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Post by Awe on May 28, 2020 23:24:17 GMT -5
đ¤ your flesh dies, your spirit gets judged to see what tests you passed!! đ That's wishful thinking on your part with not a shred of evidence to support your claim. Oh, i am sorry you missed the memo! too badđ˘đ˘
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Itâs not too late
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Post by Itâs not too late on May 28, 2020 23:31:07 GMT -5
We have time to get the right answers!!!
thankfullyđ
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Post by dmmichgood on May 29, 2020 0:19:15 GMT -5
How do you know that "the failure of logic is frightening amongst our elders ?"
How many "elders" do you Know? thousands yes , it is well documented that the media prys on the vulnerable. Well you must be very gullible yourself, because your own "failure of logic" is not only frightening but it dangerous as well!
Example: your own "failure of logic" in evaluating the measles epidemic
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Post by Awe on May 29, 2020 21:51:43 GMT -5
It was inevitable that there would be a massive reaction Against vaccines , when these types of things are too easy to manipulate , either for ignorant reasons, erroneous acts, or any number of other reasons.
And we donât know if some guilties were not prosecuted.
I guess people are human , and that means we miss the
Point of our purpose for doing our best at all times.
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Post by dmmichgood on May 29, 2020 22:10:57 GMT -5
It was inevitable that there would be a massive reaction Against vaccines , when these types of things are too easy to manipulate , either for ignorant reasons, erroneous acts, or any number of other reasons. And we donât know if some guilties were not prosecuted. I guess people are human , and that means we miss the Point of our purpose for doing our best at all times. NO!
It did NOT need to have been "inevitable that there would be a massive reaction against vaccines."
The "massive reaction" was fueled by an anti-vaccer and you were obviously drinking it down in gulps yourself without doing your home work as to what really happened!
So, -go ahead & excuse yourself, -but remember that 83 children died because people like yourself never checked any facts before they jumped head long into accusations and decisions that resulted in the deaths of those children!
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Post by Deleted on May 30, 2020 10:42:57 GMT -5
The reactions against vaccines were less severe when people were predictably dying, suffering, miscarrying and being born with defects in large numbers from the diseases we now don't give a second thought to - measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria, smallpox, whooping cough (and on and on...)
The irony is that the vaccines work so well that people think they are harmful. Dumb apes.
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Post by Awe on May 30, 2020 20:06:22 GMT -5
The reactions against vaccines were less severe when people were predictably dying, suffering, miscarrying and being born with defects in large numbers from the diseases we now don't give a second thought to - measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria, smallpox, whooping cough (and on and on...) The irony is that the vaccines work so well that people think they are harmful. Dumb apes. Wonder if someday the truth will stand up? just because people say itâs true doesnât make it so,đł if illnesses were easy to predict, the apes wouldnât be ruling science, would they? đ
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Post by dmmichgood on May 30, 2020 20:15:57 GMT -5
The reactions against vaccines were less severe when people were predictably dying, suffering, miscarrying and being born with defects in large numbers from the diseases we now don't give a second thought to - measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria, smallpox, whooping cough (and on and on...) The irony is that the vaccines work so well that people think they are harmful. Dumb apes. Wonder if someday the truth will stand up? just because people say itâs true doesnât make it so,đł if illnesses were easy to predict, the apes wouldnât be ruling science, would they? đ Truth HAS stood up!
Some people just don't want too accept it. They just like their conspiracy theories better because it stokes their feelings of superiority by making them think they know something other people don't.
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Post by Awe on May 30, 2020 20:18:14 GMT -5
Wonder if someday the truth will stand up? just because people say itâs true doesnât make it so,đł if illnesses were easy to predict, the apes wouldnât be ruling science, would they? đ Truth HAS stood up!
Some people just don't want too accept it. They just like their conspiracy theories better because it stokes their feelings of superiority by making them think they know something other people don't.
Is that so? ok , so be it. đ
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Post by curlywurlysammagee on May 30, 2020 21:01:29 GMT -5
The reactions against vaccines were less severe when people were predictably dying, suffering, miscarrying and being born with defects in large numbers from the diseases we now don't give a second thought to - measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria, smallpox, whooping cough (and on and on...) The irony is that the vaccines work so well that people think they are harmful. Dumb apes. Wonder if someday the truth will stand up? just because people say itâs true doesnât make it so,đł if illnesses were easy to predict, the apes wouldnât be ruling science, would they? đ That is particularly true with religion. Your comment about apes ruling science is just dribble.
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Post by curlywurlysammagee on May 30, 2020 21:04:18 GMT -5
Wonder if someday the truth will stand up? just because people say itâs true doesnât make it so,đł if illnesses were easy to predict, the apes wouldnât be ruling science, would they? đ That is particularly true with religion. Your comment about apes ruling the science is why no one takes you seriously.
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Post by dmmichgood on May 30, 2020 21:34:19 GMT -5
Truth HAS stood up!
Some people just don't want too accept it. They just like their conspiracy theories better because it stokes their feelings of superiority by making them think they know something other people don't.
Is that so? ok , so be it. đ yep! Look up why people believe conspiracy theories.
www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/talking...
Why Do People Believe in Conspiracy Theories? The need to find order in a confusing world. Posted Jan 06, 2018
It seems that every family has an Uncle Joeâthe guy who goes on and on about conspiracy theories at the holiday dinner table. The 9/11 attack was orchestrated by the government. The moon landing was filmed in Hollywood. Oswald did not act alone in the Kennedy assassination. And donât get me started on global warming. Record low temperatures this Christmas, and you expect me to believe the world is actually getting warmer? Give me a break.
Maybe we should give Uncle Joe a break, or at least try to understand where heâs coming from. Why do some people believe in conspiracy theories anyway?
This is exactly the question posed by British psychologist Karen Douglas and her colleagues in a recent article in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science.
The researchers found that reasons for believing in conspiracy theories can be grouped into three categories:
~The desire for understanding and certainty
~The desire for control and security
~The desire to maintain a positive self-image
cont@ www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/talking...
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Post by Awe on May 31, 2020 6:21:17 GMT -5
Is that so? ok , so be it. đ yep! Look up why people believe conspiracy theories.
www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/talking...
Why Do People Believe in Conspiracy Theories? The need to find order in a confusing world. Posted Jan 06, 2018
It seems that every family has an Uncle Joeâthe guy who goes on and on about conspiracy theories at the holiday dinner table. The 9/11 attack was orchestrated by the government. The moon landing was filmed in Hollywood. Oswald did not act alone in the Kennedy assassination. And donât get me started on global warming. Record low temperatures this Christmas, and you expect me to believe the world is actually getting warmer? Give me a break.
Maybe we should give Uncle Joe a break, or at least try to understand where heâs coming from. Why do some people believe in conspiracy theories anyway?
This is exactly the question posed by British psychologist Karen Douglas and her colleagues in a recent article in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science.
The researchers found that reasons for believing in conspiracy theories can be grouped into three categories:
~The desire for understanding and certainty
~The desire for control and security
~The desire to maintain a positive self-image
cont@ www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/talking...
Oh, and donât forget to mention the biggest hucksters , those âevolutionistsâ! they put us all to shame, even the apes that invented it on that goofy typewriter!! đ
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Post by Awe on May 31, 2020 8:53:48 GMT -5
dm, I have a riddle for you to answer?
we All love mercy , When we are at fault.
How can we have mercy unless we have
true judgements?
and from whence cometh true judgement?
đ
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Post by curlywurlysammagee on May 31, 2020 13:03:31 GMT -5
dm, I have a riddle for you to answer? we All love mercy , When we are at fault. How can we have mercy unless we have true judgements? and from whence cometh true judgement? đ Certainly not from that immoral creep that you worship.
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Post by awe on May 31, 2020 14:00:08 GMT -5
dm, I have a riddle for you to answer? we All love mercy , When we are at fault. How can we have mercy unless we have true judgements? and from whence cometh true judgement? đ Certainly not from that immoral creep that you worship. Sad to say, next to âmonkeyism â , you put yourself into the conspiratorialist camp! from where Please tell, do you get your true judgment?
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Post by curlywurlysammagee on May 31, 2020 14:16:12 GMT -5
Certainly not from that immoral creep that you worship. Sad to say, next to âmonkeyism â , you put yourself into the conspiratorialist camp! from where Please tell, do you get your true judgment? There is not much of your comment or question that makes sense. Have you been eating too many nuts lately?
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Post by dmmichgood on May 31, 2020 14:40:40 GMT -5
dm, I have a riddle for you to answer? we All love mercy , When we are at fault. How can we have mercy unless we have true judgements? and from whence cometh true judgement? đ It is no riddle at all. Humankind realized that the only way they could live in a group and to survive and progress they had to help each other.
This is known as "Reciprocity"
Reciprocity in social psychology refers to responding to a positive action with another positive action, rewarding kind actions.
As a social construct, reciprocity means that in response to friendly actions, people are frequently much nicer and much more cooperative than predicted by the self-interest model; conversely, in response to hostile actions they are frequently much more nasty and even brutal.
Out of the need for a peaceful way to live came the terms you named: -judgement, mercy etc.
So it is that such a big riddle or enigma that is so difficult to understand?
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Post by Awe on May 31, 2020 15:27:10 GMT -5
dm, I have a riddle for you to answer? we All love mercy , When we are at fault. How can we have mercy unless we have true judgements? and from whence cometh true judgement? đ It is no riddle at all. Humankind realized that the only way they could live in a group and to survive and progress they had to help each other.
This is known as "Reciprocity"
Reciprocity in social psychology refers to responding to a positive action with another positive action, rewarding kind actions.
As a social construct, reciprocity means that in response to friendly actions, people are frequently much nicer and much more cooperative than predicted by the self-interest model; conversely, in response to hostile actions they are frequently much more nasty and even brutal.
Out of the need for a peaceful way to live came the terms you named: -judgement, mercy etc.
So it is that such a big riddle or enigma that is so difficult to understand?
Repricocity, implies intentions, do children need need to be taught what is right and what is wrong,? As we mature , does our conscience teach us to do good?
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Post by dmmichgood on May 31, 2020 15:50:33 GMT -5
It is no riddle at all. Humankind realized that the only way they could live in a group and to survive and progress they had to help each other.
This is known as "Reciprocity"
Reciprocity in social psychology refers to responding to a positive action with another positive action, rewarding kind actions.
As a social construct, reciprocity means that in response to friendly actions, people are frequently much nicer and much more cooperative than predicted by the self-interest model; conversely, in response to hostile actions they are frequently much more nasty and even brutal.
Out of the need for a peaceful way to live came the terms you named: -judgement, mercy etc.
So it is that such a big riddle or enigma that is so difficult to understand?
Repricocity, implies intentions, do children need need to be taught what is right and what is wrong,? As we mature , does our conscience teach us to do good? Read what I said over & over again & again and think about it for awhile and maybe you can answer your own questions.
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Post by Awe on May 31, 2020 17:23:49 GMT -5
Repricocity, implies intentions, do children need need to be taught what is right and what is wrong,? As we mature , does our conscience teach us to do good? Read what I said over & over again & again and think about it for awhile and maybe you can answer your own questions.Are you implying that your theory only works if people keep reading it and thinking ? what happens when your children disobey ?
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Post by dmmichgood on May 31, 2020 17:46:41 GMT -5
Read what I said over & over again & again and think about it for awhile and maybe you can answer your own questions. Are you implying that your theory only works if people keep reading it and thinking ? what happens when your children disobey ? I ask YOU to re-read & think about what I posted about "Reciprocity"
I gave YOU the definition of "Reciprocity" I will repeat it.
Reciprocity in social psychology refers to responding to a positive action with another positive action, rewarding kind actions. As a social construct, reciprocity means that in response to friendly actions, people are frequently much nicer and much more cooperative than predicted by the self-interest model; conversely, in response to hostile actions they are frequently much more nasty and even brutal. What you SAY to children isn't nearly effective as what you MODEL in your own actions toward your fellowman.
Why is that so difficult to understand?
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Post by Awe on May 31, 2020 19:02:17 GMT -5
Are you implying that your theory only works if people keep reading it and thinking ? what happens when your children disobey ? I ask YOU to re-read & think about what I posted about "Reciprocity"
I gave YOU the definition of "Reciprocity" I will repeat it.
Reciprocity in social psychology refers to responding to a positive action with another positive action, rewarding kind actions. As a social construct, reciprocity means that in response to friendly actions, people are frequently much nicer and much more cooperative than predicted by the self-interest model; conversely, in response to hostile actions they are frequently much more nasty and even brutal. What you SAY to children isn't nearly effective as what you MODEL in your own actions toward your fellowman.
Why is that so difficult to understand?If you told me that 2+4=8 , I would say that is incomprehensible? Now youâre postulating an unproven hypothesis, itâs up to you to prove your theory, even though you do seem to believe it based on speculation ? đ
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Post by Awe on Jun 2, 2020 3:55:36 GMT -5
Basing a response on science, : why are our bodies
Co-dependent on millions of âvirusesâ?
And how do scientists speculate which âvirusâ is the
antigen of a diagnosed disorder?
This is a very serious question.
When In studying the condition of a diseased tissue?,
a virus is isolated that isnât as common in the tissue
of âhealthyâ tissues, the medical research acts on the
assumption the isolated virus is the âcause â of
the âdisorder/dis-ease â. How can we hope to understand the
Purpose of a virus , if we assume it is the problem,
when it might be a part of the curing ?
Case: you arrive at various fires ? and you find
that there is a deployed fire truck in operation.
That correlation should never be used to assign
responsibility of the cause of the fire to the rescue
agents ?
Yet , we are also guilty of jumping to Wrong conclusions
when our very health is at stake!!!
As we have been duped to believe colestral is the cause of a âdisorderâ , when it
Is being deployed and is very much needed to repair damaged tissue in our body,
This needs to be better understood if we are to benefit
from real science, and stop the fake science!!
Eh? I realize this hasnât been on the radar for awhile
Thank you
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Post by BobWilliston on Jun 2, 2020 4:58:58 GMT -5
Who unlocked the loony bin?
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Post by curlywurlysammagee on Jun 2, 2020 12:54:49 GMT -5
Who unlocked the loony bin? Hopefully it is not a citizen of NZ.
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Post by Awe on Jun 2, 2020 13:43:03 GMT -5
It is completely looney that doctors that should be in the Know! , have no clue that cholesterol Is essential
for our health / andrecovery.
Nevertheless, they carry on in a reckless wrecked paradigm.
Call it what you wish , it ainât logical !
đĽ´
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Post by dmmichgood on Jun 2, 2020 14:20:55 GMT -5
It is completely looney that doctors that should be in the Know! , have no clue that cholesterol Is essential for our health / andrecovery. Nevertheless, they carry on in a reckless wrecked paradigm. Call it what you wish , it ainât logical ! 𼴠I am so sorry that you know so little about Cholesterol. Perhaps this will help you. The Effects of High Cholesterol on the BodyCholesterol is a waxy substance found in your blood and in your cells. Your liver makes most of the cholesterol in your body. The rest comes from foods you eat. Cholesterol travels in your blood bundled up in packets called lipoproteins. Cholesterol comes in two forms: Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) is the âbad,â unhealthy kind of cholesterol. LDL cholesterol can build up in your arteries and form fatty, waxy deposits called plaques. High-density lipoprotein (HDL) is the âgood,â healthy kind of cholesterol. It transports excess cholesterol out of your arteries to your liver, which removes it from your body. Cholesterol itself isnât bad. Your body needs some cholesterol to make hormones, vitamin D, and digestive fluids. Cholesterol also helps your organs function properly. Yet having too much LDL cholesterol can be a problem. High LDL cholesterol over time can damage your arteries, contribute to heart disease, and increase your risk for a stroke. Getting your cholesterol checked at regular doctor visits and lowering your heart disease risk with diet, exercise, lifestyle changes, and medication can help decrease complications associated with heart disease and improve quality of life. Cardiovascular and circulatory systemsWhen you have too much LDL cholesterol in your body it can build up in your arteries, clogging them and making them less flexible. Hardening of the arteries is called atherosclerosis. Blood doesnât flow as well through stiff arteries, so your heart has to work harder to push blood through them. Over time, as plaque builds up in your arteries, you can develop heart disease. Plaque buildup in coronary arteries can disrupt the flow of oxygen-rich blood to your heart muscle. This may cause chest pain called angina. Angina isnât a heart attack, but it is a temporary disruption of blood flow. Itâs a warning that youâre at risk for a heart attack. A piece of plaque can eventually break off and form a clot or the artery may continue to become narrowed which can fully block blood flow to your heart, leading to a heart attack. If this process occurs in the arteries going to the brain or within the brain it can lead to a stroke. Plaque can also block the flow of blood to arteries that supply blood to your intestinal tract, legs, and feet. This is called peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Endocrine systemYour bodyâs hormone-producing glands use cholesterol to make hormones such as estrogen, testosterone, and cortisol. Hormones can also have an effect on your bodyâs cholesterol levels. Research has shown that as estrogen levels rise during a womanâs menstrual cycle, HDL cholesterol levels also go up, and LDL cholesterol levels decline. This may be one reason why a womanâs risk for heart disease increases after menopause, when estrogen levels drop. Lowered production of thyroid hormone (hypothyroidism) leads to an increase in total and LDL cholesterol. Excess thyroid hormone (hyperthyroidism) has the opposite effect. Androgen deprivation therapy, which reduces levels of male hormones to stop prostate cancer growth, can raise LDL cholesterol levels. A deficiency of growth hormone can also raise LDL cholesterol levels. Nervous systemCholesterol is an essential component of the human brain. In fact, the brain contains about 25 percent of the bodyâs entire supply of cholesterol. This fat is essential for the development and protection of nerve cells, which enable the brain to communicate with the rest of the body. While you need some cholesterol for your brain to function optimally, too much of it can be damaging. Excess cholesterol in the arteries can lead to strokes â a disruption in blood flow that can damage parts of the brain, leading to loss of memory, movement, difficulty with swallowing and speech and other functions. High blood cholesterol on its own has also been implicated in the loss of memory and mental function. Having high blood cholesterol may accelerate the formation of beta-amyloid plaques, the sticky protein deposits that damage the brain in people with Alzheimerâs disease. Digestive systemIn the digestive system, cholesterol is essential for the production of bile â a substance that helps your body break down foods and absorb nutrients in your intestines. But if you have too much cholesterol in your bile, the excess forms into crystals and then hard stones in your gallbladder. Gallstones can be very painful. Keeping an eye on your cholesterol level with recommended blood tests and lowering your risk for heart disease will help improve your overall quality of life.
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