993, p. A10).

“When
the Siberian shaman gets     ready to go into his trance, all the
villagers get together... and  play    whatever instruments they have to
 send him off [into trance and  possession]. …    It was the same way
with The Doors when we played in concert... I  think that    our drug
experience let us get into it... [the trance state]  quicker.... It   
was like Jim [Morrison] was an electric shaman and we were the  electric
    shaman’s band, pounding away behind him. Sometimes he wouldn’t feel
 like    getting into the state, but the band would keep on pounding and
  pounding, and    little by little it would take him over. God, I could
 send an electric  shock    through him with the organ. John could do it
 with his drumbeats”  (DOORS    keyboardist Ray Manzarek, cited by Jerry
 Hopkins and Daniel Sugerman,  No One    Here Gets Out Alive, pp.
158-60).

“Rock has always been the  devil’s    music, you can’t
convince me that it isn’t. I honestly believe  everything I’ve    said—I
 believe rock and roll is dangerous. … I feel that we’re only  heralding
    something even darker than ourselves” (DAVID BOWIE, Rolling Stone, 
February    12, 1976, p. 83).

“In the end you have to look  at a 
  song and not know exactly where it came from” (BRUCE SPRINGSTEIN, 
Dateline,    Dec. 14, 1998).

Flea (from the Red Hot Chili   
Peppers):  "Music is really great, it can, it can, it can move,    you
know a large group of people, it can inspire and move a large  group of
   people--then revolution can happen"

“That
certain feeling happened  to    me in a big way quite often with the
first King Crimson. Amazing  things would    happen--I mean, telepathy,
qualities of energy, things that I had  never    experienced before with
 music … you can’t tell whether the music is  playing    the musician or
 the musician is playing the music” (Robert Fripp,  guitarist    for
KING CRIMSON, Down Beat, June 1985, p. 61).

“I
believe inspiration comes    through me and that I channel it” (Jim
Kerr, SIMPLE MINDS, cited by  Steve    Turner, Hungry for Heaven, p.
147).

John McLaughlin, leader of    MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA,
testified: “One night we were playing and  suddenly the    spirit
entered into me, and I was playing, but it was no longer me  playing”   
 (The Rock Report, p. 58).

Glen Tipton of JUDAS PRIEST  says, 
  “I just go crazy when I go onstage … it’s like someone else takes over
  my    body” (Hit Parader, Fall 1984, p. 6).

In 1974,
 JONI MITCHELL told  the    press of a male spirit who helps her write
music. “Joni Mitchell  credits her    creative powers to a ‘male muse’
she identifies as Art. He has taken  so much    control of not only her
music, but her life, that she feels married to  him,    and often roams
naked with him on her 40-acre estate. His hold over  her is so    strong
 that she will excuse herself from parties and forsake lovers  whenever
   he ‘calls’” (Why Knock Rock? p. 112, citing Time magazine, Dec. 16, 
1974, p.    39).

“I wake up from dreams and go    ‘Wow, put this down on
paper,’ the whole thing is strange. You hear  the words,    everything
is right there in front of your face. I feel that  somewhere,   
someplace it’s been done and I’m just a courier bringing it into the 
world”    (MICHAEL JACKSON, Rolling Stone, Feb. 17, 1983).

“When I
hit the stage it’s all  of    a sudden a ‘magic’ from somewhere that
comes and the spirit just hits  you, and    you just lose control of
yourself” (Michael Jackson, Teen Beat: A  Tribute to    Michael Jackson,
 Summer 1984, p. 27).

GINGER BAKER, drummer for the   
popular ‘60s band CREAM, said: “It happens to us quite often--it feels 
as    though I’m not playing my instrument, something else is playing it
 and  that    same thing is playing all three of our instruments. That’s
 what I mean  when I    say it’s frightening sometimes. Maybe we’ll all
play the same phrase  out of    nowhere.  It happens very often with us”
 (Bob Larson, Rock and the  Church, p.    66).

JOE
COCKER, who contorts    grotesquely during his performances, claims that
 something “seizes”  him when    he songs rock
& roll (Time magazine, cited by Bob
Larson, Rock and the Church,    p. 66).

Lead
singer Perry Farrell of    JANE’S ADDICTION performs in a “frenzied
trance-state” like that of a  shaman.

“When
I’m singing and in touch     with the energy I’m generating, I sometimes
 literally have no  awareness of    where I am. The ego disappears, and
me and my surroundings with it. …  that’s    the reason I’m in music--to
 achieve that feeling” (Daryl Oates of HALL  AND    OATES, interview
with Timothy White, 1987, Rock Lives, p. 592).

The
original recording of “I  Put    a Spell on You” was done after the
SCREAMIN’ JAY HAWKINS and his band  members    got drunk and “some type
of presence seemed to seize him.” He began  “grunting,    growling,
screaming, gurgling in strange unknown tongues, and wildly  dancing   
around the studio” (Heartbeat of the Dragon, p. 40).

Crosby
of Crosby, Stills

&
Nash made that
plain enough when he bragged, "I figured that the only    thing to do
was steal their kids. I still think it's the only thing to     do...I'm
not talking about kidnapping...but about changing young  people's   
value system."

The sexuality of music is  usually    referred to in
terms of rhythm, it is the beat that commands a  directly    physical
response.  Music with the heavy, hard beat got the name "Rock  and   
Roll" when a disc jockey coined the term from sex in the back seat of a
 car.  The rock beat is Satan's sound of lawlessness. The rock beat is 
musical    perversion. Every knowledgeable musician knows that the term
"rock"  really    means a shameful act of lust.  But that is not the
only problem!  The  beat of    rock is nothing new. Pagan, animistic
tribes had the "rock beat" long  before    it came to America.  They use
 the driving beat to get "high" and bring  them    into an altered state
 of consciousness.  Traditional drumming and  dancing    techniques are
designed to achieve the Shamanic State of  Consciousness.  You    see,
the beat  is a vehicle for demon infestation.



[/color]

45
Off-Topic / Recent Earthquake map for California
« on: July 31, 2010, 08:01:19 pm »Message ID: 214560
It's amazing how fast and accurate this map is
http://quake.usgs.gov/recenteqs/
It gives you an instant detailed report

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