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Mainstream Media exposes 9/11 on 9/11, then retracts

Posted on Jul 7th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
I love how the Mainstream Media speaks of the 9/11 Truth Movement as "a bunch of conspiracy theorists who claim that explosives were used to drop the THREE, yes THREE buildings at the World Trade Center that came down on 9/11.  And, of course, since we've had "Muslim Fanatics" pounded into our heads year after year, for some of us it's quite difficult or "out there" to challenge the official line.  What I love about this video is that the first 20 minutes are all footage from Mainstream Media reporting on the day of 9/11.  It's them interviewing people at the scene of the crime, firemen, policemen, maintenance workers at the WTC, and people who worked there and escaped the crumbling towers what went on.

You decide for yourself why the story changed and why it's considered "conspiracy theory" to say precisely what the mainstream media said on 9/11.

"Conspiracy Theory" is one of those all-American terms that I have never heard used anywhere else.  The next time someone uses this term, which is simply used to discredit anything that would cause cognitive dissonance in people programmed to believe in symbols (flags, pledges of allegiance, anthems, etc.) rather than what they can see, hear and feel, send them to their nearest Federal Court House to examine the docket.  The most common federal crime is "conspiracy to..."  Conspiracy is not a theory, it's a crime that coercive protection rackets known as governments have perfected. 

9/11 Revisited: Were explosives used?



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What helps you stay open?

Posted on Jul 12th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for July 11, 2008:

I think that, with time, one learns to be open to more and more of what one is experiencing. When I realize that I am not who I image-in (i.e, force an image in) myself to be. That Beingness is here and it is not necessarily invested in my image of what I imagine I am. Being Is. So with time I learn to be open to this Beingness that is I Am. To know that it might slam the door in your face, regale you with profound wisdom, honk it's horn in demonic sneer and "fuck you" on the freeway, stroke your ass ever so lightly in the subway through that incredibly light, flowery crepe skirt that makes your rump a tender fruit that my teeth want to sink into, or help you across the road with your groceries.

We are Curiosity. By this I don't necessarily mean that we are curious. Some of us are boring and bored as hell. Nevertheless the Cosmic Curiosity is what becomes us on its way to sitting on the guru's throne while playing with the devotees in prohibited ways "after-hours" or landing on the side of the freeway, a mat of crushed tooth and bone plastered into bloodied fur. Curiosity becomes Us.

And so I learn to be open to all of this. To know that even I am not what I expected. I was expecting some brilliant, debonaire, enlightened being - and then I showed up.  Hey, I can dig it.  If, sometimes, it's hard for you, just imagine what it's like for me.  Ha, ha, ha! For all the ideas that I have of who I am, I am not that idea.  The idea of who I am is not.  The idea of who you are is not. 

In being open to you, you simply appear in the same place that I appear.  There is only one movement.  That movement is unitive and in its swirl all flavors, emotions, thoughts, nuances, attractions and repulsions appear to appear.  Yet the movement is not any of these.  Maybe wisdom manifests, a flirtation, indifference, help, a severed head, a vigorous fuck, a poetic symphony of delightful invitations, silence or an improvised sonic frenzy.

I am open.  Openness is the hole I emerge from and tumble back into, whether I'm opening my arms to you or slamming the door in your face.  Openness is - beyond and through all appearances.
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Transient Incidents

Posted on Jul 12th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
Imgp3354
We are transient incidents. 

The fiction of "my life" is a transient incident.
The fiction of "my country" is a transient incident. 
The fiction of "our love affair" is a transient incident. 
The fiction of "my enlightenment" is a transient incident. 

Transient and delicious

There is nothing that I can fix that will keep "me" from disappearing and another, unknown "I" reappearing

here to be discovered again...
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Weaving the Human Spirit

Posted on Jul 14th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
An old medicine man (actually, he was more of a Coyote Doctor, which is REAL trouble) once told me, "If you're thinking of getting serious about a woman, go meet her mother, because she'll come out a lot like her mother." And then I asked him "What about a woman who wants to find out about a man she like."

"Go meet his mother. Same thing! Human beings are shaped by their mothers. Their bodies are shaped with the mother's attitude toward life way before they have any sense of being male or female."

And that reflects my experience here in the U.S. and much of the Anglo world: a culture where both the female and the male are asexualized. Women tell me all the time that they wish that their man would talk to them the way that I talk to them. My simply question to them: How do you talk to your man?

More later...

Back again: Now before you object and tell me that you are NOT like your mother or the women you grew up with, let me tell you that I am not talking about your belief system, your values. "Temperament" is heading in the right direction but, I perceive it more like a body thing. How the body moves in the world - because before we gain muscular possession of our own bodies, our bodies are moved mostly by the feminine and the rhythmicity of our stance and response to the world is syncopated into the anatomy and neurology of our responsiveness. Later our musculature begins to express that neurology AND the greater or lesser capacity to tap into our anatomical hearts as organs of knowing, which is precisely what they are - yet we have very little access to this knowing in Western culture and any culture that domesticates children rather than supporting their natural process of discovery and creation. A child is CONNECTIVE by nature and the military-medical-pharmaco-industrial educational uses force to confine children into a very narrow bandwidth of disconnective obedience.

Spending years with a beautiful woman from Venezuela raised by three generations of women and plenty of wild, loving, outrageous men has taught me much about how human families can flourish without the need for the imposition of "rules" and always "correcting behavior" which was so prevalent in my upbringing and which is quite acute in the U.S. Although, as of late, it seems that many children in the U.S. grew up in a hyper-permissive indifference. If we don't like how our kids act, rather than weaving them into the fabric of feelings, we just upgrade their video toys so that their presence can be "on hold."

What does this have to do with the sacredness of male sexuality? Everything. Because male and female sexuality start at conception, when we are woven into the sensuality of the world through riding a literal ocean of rhythmic, emotive, biological waves in our mothers' wombs. The sensual rhythmicity of our mothers, or lack thereof, binds us into a deep-seated, embryonic response to the world that our very organismic structures then express developmentally already prior to birth. Neurological embryology now reveals that if our mothers are stressed, embryonic development favors the development of the reptilian brain and brainstem, thus favoring individuals best-equipped for fight and flight, warfare and strife. If our mothers are at ease and assured of a harmonious future, embryonic development favors the development of the pre-frontal cortex and beings best equipped for the creative potential that harmonious cultures and conditions offer us.

How women choose to undergo their pregnancies has profound,primordial impact upon the very nature of the being who will emerge from their wombs.

After many years of seeking to understand the U.S., it seems to me that the watershed moment in U.S. history which shapes the foundations of our present-day culture is the Great Depression. Here we see the rupture of the connective, agricultural communities woven of wombs within wombs of sustenance, with the man as consummate master of "husbandry." The very word connotes attendance to the female cycles of fertility.

With the severance from the land and from ethnic, linguistic communities, the fabric of agricultural life, of a cultural of husbandry, we find the immigrant communities of profoundly related and complementary individualities shattered through the dispossession of their lands wrought more by the Federal Reserve Bank and the Department of Agriculture (as well as the railroad owners who failed to bring the crops to market in 1929, the year of the biggest harvest in U.S. history) who coaxed the American farmer to try his hand at petro-chemical agriculture, mortgaging the lands which they, until then, owned largely free and clear.

The human becomes commodified as a "unit of production," selling his/her life piecemeal by the hour, the month, etc., as opposed to making a living out of that which lives. And community and ancestral transmission are torn asunder. Speaking the Queen's English, in Britain, or American English in the States becomes the order of the day, and washing oneself clean of any remnants of ancestry, whether in tongue, dress, or gest, which would signal one as somewhat green to the ways of the city. The human seeks to homogenize and commodify himself.

Meanwhile, wives, children and elder relatives have been left with those relatives who DID manage to hold on to their lands, and intimacy now becomes strain, the women expectant of their husband's return and the husband ashamed that his proud manhood has not necessarily equipped him to best compete in a crowd of commodified humans without community. Now, rather than a rich tapestry of mutually-enriching individuals, where even the village fool serves the community in comic release, the order of the day is to become proficient at following rules

The numbers tell it quite graphically:
1929: 80% of the U.S. population is rural
1935: 75% of the U.S. population is urban

Six years!

And how this disruption in human community, in the dimensions of wombs within wombs and men as the delighters, the minstrels, the tenders-to, the husbands of wombs within wombs, is something that I think that many people don't quite grasp. Not that we simply look to the past, but that we consider the rhythmicities that we inhabit and that we rock our children into this world through.

Joseph Chilton Pearce, in his book "The Death of Religion and the Rebirth of Spirit," has spoken to this quite eloquently: the primordial importance of a mother's experience during pregnancy, the tone of childbirth, and the absolute importance of those first 5 years of childhood and whether that child is raised in the presence of beings who have a heart-to-heart primordial commitment to the presence of this being, or others, however well-intentioned, skilled, etc., who will relate to this blossoming curiosity in a relationship constrained and defined by regulatory agencies and the diagnostic compulsions that regiment increasing amounts of our lives together and capacity to transmit to each other.

Reading David Deida is great, but the culture arises out of the womb. And to think that passing maternity laws, for example, is the solution, is to further acquiesce to external reglementation by the legalistic priesthood of our lives.

We can rediscover and re-enliven the eroticism of our economies. Oekonomia in Greek elegantly designates "the administration of our households," which is the womb that we inhabit after emerging from that of our mothers. We can create ways to increasingly sustain ourselves through activities that are connective, that can provide the wombn and the children we seek to invite richly into our lives the necessary years to support the development of human beings endowed with the fully expressed potential of our neural and heart anatomies, along with the rest. That economy has somehow becomes "the dismal science" is only too apropos and tells us much of a culture raised on TV dinners in front of the TV, hardly knowing any more what it means "to sit at table together" to converse, debate, share, ridicule, mock, celebrate, dance, wrestle, love, create, etc.

Kind Regards, O
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The Long Way Home

Posted on Jul 14th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
We could talk about a lot of things together
and share our brilliance and our mirth
and yet I know that we are only here mixing it up
on the way home.

Home?

What is home for
a wayward minstrel of long-forgotten trails where the soft feet of smiling brothers and sisters still tread,
where their smiles still linger in my heart of hearts
ever since we last smiled at one another,
'cause I was missing home,
and home, for me, is always a shift
back to the Unknown Unbound.

The smell of pines reminds me of home
the company of  birds & creeks,
ice floating in high mountain lakes that invite us to dive in and rediscover the fire within,
that high country air that brings us so close to the sky
that I'm reminded gloriously that the journey onward in that
Undoing
is pure ecstasy, pure galaxy, pure Repose.
The Valley of Thunder and Lightnin's Lady Lover

Take the Long Way Home - Supertramp


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Birds Over Low Tundra

Posted on Jul 16th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O


I celebrate this sensation of extended water-colored space,
a knitting back to Silence's infinite expanse
and the emergence of frenzied chatter
like islets of trees along the cool mists,
insect buzz,
an aerial parade of birds over low tundra. 
We liberate our horizons and each other
from this "romantic relationshipship" frame
and see these "selves"  surrounded, sustained, and wholly expressive of
an Infinite Unfolding that  nourishes all loves. 
My Lover's faces are infinite and particular as well. 
I hold them all in this tender expanse the "I" emerges in,
here in the mists of a  world of water and carbon Being,
knowing full well that when She appears, and reaches for my hand again,
we'll wander from the clarity of this world back into mists,
losing sight of Her infinity
for the particularity of her touch,
the inebriation of Her Taste.

©2008 Little Big O
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Questions for our times

Posted on Jul 16th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
I believe that these are questions for our times. Is there a way for us to get along without coercion? Can you and I find intimacy without negotiating each other's will?

I lived it for years with three Cheyenne friends whose estethic of freedom ran so deep that direct requests were almost never heard in their midst because "the people" don't relate to "the people" as tools. I remember these powerful, quiet, beautiful, funny, singing burls of men in whose presence Space was so sumptuously and naturally charged and wholly unencumbered
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Something Big is Happening

Posted on Jul 16th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O

"Something Big is Happening"

Statement - 9 July 2008

By Rep. Ron Paul, M.D.

16/07/08 "
ICH" -- - Madam Speaker, I have, for the past 35 years, expressed my grave concern for the future of America . The course we have taken over the past century has threatened our liberties, security and prosperity. In spite of these long-held concerns, I have days--growing more frequent all the time--when I'm convinced the time is now upon us that some Big Events are about to occur. These fast-approaching events will not go unnoticed. They will affect all of us. They will not be limited to just some areas of our country. The world economy and political system will share in the chaos about to be unleashed.

Though the world has long suffered from the senselessness of wars that should have been avoided, my greatest fear is that the course on which we find ourselves will bring even greater conflict and economic suffering to the innocent people of the world--unless we quickly change our ways.

America , with her traditions of free markets and property rights, led the way toward great wealth and progress throughout the world as well as at home. Since we have lost our confidence in the principles of liberty, self reliance, hard work and frugality, and instead took on empire building, financed through inflation and debt, all this has changed. This is indeed frightening and an historic event.

The problem we face is not new in history. Authoritarianism has been around a long time. For centuries, inflation and debt have been used by tyrants to hold power, promote aggression, and provide “bread and circuses” for the people. The notion that a country can afford “guns and butter” with no significant penalty existed even before the 1960s when it became a popular slogan. It was then, though, we were told the Vietnam War and the massive expansion of the welfare state were not problems. The seventies proved that assumption wrong.

Today things are different from even ancient times or the 1970s. There is something to the argument that we are now a global economy. The world has more people and is more integrated due to modern technology, communications, and travel. If modern technology had been used to promote the ideas of liberty, free markets, sound money and trade, it would have ushered in a new golden age--a globalism we could accept.

Instead, the wealth and freedom we now enjoy are shrinking and rest upon a fragile philosophic infrastructure. It is not unlike the levies and bridges in our own country that our system of war and welfare has caused us to ignore.

I'm fearful that my concerns have been legitimate and may even be worse than I first thought. They are now at our doorstep. Time is short for making a course correction before this grand experiment in liberty goes into deep hibernation.

There are reasons to believe this coming crisis is different and bigger than the world has ever experienced. Instead of using globalism in a positive fashion, it's been used to globalize all of the mistakes of the politicians, bureaucrats and central bankers.

Being an unchallenged sole superpower was never accepted by us with a sense of humility and respect. Our arrogance and aggressiveness have been used to promote a world empire backed by the most powerful army of history. This type of globalist intervention creates problems for all citizens of the world and fails to contribute to the well-being of the world's populations. Just think how our personal liberties have been trashed here at home in the last decade.

The financial crisis, still in its early stages, is apparent to everyone: gasoline prices over $4 a gallon; skyrocketing education and medical-care costs; the collapse of the housing bubble; the bursting of the NASDAQ bubble; stock markets plunging; unemployment rising; massive underemployment; excessive government debt; and unmanageable personal debt. Little doubt exists as to whether we'll get stagflation. The question that will soon be asked is: When will the stagflation become an inflationary depression?

There are various reasons that the world economy has been globalized and the problems we face are worldwide. We cannot understand what we're facing without understanding fiat money and the long-developing dollar bubble.

There were several stages. From the inception of the Federal Reserve System in 1913 to 1933, the Central Bank established itself as the official dollar manager. By 1933, Americans could no longer own gold, thus removing restraint on the Federal Reserve to inflate for war and welfare.

By 1945, further restraints were removed by creating the Bretton-Woods Monetary System making the dollar the reserve currency of the world. This system lasted up until 1971. During the period between 1945 and 1971, some restraints on the Fed remained in place. Foreigners, but not Americans, could convert dollars to gold at $35 an ounce. Due to the excessive dollars being created, that system came to an end in 1971.

It's the post Bretton-Woods system that was responsible for globalizing inflation and markets and for generating a gigantic worldwide dollar bubble. That bubble is now bursting, and we're seeing what it's like to suffer the consequences of the many previous economic errors.

Ironically in these past 35 years, we have benefited from this very flawed system. Because the world accepted dollars as if they were gold, we only had to counterfeit more dollars, spend them overseas (indirectly encouraging our jobs to go overseas as well) and enjoy unearned prosperity. Those who took our dollars and gave us goods and services were only too anxious to loan those dollars back to us. This allowed us to export our inflation and delay the consequences we now are starting to see.

But it was never destined to last, and now we have to pay the piper. Our huge foreign debt must be paid or liquidated. Our entitlements are coming due just as the world has become more reluctant to hold dollars. The consequence of that decision is price inflation in this country--and that's what we are witnessing today. Already price inflation overseas is even higher than here at home as a consequence of foreign central banks' willingness to monetize our debt.

Printing dollars over long periods of time may not immediately push prices up--yet in time it always does. Now we're seeing catch-up for past inflating of the monetary supply. As bad as it is today with $4 a gallon gasoline, this is just the beginning. It's a gross distraction to hound away at “drill, drill, drill” as a solution to the dollar crisis and high gasoline prices. Its okay to let the market increase supplies and drill, but that issue is a gross distraction from the sins of deficits and Federal Reserve monetary shenanigans.

This bubble is different and bigger for another reason. The central banks of the world secretly collude to centrally plan the world economy. I'm convinced that agreements among central banks to “monetize” U.S. debt these past 15 years have existed, although secretly and out of the reach of any oversight of anyone--especially the U.S. Congress that doesn't care, or just flat doesn't understand. As this “gift” to us comes to an end, our problems worsen. The central banks and the various governments are very powerful, but eventually the markets overwhelm when the people who get stuck holding the bag (of bad dollars) catch on and spend the dollars into the economy with emotional zeal, thus igniting inflationary fever.

This time--since there are so many dollars and so many countries involved--the Fed has been able to “paper” over every approaching crisis for the past 15 years, especially with Alan Greenspan as Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, which has allowed the bubble to become history's greatest.

The mistakes made with excessive credit at artificially low rates are huge, and the market is demanding a correction. This involves excessive debt, misdirected investments, over-investments, and all the other problems caused by the government when spending the money they should never have had. Foreign militarism, welfare handouts and $80 trillion entitlement promises are all coming to an end. We don't have the money or the wealth-creating capacity to catch up and care for all the needs that now exist because we rejected the market economy, sound money, self reliance and the principles of liberty.

Since the correction of all this misallocation of resources is necessary and must come, one can look for some good that may come as this “Big Event” unfolds.

There are two choices that people can make. The one choice that is unavailable to us is to limp along with the status quo and prop up the system with more debt, inflation and lies. That won't happen.

One of the two choices, and the one chosen so often by government in the past is that of rejecting the principles of liberty and resorting to even bigger and more authoritarian government. Some argue that giving dictatorial powers to the President, just as we have allowed him to run the American empire, is what we should do. That's the great danger, and in this post-911 atmosphere, too many Americans are seeking safety over freedom. We have already lost too many of our personal liberties already. Real fear of economic collapse could prompt central planners to act to such a degree that the New Deal of the 30's might look like Jefferson 's Declaration of Independence.

The more the government is allowed to do in taking over and running the economy, the deeper the depression gets and the longer it lasts. That was the story of the 30s and the early 40s, and the same mistakes are likely to be made again if we do not wake up.

But the good news is that it need not be so bad if we do the right thing. I saw “Something Big” happening in the past 18 months on the campaign trail. I was encouraged that we are capable of waking up and doing the right thing. I have literally met thousands of high school and college kids who are quite willing to accept the challenge and responsibility of a free society and reject the cradle-to-grave welfare that is promised them by so many do-good politicians.

If more hear the message of liberty, more will join in this effort. The failure of our foreign policy, welfare system, and monetary policies and virtually all government solutions are so readily apparent, it doesn't take that much convincing. But the positive message of how freedom works and why it's possible is what is urgently needed.

One of the best parts of accepting self reliance in a free society is that true personal satisfaction with one's own life can be achieved. This doesn't happen when the government assumes the role of guardian, parent or provider, because it eliminates a sense of pride. But the real problem is the government can't provide the safety and economic security that it claims. The so called good that government claims it can deliver is always achieved at the expense of someone else's freedom. It's a failed system and the young people know it.

Restoring a free society doesn't eliminate the need to get our house in order and to pay for the extravagant spending. But the pain would not be long-lasting if we did the right things, and best of all the empire would have to end for financial reasons. Our wars would stop, the attack on civil liberties would cease, and prosperity would return. The choices are clear: it shouldn't be difficult, but the big event now unfolding gives us a great opportunity to reverse the tide and resume the truly great American Revolution started in 1776. Opportunity knocks in spite of the urgency and the dangers we face.

Let's make “Something Big Is Happening” be the discovery that freedom works and is popular and the big economic and political event we're witnessing is a blessing in disguise.

Ron Paul is a Republican Congressman from Texas. He was the 1988 Libertarian Party candidate for President.

http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2008/cr070908h.htm

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An ode to dripping mangoes

Posted on Jul 25th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
i think that there's no way that we're going to get out of this mess until we embrace physicality 100%, embrace the sensuality of our superlative anatomies, of how we are interwoven into a net of adventurous curiosity that connects us to the birds that gift their feathers so that they can know that humans are reveling in multi-feathered lovin', that we are interwoven into the mangos who rejoice at our care and lovingly give up their juiciness dripping down our chins and down your chest where my tongue will not let one single drop get lost without getting 100% appreciated, that we are interwoven into the trees who breathe with us, that we are the adventure of stars.  If we truly penetrate our physicality we discover the luminous kindness that we are woven of and which adventures through us.
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Democracy, the God that Failed

Posted on Jul 27th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
The book by the same title is a fascinating view of political history.  If you read it, you'll encounter an amazing history, washed over by the statist propagandists, of the steady erosion of individual rights in the progression from feudalism, to monarchism, to democracy.  And also some compelling arguments as to why presidents tend to pilfer the treasuries of their governments during their short terms in office.  In the meanwhile, you can acquaint yourself with a quick look by reading Hans-Hermann Hoppe's article here:

Also, here's  an impressive article on how governments tend to grow bigger and invade more aspects of our lives inexorably.  What I enjoy about the article is that it shows precisely how nobly-intentioned people, who are unaware of the methodology they are availing themselves of when they ask government to solve yet another problem, are actually promoting the inefficiencies and abuses inherent in any organization that can seize funds regardless of the performance of that organization. 
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Perfect Example

Posted on Jul 28th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
Folks, if you're paying attention to the players in the global game, then you'll put the pieces together, this time it's the Rice Game in Haiti.  The liberals say this is all due to "Free Market Deregulation" and the banksters fund the liberal and neo-con media.  They want you to believe that "free market," i.e. the freedom to choose is a bad thing, and they'd like you to ask them to choose for you.  The only thing "free market" about this situation is that this is a marketplace for force:  UN Forces, IMF forces (same thing), World Bank forces, US government forces, etc.  These are NOT free market players, nor is the corporate rice farmer in North Carolina or Louisiana who gets taxpayer assistance to ruin the environment, destroy local communities, and destabilize economies abroad as well, as well as assault the very genome of rice.

Watch this documentary at minute 8 and you'll see so-called "free market deregulation" at work in agriculture: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6383992297145489596&q=john+stossel&ei=5dqNSNnvM46g4ALkyKjGCA 

If you're following my blog and still don't know what money IS, then you're going to be another person begging a politician for some mercy.  Put the pieces together and put some boogie in your belly, with some great Haitian tunes.  Enjoy!   This is OUR planet - but it's only ours once we demonstrate the willingness to SEE, to HEAR and to MOVE with it!

Peace!

Inside USA - The politics of rice - 04 Jul 08 - Part 1

Inside USA - The politics of rice - 04 Jul 08 - Part 2

FARAH JUSTE FEATURING LARRY LEGEND MUSIC VIDEO

And ask yourself, what is the image that comes to mind when you hear the word "Haiti"?  And why is it that this land rife with poverty has some of the wealthiest land in the Americas?  How can it be so?  What are the chains that binds an entire nation of people living on some of the most fertile land on earth? 

Peace (Again)!
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Great News for Investors

Posted on Jul 28th, 2008 by Little Big O : Luminous Mischieviousness Little Big O
The Air Car

Imagine the repercussions:  Right now investments in wind and solar energy work out at 7 cents/kw/hr, whereas gas-fired furnaces require a price of 0.12/kw/hr to be economically feasible.  This is wonderful.  If you're wondering what to invest in, solar panels on your rooftop give a 10% annualized return, which is way better than U.S. Treasury bonds are paying.  As long as the government doesn't interfere to "save" things, we're looking at an amazing next century. 

Also, new hybrids are being developed that will cost 2 cents/mile in electricity, as compared to 20-25 cents for gas-driven cars. 
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