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Archive for December, 2008

GREED and DEATH

December 30, 2008 pochp Comments off

My short story ‘Greed and Death’ was published by Associated Contents.

Rating: 3.0 of 5

The thief was on a ‘job’. He was looking for the rare antique he was supposed to lift. He sensed someone behind him and was surprised to see it was his girl and partner he had just dumped.

‘What are you doing here?’ The thief asked.

‘I already got what you’re looking for. And for your information, I’m dumping you too,’ Beth said with a naughty smile.

‘Oh yeah? How about dumping you twelve feet under if you don’t give it to me.’

He moved towards Beth. Beth stood her ground. She was prepared for this. Frank grabbed her neck and said, ‘Where? Take me to it now.’ The hand on her neck tightened. Something stabbed Frank’s back. Beth was really fast with her switchblade. Before Frank could make any move other than widen his eyes, there was another stab. Then another. Frank stepped back until he fell into a soft chair, too shocked to do or say anything.

When Mrs. Fortiz entered her house later that afternoon, it was her turn to be surprised to discover a dead man inside.

‘My precious antique is missing,’ she told the Las Palmas Police officers. ‘It’s a figurine of a flying swan dated back to 1710. Worth more than .2 million dollars.’ A tough old woman, thought Lt. Joe Picasso. Throughout the interview, she was poker-faced and emotionless.

‘Antique, did you say ma’am?’ asked Detective Victor Bravo.

‘Exactly that, young man.’

‘Well, we got a lucky clue,’ Bravo said to everyone. ‘We got a card from the victim’s wallet that says “Alameda Antiques.” Owned by a certain Elizabeth Marquez. The dead man’s name is Frank Halcon.’

‘We better have a search warrant before we talk to miss Marquez,’ said Picasso. ‘Give her no chance to dispossess it if she indeed possess it.’ The medical examiner said that the victim was attacked at about 3 PM. The LPPD cops said goodbye to Mrs. Fortiz and the medical group took away the dead thief. –next page–

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Categories: creative writing Tags:

BEST GIFT

December 26, 2008 pochp Comments off

The best gift I received so far was a link to Google search– and I discovered it only because I clicked the ‘more…’ button on my links window!

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Cisco Telepresence

December 25, 2008 pochp Comments off

Have you heard about Cisco Telepresence? Visit their site and judge if it is just magic or not.

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DANGEROUS ROADS

December 25, 2008 pochp Comments off

My sister’s car skid and fell into a ditch a few days ago. This was in Wisconsin. Her one year old son and 2 months old girl was with her. Thanks God no one was hurt. But she was fined 500$ for not reporting the accident and for leaving the scene of the accident.
When they got home, her son was so happy mimicking her scream when the accident occured. Better for the boy rather than to have a psy scar.

Categories: humanity

WIKIPEDIA

December 25, 2008 pochp Comments off

If worse comes to worse, Wikipedia would never have to close down because of lack of funds. It would just need to become a subscription company to keep the search engine running. I think a one-dollar-a-month fee is very affordable but would be more than enough.

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A CHAT which I started

December 25, 2008 pochp Comments off

You said 6 hours ago: (that was pochp)
We are breathing. All of us. If you want to die, stop breathing. You want to live, continue breathing. Where is non-freewill then?? I don’t find freewill believable but It’s less stupid.
R. Eric Sawyer said 5 hours ago:
We are not too far apart about free will, except for the doctrine of the fall.
In what Luther described as “The Bondage of the Will”, sin deforms us in such a way that our free will becomes limited.
In a secular example, think of this: If I lie, I begin to limit my freedom. I must think, speak and act in a way consistent, not with reality or even with my present will, but in a way consistent with the lie. The further I go with the (now plural) lies, the more bondage I experience. Even in the mental health field, we usually see recovery as a move away from bondage in thoughts, feelings and actions, to freedom.
I understand humanity as created with total free will, loosing it through our ancestral and individual sin to a point of bondage (“help! I’ve fallen and can’t get up!” for those old enough to remember THAT commercial!) and Salvation beginning to set us back on our feet, restoring to us our freedom –sort of as physical therapy restoring my ability to walk after the surgeons saved my life.
Restored total freedom is God’s goal with us.
astudent said 3 hours ago:
danaofthebells,
Well, I read most of both links and I could refute them point for point, but that would waste both of our time and would not be fair to them unless they are reading these comments. There are many who follow the teaching of Calvin that believe there is no free will. Funny thing about them is they all believe they are the saved though they have no idea why.
One doesn’t have to use the Bible to prove free will. If you want to lie, then lie. If you want to steal, then steal just don’t get caught.
By the way you probably could seal your pipe with silicone sealer.
astudent said 3 hours ago:
pochp,
That’s funny! Test your theory and stop breathing. I think I can scrounge up quite a bit of money to bet that you can’t just stop breathing. It would be safe to say that you can take your own life in other ways: which will cause you to stop breathing.
If you want to say that you do not have free will because you can not just stop breathing, you can (your free too). It wouldn’t make much sense to me, because you are free to do anything you want. Let me rephrase that, you are free to try anything, success is not guaranteed.
I find the last part of your comment also funny. Perhaps I just don’t understand it, but if you have no free will and that is stupid, and free will is less stupid, then what isn’t stupid? Please resist the temptation to say my comment. Everyone all ready knows that anyway.
astudent said 3 hours ago:
R. Eric Sawyer,
Though it is true that one lie leads too many lies every lie is by choice. It is like flipping a coin. Every time it is flipped it can land either way and every time the opportunity presents its self one can either lie or tell the truth. There may be more internal pressure to lie, but the choice is up to the individual: no one makes them lie.
Any bondage from previous lies is self imposed. I do agree that there is bondage, but anyone can break the chains of it. We are free to accept Jesus as our personal Savior or not. Some say that because God knows who will accept that He made them, but that is not logical. If God were going to save and condemn because of His will there would be no need of a Savior. There would not be any reason for the universe and all of the sin in it for that matter.
If one has no free choice because of previous sins then we are all just victims of our own lies and if we are victims then we do not need to be saved from God: we need to be saved from ourselves. God doesn’t condemn victims. He condemns the guilty.
R. Eric Sawyer said 2 hours ago:
But if we have totally free will, and have the power to choose good, then we have the power to save ourselves, we are condemned because we fail to use that power.
In a nutshell, that was the same argument as Pelagious in the fifth century. Refuted by St. Augustine, the church decided that his teaching was heretical at the Council of Carthage in 4??
I agree that the bondage is self imposed, but it does not follow that it can therefore be self-removed. Think again of sin as something of a lobster pot, easy to enter, but impossible to exit. There is of course the idea that salvation is first of all a rescue of those in bondage (Rom 7:24). Coupled with this is the thought that damnation is brought on by our willingly entering such bondage -not admitting it was bondage, but knowing it to be against God. Thus, our sorry fate, if not for the work of Christ, is just.
As to your point in the first paragraph, that each sin stands on its own, that is not my experience of the nature of sin. I find that each trasgression greases the skids for the next. Each time the coin lands “heads” the probability skews towards repeated “heads” Your milage may vary.
You have a good point that God doesn’t condemn victims. But what if I am victim of my own sin? If I am both victem and perpetrator? I ignored the warnings, and drove off into the mud bog. Now I am indeed a victim in need of rescue from beyond myself, but a victim of my own rebellion against the warning signs. The fact that I am at fault, and deserve my fate, in no way mitigates my need of help if I am to do anything but rot in that mire.
The relationship of free choice and the soveregn will of God is a mystery. I think the truth is that an answer that denies God’s power is wrong on the face of it, but so is any denial of my need to choose. I attempted a minor exploration in “Pondering the TUL[I]P” over at my place, but I am happiest with CS Lewis’ speculation that perhaps we can’t understand the relationship of choice and time until we are beyond both.
There is much to the idea that I seek God because He moved me to seek Him, that He is working in me “both to will and to work,” that I am to “work out my salvation with fear and trembling, for it is Christ that works in me.
Perhaps God holds my hand in his, as I held my son’s, when we are first learning to write with free will. The more we submit to Him, the freer we become.
But I steadfastly affirm your point that I am guilty of damnation by my own deeds, and affirm that I a powerless to overcome them save by the merits and intervention of Chirst, that I must accept His help in ordered to be rescued by Him, who alone has the power to save.
-Blessings this Christmas eve!

Categories: philosophy Tags:

The Real Price Of Gold

December 23, 2008 pochp Comments off

This was my response to National Geographic:

Eyeopening indeed. The picture of the slaves alone makes you want to start a revolution.
I was reminded of a book I read which alleges that since the earlier centuries in Europe, children were being used as slaves in producing fake antiques. They were forced to use their bare hands in sanding woods (best method) until they were bleeding and were forced to continue still.

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DEADLY SIMULATION

December 22, 2008 pochp Comments off

Penny Coleman is the widow of a Vietnam veteran who took his own life after coming home. Her latest book, Flashback: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Suicide and the Lessons of War, was released on Memorial Day 2006. Her Web site is Flashback. She has just reported the following news:

Kids Learn that Killing Is Fun at the Army’s Lethal New Theme Park
The Army Experience Center , located in the Franklin Mills Mall just north of Philadelphia , bills itself as a “state-of-the-art educational facility that uses interactive simulations and online learning programs to educate visitors about the many careers, training and educational opportunities available in the Army.”
Nonsense. The only thing they’re teaching here is how to blow shit up. If it’s state-of-the-art anything, it’s state-of-the-art adolescent boys’ wet dreams.
“Too slow! Do it again!” yells the voice in my earphones as a new sequence of armed figures in camouflage pop up in front of me. I — the player — am attached to the foreshortened barrel of an M-16 — and a little embarrassed by that. It’s not my thing, really. And I wasn’t expecting the game to involve having to tolerate some dickhead’s personal opinion about my marksmanship.
But I didn’t come here to get yelled at or to play games. I came because I was curious about the Army’s latest marketing strategy. For $12 million, this place has been dressed to kill: 15,000 square feet (about three basketball courts) done up in brushed steel, glass and low-light glam. But what this place is really about is the bling: strings of networked Xbox 360 pods and individual gaming stations. And the crown jewels: a UH-60 Black Hawk, an AH-64 Apache and a Humvee. Simulators. And it’s all entirely free.
“Potential recruits are afforded a unique opportunity to learn what it means to be the best-led, best-trained and best-equipped Army in the world by allowing them to virtually experience multiple aspects of the Army,” says Pete Geren, Secretary of the Army.
Sir, give me a break, sir! You mean the “Career Navigators,” those fancy touch-screen installations where you can see all the different jobs the Army can train you for? No one went near them all day. Most of these kids can’t reach them, anyway. It’s the shiny toys and virtual adrenaline rush that brings them in.
Behind a glass wall, there are 40 more terminals facing a wall of plasma screens: the Tactical Operations Center , where local educators (principals, superintendents, school counselors and teachers) are given an earful about how misunderstood the military is.
“Accurate information about the military experience is often drowned out, or the information that does get through projects mixed messages or inaccuracies,” Lt. Gen. Benjamin C. Freakly recently complained to the Northeast Times. “The Army Experience Center provides hands-on, virtual-reality experiences and simulations for young men and women, their parents and others to see, touch and learn firsthand what it means to be in the Army.”
There are no mixed messages at the AEC: being in the Army is about getting to play with boy toys, 24/7. Freakly’s tidy version of “what it means to be in the Army” fails to mention what can happen if your Humvee hits an IED, or how it might feel to be splattered with your best friend’s insides. Or your own.
As I considered that grim thought, there’s a tap on my shoulder. It’s my turn — my Black Hawk awaits.
Our orders are to protect a convoy as it moves through enemy territory. The video kicks in with a roar of rotors; the chopper lurches and bucks as it turns to follow the trucks on the ground — the wind, the vibrations, the report of my M-4 and the staccato of incoming rounds make it hard to hear the screamed alerts coming over the intercom: “Enemy on the right!” “Look out, RPGs straight ahead!”
Bad guys are shooting at me from the alleys, the shadows, the rooftops, but I am wasting them. One after another, they get caught in my crosshairs and — bam! — their bodies lift and sprawl in haphazard death. We’re slammed by an IED and momentarily engulfed in flame. My hand is getting numb from the rifle recoil, but my lizard brain has taken over.
Too soon, we emerge from the bedlam and an inspirationally oversized American flag indicates that we have successfully achieved our destination — a field hospital where rows of medics attend to ghastly luminous, very slightly breathing shapes, the bloodless bodies of the cyber-wounded.
It’s a bizarre curtsy to realism, and almost is lost in the orgy of virtual pyrotechnics as American rockets vaporize a bridge in the background.
I rode the Black Hawk three times and the Humvee twice. My best score: I totally “engaged” 47 percent of the man-shapes that came into my crosshairs. I’m told that 27 percent is average.
And only a few Rules of Engagement infractions — civilians, the ones without guns who were running away. Didn’t notice. Too bad. Mission accomplished.
Paul Boyce, an Army spokesman, “strongly refutes” the notion that any of the Army’s initiatives glamorize war, adding that “great care” is taken to avoid portraying violence.
Again, nonsense. The drill instructor who was yelling at me earlier is a character in the Army’s official game, ” America ’s Army,” available at all of the AEC’s game stations. ” America ’s Army” is unapologetically about realistic, deadly combat — minus the blood. A hit registers as a puff of red smoke. Four puffs and you are “engaged.” Concerned parents can further sanitize the violence with controls that cause dead soldiers to simply sit down.
“We have a ‘Teen’ rating that allows 13-year-olds to play, and in order to maintain that rating we have to adhere to certain standards,” Chris Chambers, a retired Army major who is now the project’s deputy director, told the New York Times. “We don’t use blood and gore and violence to entertain.”
So, in the absence of blood and gore, there is no violence. And kids get that? They get the distinction between fantasy and reality? I found the blurring completely disorienting, and I have consumed decades of both real and virtual violence.
Lt. Col. Dave Grossman has written extensively on the psychology of killing, and he argues that it’s not that people can’t tell the difference between fantasy and reality, but that these games use virtual experience to systematically desensitize and condition.
Grossman cites hundreds of studies that reveal a direct correlation between exposure to media violence — especially interactive video games — and increased childhood aggression. A Stanford University study is particularly compelling: Over a 20-week period, third- and fourth-graders who limited or eliminated TV and video games demonstrated a 50 percent decrease in verbal aggression and a 40 percent decrease in physical aggression.
Grossman warns that Americans ”are reaching that stage of desensitization at which the inflicting of pain and suffering has become a source of entertainment; vicarious pleasure rather than revulsion. We are learning to kill, and we are learning to like it.”
Whose agenda does that serve?
Brian Mackey, a slight kid from Levittown , Pa. , is working the front desk. He’s wearing a white T-shirt sporting a U.S. Army logo, and although he doesn’t have the bulk that comes with basic training (and age), I ask if he is active duty anyway. Brian says no, he plans to go straight from graduation in June into the Army. In the meantime, he has the ideal job for pre-induction skills training.
Brian has a 3.95 grade-point average in high school, but he isn’t interested in the differences between policies or politicians or wars. And he isn’t interested in any of the Army’s fancy careers either. He wants to be in the infantry. When he says, “Sure I might die, but infantry is what I’ve always wanted,” I can’t help but wonder how much of his bravado comes from exactly that systematic desensitization and conditioning Grossman talks about.
His T-shirt, by the way, is part of the First Infantry Division apparel collection, the Army’s first officially licensed line of clothing, on sale in the AEC and at Sears. Made in China. Available in boys sizes.
Despite the AEC’s 13-year-old age limit, underage exiles are welcome to come for the free movies. Or to “Dining Army Style,” featuring MRE (Meal, Ready to Eat) smorgasbords. Otherwise, they can watch — through the center’s glass front from the video arcade or the skateboard palace, both directly opposite the AEC — while their older brothers compete in the Xbox tournaments.
A provision of No Child Left Behind, one of the first pieces of legislation proposed by the Bush administration, forced schools to open their doors to recruiters and provide contact information for students as young as 11.
J.E. McNeil, executive director of the Center on Conscience & War, calls such marketing tactics “an illegal tool in the recruiting arsenal” and a “violation of international law.”
The Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict, ratified and signed by the U.S. Senate in 2002, categorically forbids the Pentagon, or the militaries of any of the other 124 signatory nations, to attempt to recruit children 13 to 16 years old. The Pentagon simply chooses to ignore it, and Congress has neglected to enforce the treaty. (A meticulous documentation of the Pentagon’s recruiting tactics explicitly directed at children can be found in a recent report by the American Civil Liberties Union, Soldiers of Misfortune.)
Staff Sgt. Kevin Haver is a recruiter, a 25-year-old native Philadelphian, pumped up, tightly wrapped in his uniform, and one of a score of active-duty soldiers currently assigned to the AEC. He’s taciturn at first. Having ascended to the warrior class, he has learned to despise and distrust all that is not military. Or at least, to act that way.
Haver has completed five deployments (including two to Iraq and one to Afghanistan ), and he describes them defiantly as “the most fun I’ve ever had.” My question about stress gets a dismissive snort. He’s a “flexible kind of guy.” Being home is nice enough, but it’s too laid-back. He misses the high energy, the focused activity, and especially, the comradeship.
In fact, here at the center, it is laid-back — nothing like the heavy-handed recruiting tactics that have caused so much public outrage over the past few years. Soldiers are standing around talking, watching TV. Some of Haver’s buddies even jumped on the sims with me, inflating my scores. The place is filled with kids, but they are all playing games, ignoring the soldiers, who ignore them in turn.
“It’s not a recruiting center,” insists Ed Walters, the Army’s first official chief marketing officer.
It is so, Ed.
For the past two years, the Army has proudly claimed to have met its recruitment goals. The economic crisis, unemployment, expanded educational benefits, grossly inflated enlistment bonuses, an array of medical, moral and criminal waivers, and relaxed weight, height, age and education requirements all make that achievement look considerably less impressive. The Army’s efforts have cost more than $4 billion a year, but a recent rash of recruiter suicides in Texas suggests that the ongoing stress of meeting quotas is becoming intolerable for some.
It seems the Army has come up with a unique strategy for the future: automation. For $4 billion, they could build half a dozen experience centers in every state and let the machines desensitize, condition, train and even enlist America ’s youth.
The Pentagon has been enjoined by both by national lawmakers and international institutions to stop pandering to children. When children’s bodies are invaded, we call it statutory rape. Do we have a tidier phrase for the invasion of their minds?

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USELESS POSTS

December 21, 2008 pochp Comments off

I noticed that there was a surge of useless posts. I hope WP would not sacrifice quality for quantity.

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HOW TO END PARTIES

December 21, 2008 pochp Comments off

This is part of a post from mindbodydoc:

…the most difficult aspect of dinner parties is to manage the ending. Never allow a party to drift on. Those who love the sound of their own voice will dominate, while everybody else will get bored and feel trapped. You must control the ending.
When I was a medical student, my tutor used to announce the end of the dinner by appearing in his dressing gown and telling everybody he wanted to go to bed now. While I would not encourage that – some might take it the wrong way – you need to find some way of bringing the proceedings to an end. One useful ploy is to ask one of your guests, whom you know well, to announce that it’s late and time to go. This will allow you to agree and thank everybody for coming. Remain in control at all times. Do not replenish the liqueurs and never offer to make more coffee.

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