My goodness! They have a 12 year old boy, Shaheen Jafargholi, from this year's Britain's Got Talent, singing ‘I wonder who's loving you now’.
It is a moment in his young life he will never forget.
My goodness! They have a 12 year old boy, Shaheen Jafargholi, from this year's Britain's Got Talent, singing ‘I wonder who's loving you now’.
It is a moment in his young life he will never forget.
Watching it now - it is so surreal! The picture of him above the stage with his arms stretched out in a Christ like crucified pose was just creepy.
The guy had a great talent as an entertainer but he was certainly screwed up mentally. And now they are treating him like some sort of saint. Yes, he might have done some humanitarian work but who of us wouldn’t do the same given the time and money he had.
I gave a few witness funeral talks in my time. This show certainly doesn't follow the instructions not to eulogise the dead.
sydney (afp) - people who live on vegetarian diets have slightly weaker bones than their meat-eating counterparts, australian researchers said thursday.. a joint australian-vietnamese study of links between the bones and diet of more than 2,700 people found that vegetarians had bones five percent less dense than meat-eaters, said lead researcher tuan nguyen.. the issue was most pronounced in vegans, who excluded all animal products from their diet and whose bones were six percent weaker, nguyen said.. there was "practically no difference" between the bones of meat-eaters and ovolactovegetarians, who excluded meat and seafood but ate eggs and dairy products, he said.. "the results suggest that vegetarian diets, particularly vegan diets, are associated with lower bone mineral density," nguyen wrote in the study, which was published thursday in the american journal of clinical nutrition.
"but the magnitude of the association is clinically insignificant," he added.. nguyen, who is from sydney's garvan institute for medical research and collaborated on the project with the pham ngoc thach university of medicine in ho chi minh city, said the question of whether the lower density bones translated to increased fracture risk was yet to be answered.. "given the rising number of vegetarians, roughly five percent (of people) in western countries, and the widespread incidence of osteoporosis, the issue is worth resolving," he said.. .
article taken from yahoo news ...........................outlaw.
I think that Jaguarbase just about has it right. Today there are still a few bushmen left in Africa who hunt much like our early ancestors did. They stalk an animal, running it down for many hours, until they eventually chase it down and kill it. These skinny men and their families probably still only eat meat once or so a month. Driving to the local McDonald's for a greasy burger bares no resemblance to what our meat eating ancestors did.
a couple of topics recently have made me think.
first, there was snowbird's "i think i am getting old" and the news that farrah fawcett has died at the relatively young age of 62.. also, the economic down turn has started older people wondering if retirement as we used to know it will be a thing of the past.
i am 56 years old but somehow never see myself retiring in the traditional sense of the word.. i am beginning to think that we are beginning to the time when older people will become more and more ambitious.
A couple of topics recently have made me think. First, there was Snowbird's "I think I am getting old" and the news that Farrah Fawcett has died at the relatively young age of 62.
Also, the economic down turn has started older people wondering if retirement as we used to know it will be a thing of the past. I am 56 years old but somehow never see myself retiring in the traditional sense of the word.
I am beginning to think that we are beginning to the time when older people will become more and more ambitious. Older people today enjoy unpresidented levels of good health. And, free form the responsibilities of children, the burden of mortgages and needing relatively little in terms of material things, could free up older people to become entrepeneurs, starting up new businesses, to become more educated (degrees, PhDs, etc.) and to devoting quality time to public services and charities.
So I say watch out you young ones, the age of the older person is here!
I was never a Charle's Angel fan but Farrah was a good looking woman.
For us baby-boomers it is a sad reminder of how life is fragile for all of us.
dear jw's -.
i was, not too long ago, one of you.
i loved jehovah, and his organization.
Hi Jeff
Your letter expresses exactly my feelings.
I grew up a witness and spent the majority of my adult life working hard for the organisation. I too would have died for my beliefs or willingly given my life for others. But the reality is that sincerely believing in something is not going to make it true. Rather than teaching the simple true of Jeus, the society has focused on an end of the world doctrine and a 'ministry' that is unclear and ill defined, certainly not the ministry of the good news of the Christ. How sad.
Eyeslice
this will be posted on freeminds in due course for the benefit of jws who are reading the articles there;.
there are two accounts in the bible centered around jesus that were a great help to me as i was leaving the control of the watch tower society.. to me, the watch tower society, with it's governing body and local representatives, the elders, were my religious leaders.
i was, in all truth, a religious person.
I attended the district convention with my wife at the weekend.
JW or not, you have to admit that Jesus plays very little part in this religion. Jesus is rarely mentioned at all in their retoric and although there was lots of mentions of 'the ministry' exactly what this ministry is is unclear and certainly has little to do with the good news of the Christ.
i'm reading the trial, by franz kafka.
pretty interesting read so far, though i'm only about 90 pages into it.
it's about a man who is arrested, but no one will tell him what he's been charged with, or give him any information at all.
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini (same author as the Kite Runner).
The White Tiger by Aravind Adiga (not sure what I make of this!)
On my reading book for the summer - Siddartha - I have read a few books about the Buddha so this will be an interesting take. Also, ust a Little Run Around the World by Rosie Swale Pope (who ran 20,000 miles solo: 53 pairs of shoes and 29 proposals of marriage. This woman is going to become my new running hero!!!). What I Talk About When I am Running by Haruki Murakami.
quick note to say that gail and i are getting baptised as christians next sunday, 12pm, riverside gospel church..
PasswordProtected - I hope all goes well for you and your good wife next week.
I have often wondered whether I would really need to get baptised again if I started practicing a different faith. I was baptised before the change of the JW vows. This means the second question wasn't to the effect "do understand that your baptism indentifies you as one of Jehovah's Witnesses' but more along the lines that you will in future do God's will as directed by his holy spirit. So although I no longer practice as one of Jehovah's Witnesses, I still regard my baptism as valid.
Eyeslice
there are close to 7 million baptised jehovah's witnesses in the world.
most start off real zealous in meeting attendance and preaching work.
some remain zealous but most cool off sooner or later.
I think that the general consensus of the posters here is correct. More and more are just going through the motions.
I couldn't do that - for me it had to be all or nothing - so I chose nothing.