Thursday, March 31, 2011

This Is Why Many People Don't Eat Meat:"From Farm To Fridge"!

Sick!!!!

Lawsuit seeks dissolution of Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, Johns Creek, Milton, Chattahoochee Hills  | ajc.com

Lawsuit seeks dissolution of Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, Johns Creek, Milton, Chattahoochee Hills | ajc.com

April Fools' Day: Origin and History — Infoplease.com

April Fools' Day: Origin and History — Infoplease.com

by David Johnson and Shmuel Ross

April Fools' Day, sometimes called All Fools' Day, is one of the most light-hearted days of the year. Its origins are uncertain. Some see it as a celebration related to the turn of the seasons, while others believe it stems from the adoption of a new calendar.

New Year's Day Moves

Ancient cultures, including those of the Romans and Hindus, celebrated New Year's Day on or around April 1. It closely follows the vernal equinox (March 20th or March 21st.) In medieval times, much of Europe celebrated March 25, the Feast of Annunciation, as the beginning of the new year.
In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII ordered a new calendar (the Gregorian Calendar) to replace the old Julian Calendar. The new calendar called for New Year's Day to be celebrated Jan. 1. That year, France adopted the reformed calendar and shifted New Year's day to Jan. 1. According to a popular explanation, many people either refused to accept the new date, or did not learn about it, and continued to celebrate New Year's Day on April 1. Other people began to make fun of these traditionalists, sending them on "fool's errands" or trying to trick them into believing something false. Eventually, the practice spread throughout Europe.

Problems With This Explanation

There are at least two difficulties with this explanation. The first is that it doesn't fully account for the spread of April Fools' Day to other European countries. The Gregorian calendar was not adopted by England until 1752, for example, but April Fools' Day was already well established there by that point. The second is that we have no direct historical evidence for this explanation, only conjecture, and that conjecture appears to have been made more recently.

Constantine and Kugel

Another explanation of the origins of April Fools' Day was provided by Joseph Boskin, a professor of history at Boston University. He explained that the practice began during the reign of Constantine, when a group of court jesters and fools told the Roman emperor that they could do a better job of running the empire. Constantine, amused, allowed a jester named Kugel to be king for one day. Kugel passed an edict calling for absurdity on that day, and the custom became an annual event.
"In a way," explained Prof. Boskin, "it was a very serious day. In those times fools were really wise men. It was the role of jesters to put things in perspective with humor."
This explanation was brought to the public's attention in an Associated Press article printed by many newspapers in 1983. There was only one catch: Boskin made the whole thing up. It took a couple of weeks for the AP to realize that they'd been victims of an April Fools' joke themselves.

Spring Fever

It is worth noting that many different cultures have had days of foolishness around the start of April, give or take a couple of weeks. The Romans had a festival named Hilaria on March 25, rejoicing in the resurrection of Attis. The Hindu calendar has Holi, and the Jewish calendar has Purim. Perhaps there's something about the time of year, with its turn from winter to spring, that lends itself to lighthearted celebrations.

Observances Around the World

April Fools' Day is observed throughout the Western world. Practices include sending someone on a "fool's errand," looking for things that don't exist; playing pranks; and trying to get people to believe ridiculous things.
The French call April 1 Poisson d'Avril, or "April Fish." French children sometimes tape a picture of a fish on the back of their schoolmates, crying "Poisson d'Avril" when the prank is discovered


Read more: April Fools' Day: Origin and History — Infoplease.com http://www.infoplease.com/spot/aprilfools1.html#ixzz1IECwDvPb

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Newly found documents shed light on MLK's convicted killer



By Vivian Kuo, CNN
March 30, 2011 5:40 p.m. EDT
Police escort a handcuffed James Earl Ray after his extradition to Tennessee from England, where he'd been captured.
Police escort a handcuffed James Earl Ray after his extradition to Tennessee from England, where he'd been captured.

(CNN)
 -- Recently discovered photos and letters are giving an inside look at the man convicted of assassinating the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
Editor's note
: Don't miss "CNN Presents: Eyewitness to Murder -- The King Assassination" at 7 p.m. ET Sunday. CNN's Soledad O'Brien retraces the steps of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., James Earl Ray, the FBI and Memphis police, and she explores alternative scenarios of who may have been responsible for King's death.
On April 4, 1968, King was shot and killed by a sniper as he stood on a balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee, where he was trying to mediate a garbage workers' strike.
The celebrated civil rights leader's death led to race riots in dozens of cities and mourning around the world.
American James Earl Ray pleaded guilty to the murder of the civil rights leader and was sentenced to 99 years in prison in March 1969. Ray died in 1998.
Little was known of Ray's state of mind in his months in jail before his guilty plea -- until Shelby County, Tennessee, officials came across a bundle of documents about five years ago in a local archival building.
"In 2005, we started going through the Shelby County archives -- going through organizing, identifying things," Tom Leatherwood, Shelby County register of deeds, said Wednesday. "But then in 2006 or 2007, we found this bundle. I said well, what is it? Let's see. And so we picked it up, turned it over, and there it was."
That bundle -- an unassuming, mustard-yellow folder with tape crisscrossing it -- had inscribed on it in black marker, "Public Defender James E. Ray. Do Not Destroy."
Inside was a wealth of information, including photos of the newly incarcerated accused murderer, as well as letters to family and his attorney during the eight months he was detained at the Shelby County jail.
Since then, Leatherwood said, he has been working with the county attorney to try to get those documents released to the public.
"There's no game-changer here, but for history lovers, there's some really great information," Leatherwood said.

Ray asked his sister to visit two months after his capture by police. "Bring enough to stay a couple of days," his note reads. "I can explain everything when I see them."Black and white photos show Ray being patted down by law enforcement; others show him being ushered into his jail cell. One photo shows him being escorted out of a vehicle by then-Sheriff Bill Morris and surrounded by a phalanx of police, apparently on the night he arrived in Memphis after his extradition from England, where he was captured.
Letters and Christmas cards exchanged between Ray and his family indicate a close relationship. "Take it easy," was a frequent sign-off from Ray to his brother and sister.
Another letter, sent to Ray's brother Jerry just a month before he pleaded guilty, read: "If you have anything to say about case or anything else don't write it wait until I see you or visit."
Ray also made sure whatever financial gains his story might produce for future generations would be passed on to his brother, Jerry.
"I hereby leave the property belonging to me at the time of my death, being any rights to book royalties, movie royalties and rights and rights to any other monetary compensation whether literary or otherwise," he wrote by hand in his last will and testament.
Also included in the document release are photos of Sirhan Sirhan, the convicted killer of Robert F. Kennedy. The sheriff had contacted law enforcement in California to gain knowledge on how they managed security around Sirhan.
"(Morris) knew he had a potentially explosive situation here, so he reached out to them for advice on how to handle a high-risk, high-profile inmate," Leatherwood said.
After his sentencing, Ray recanted and asked to be tried on an innocent plea, but was rebuffed by the courts. Forensic tests were conducted in 1997 on a hunting rifle recovered near the scene of the assassination, but the results were inconclusive.
After years of fighting to get his name cleared, Ray spent his last days in a coma at a Nashville hospital and died of liver failure in 1998.
Monday marks the 43rd anniversary of King's death.
Leatherwood said the full release of documents will be made available on the Shelby County Register of Deeds website athttp://register.shelby.tn.us/.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

DeKalb library to stay open thanks to 12-year-old  | ajc.com

DeKalb library to stay open thanks to 12-year-old | ajc.com

Capitalism killed life on Mars, Chávez tells 'water day' event


TOM HENNIGAN in São Paulo

CAPITALISM MAY be responsible for the lack of civilization on Mars, according to Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez.

“I have always said, heard, that it would not be strange that on Mars there had been civilisation, but then probably capitalism arrived, imperialism arrived, and did for this planet,” he said at an event on Tuesday to mark World Water Day.
There was laughter in the audience before Mr Chávez turned to his main point: a warning that a similar process of environmental degradation was already under way on Earth.
“Look. Be careful. Here on planet Earth where hundreds of years ago or less there had been great forests, now there is desert. Where there were great rivers, now there is desert on much of the planet. There is an advanced process of desertification which puts at risk life on the planet in the medium term.”
Mr Chávez frequently uses folksy analogies and humour to communicate with his audiences. During his 12 years in power, the populist leader has lashed capitalism and what he sees as US imperialism.
In his speech he said the military operation by western governments against Libya was motivated by the North African country’s oil and water reserves.
Mr Chávez is one of few world leaders to openly support Libyan leader Muammar Gadafy. The two forged a close relationship as allies within the Opec oil cartel.
Rebels in the Libyan city of Benghazi changed the name of the main sports stadium from Hugo Chávez Stadium to the Martyrs of February Stadium in honour of those killed in the uprising against Col Gadafy.
Also on Tuesday two Venezuelan students sewed up part of their mouths as part of a campaign demanding more funding for the country’s universities, which protesters say has not increased since 2006.
The two are part of a group undertaking a hunger strike outside the UN’s offices in the capital Caracas.
A pro-Chávez deputy has claimed the protesters are financed by three bankers being sought by local courts. Last week state television showed footage of what it said were hunger strikers secretly eating food.
Galloping inflation and shortages of basic foodstuffs has led to increasing domestic discontent with Mr Chávez in recent months.

Anti-Muslim GOP Presidential Candidate Herman Cain

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Who are the Libyan rebels? U.S. tries to figure out




When a U.S. Air Force pilot ejected from his crashing F-15 Eagle fighter jet and landed in rebel-held eastern Libya overnight Tuesday, he soon found to his relief that he was in friendly hands.
"He was a very nice guy," Libyan businessman Ibrahim Ismail told Newsweek of the initially quite anxious American pilot. "He came to free the Libyan people." Rebel officials dispatched a doctor to attend to the pilot and presented him with a bouquet of flowers, according to Newsweek.
But the U.S. government, now engaged in a fourth day of air strikes against Libyan regime military targets, does not know very much about the rebels who now see it as a friendly ally in their fight to overthrow Muammar Gadhafi.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton held a 45-minute, closed-door meeting with Mahmoud Jibril, a leader of the newly formed Libyan opposition Interim National Council in a luxury Paris hotel earlier this month. But in a clear signal of America's wariness about all the unknowns, Clinton gave no public statement after their meeting and did not appear in photographs with the rebel leader. (By contrast, a week earlier French President Nicholas Sarkozy bestowed formal diplomatic recognition on the Council and was photographed shaking hands with its emissaries Jibril and Ali Essawi on the steps of the Elysee Palace.)
Middle East policy watchers note a glaring disconnect between the buoyant expectations of some rebel supporters that the international military coalition will provide direct air support for their armed struggle, and the insistence of U.S. military commanders that their mandate allows for no such thing.
The coalition mission doesn't include protecting forces engaged in combat against Libyan leader Muammar Gadhafi's forces, Gen. Carter Ham, the commander of U.S. Africa Command, told reporters Monday. His mission, Ham said, is narrowly confined to preventing Gadhafi forces from attacking civilians, getting Gadhafi's forces to pull back from rebel-held towns, and allowing civilians humanitarian access to food, water, and electricity/gas supplies, Ham said.
So who are the Libyan rebels with whom we now seem (for better or for worse) to be joined with in a shared fight against Gadhafi?
One view has it that the Libyan rebels are basically peaceful protesters who found their demonstrations against Gadhafi met with bullets and had no choice but to resort to violence.
"The protesters are nice, sincere people who want a better future for Libya," Human Rights Watch Emergencies Director Peter Bouckaert told South Africa's Business Day. "But their strength is also their weakness: they aren't hardened fighters, so no one knows what the end game will be."
"This is not really a civil war between two equal powers--it started as a peaceful protest movement and was met with bullets," Bouckaert continued. "Now you have a situation where you have a professional and heavily equipped army fighting a disorganized and inexperienced bunch of rebels who stand little chance against them."
Still, the rebels are largely unknown to the American government, despite initial tentative meetings such as Clinton's and some meetings held by U.S. Ambassador to Libya Gene Cretz with opposition representatives. (Cretz is now working out of the State Department, as the United States has withdrawn its diplomatic presence.) Last week, President Barack Obama appointed an American diplomat, Chris Stevens, to be the U.S. liaison to the Libyan opposition.
"We don't have the comfort level with the rebels," said the National Security Network's Joel Rubin, a former State Department official. "We certainly know some things about them, had meetings. It's not as if there's complete blindness. But I don't think at this stage the comfort level is there for that kind of close coordination."
But the Libyan rebels seem to have found western consultants who have offered advice on reassuring buzzwords the West would like to hear. On Tuesday, the Interim National Council issued just such a soothing statement from their rebel stronghold of Benghazi.
"The Interim National Council is committed to the ultimate goal of the revolution which is to build a democratic civil state, based on the rule of law, respect for human rights including guarantying equal rights and duties for all citizens, ... [which] promotes equality between men and women, " the Council said in their statement.
The Interim National Council also "reaffirms that Libya's foreign policy will be based on mutual respect and common interest and reaffirms its respect for all Libya's previous bilateral and multilateral commitments ... respect [for] international law and international humanitarian law," the group said.
(Photo, top: Libyan rebels on the road between Benghazi and Ajdabiyah: Suhaib Salem/Reuters. Photo, middle: France's President Nicolas Sarkozy shakes hands with Libyan Interim National Council emissaries Mahmoud Jibril (R) and Ali Essawi after a meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris March 10, 2011: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters)

Baby Taken Away Over C-Section Refusal By Mother

Am I missing something here?  There is something terribly wrong with this.

Police: Slain Athens officer identified  | ajc.com

Police: Slain Athens officer identified | ajc.com

Sex can be heart attack trigger for couch potatoes  | ajc.com

Sex can be heart attack trigger for couch potatoes | ajc.com

Farrakhan warns, advises Obama about Libya (video)

Farrakhan warns, advises Obama about Libya (video)

Obama Letter to Congress on Libya Sparks Protests


WASHINGTON-President Barack Obama Monday formally notified Congress the U.S. had begun military attacks on Libya, prompting complaints from lawmakers that the president waged war without congressional consent, appearing to contradict his own previous position.
Lawmakers continue to raise questions about the legality and purpose of the U.S. participation in Libyan air strikes and patrolling of the No-Fly Zone. WSJ's Siobhan Hughes has details.
In a letter to congressional leaders, the president said the U.S. had "commenced operations to assist an international effort authorized by the United Nations (U.N.) Security Council" and "to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe and address the threat posed to international peace and security by the crisis in Libya."
Presidents over the decades have conducted military operations without prior congressional approval, including Harry Truman in Korea, George H.W. Bush in Iraq and and President Bill Clinton in Serbia. Congress in 1991 approved the Iraq military action, five months after Mr. Bush deployed forces to the region in response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. The military action in Libya, which Congress wasn't asked to approve, irked lawmakers.
Sen. Jim Webb, (D., Va.,) said in an interview Monday with MSNBC, "We have not had a debate and I know that there was some justification put into place because of concern for civilian casualties, but this isn't the way that our system is supposed to work."
House Democrats held a conference call over the weekend to discuss Libya, and support among lawmakers was mixed, a congressional aide said. Frustration appears to be coming from rank-and-file lawmakers left out of Mr. Obama's Libya briefing to committee chairmen Friday.
In 2007, Mr. Obama, then a presidential candidate, said, "The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation."
The White House said the president's actions don't contradict his earlier views, noting that the president met with a bipartisan group of lawmakers regarding Libya before any action took place.
A senior administration official said that the 2007 comment envisioned "an invasion like we saw in Iraq. A mission of this kind, which is time-limited, well-defined, and discrete, clearly falls within the President's constitutional authority."
Justice Department legal opinions support the president's power to order limited military action, according to administration lawyers, and the White House appears to be using the legal guidelines in stating the nature, duration and scope of the Libyan operation.
"As the President told the country, the US military operation in Libya will be limited in duration and scope, and conducted in partnership with an international coalition. It is aimed at preventing an imminent humanitarian catastrophe that directly implicates the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States," said Tommy Vietor, a White House spokesman.
Mr. Obama's notification letter does not satisfy the constitutional requirement that Congress approve military action, says Lou Fisher, former researcher with the Congressional Research Service and an expert on war powers. Mr. Fisher also raised objections to Mr. Obama citing United Nations authorization in his letter.
"It's impossible for Congress to take its war powers and give it to the U.N.," Mr. Fisher said. "Other than defensive actions—and there's no defensive actions here—this has to be done by Congress."
The president, with his letter, appeared to meet the requirements of the 1973 War Powers Resolution, which says only that in cases where the president doesn't seek prior approval from lawmakers, the president must notify Congress within 48 hours of committing armed forces to military action and puts a 60 day deadline on such actions.
House Speaker John Boehner doesn't believe the president always needs congressional approval to go take military action, a spokesman for the Ohio Republican said. However, "members of Congress from both parties, as well as the American people, are demanding the administration do a better job answering some basic questions about the scope and purpose of our mission in Libya, America's role, and how it will be achieved," said the spokesman, Brendan Buck.
Michigan Republican Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence committee, who was part of a group of lawmakers who met with the president before the Libya action, offered his support after the meeting. Mr. Rogers said: "Bipartisan Congressional leaders met with the President at the White House today to hear his plan, and I like what I heard. It is in America's strategic interest to support regional stability, and to prevent the use or diversion of Libya's large chemical weapons stockpile while allowing those who aspire to be free a chance to have their legitimate grievances heard."
—Siobhan Hughes contributed to this article.

Religion may become extinct in nine nations, study says


A study using census data from nine countries shows that religion there is set for extinction, say researchers.Half-empty churchIn the UK, Wales has the highest proportion of religiously "non-affiliated"

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The study found a steady rise in those claiming no religious affiliation.
The team's mathematical model attempts to account for the interplay between the number of religious respondents and the social motives behind being one.
The result, reported at the American Physical Society meeting in Dallas, US, indicates that religion will all but die out altogether in those countries.
The team took census data stretching back as far as a century from countries in which the census queried religious affiliation: Australia, Austria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Switzerland.
Nonlinear dynamics is invoked to explain a wide range of physical phenomena in which a number of factors play a part.
One of the team, Daniel Abrams of Northwestern University, put forth a similar model in 2003 to put a numerical basis behind the decline of lesser-spoken world languages.
At its heart is the competition between speakers of different languages, and the "utility" of speaking one instead of another.
"The idea is pretty simple," said Richard Wiener of the Research Corporation for Science Advancement, and the University of Arizona.
"It posits that social groups that have more members are going to be more attractive to join, and it posits that social groups have a social status or utility.
"For example in languages, there can be greater utility or status in speaking Spanish instead of [the dying language] Quechuan in Peru, and similarly there's some kind of status or utility in being a member of a religion or not."
A man fills in a census formSome of the census data the team used date from the 19th century
Dr Wiener continued: "In a large number of modern secular democracies, there's been a trend that folk are identifying themselves as non-affiliated with religion; in the Netherlands the number was 40%, and the highest we saw was in the Czech Republic, where the number was 60%."
The team then applied their nonlinear dynamics model, adjusting parameters for the relative social and utilitarian merits of membership of the "non-religious" category.
They found, in a study published online, that those parameters were similar across all the countries studied, suggesting that similar behaviour drives the mathematics in all of them.
And in all the countries, the indications were that religion was headed toward extinction.
However, Dr Wiener told the conference that the team was working to update the model with a "network structure" more representative of the one at work in the world.
"Obviously we don't really believe this is the network structure of a modern society, where each person is influenced equally by all the other people in society," he said.
However, he told BBC News that he thought it was "a suggestive result".
"It's interesting that a fairly simple model captures the data, and if those simple ideas are correct, it suggests where this might be going.
"Obviously much more complicated things are going on with any one individual, but maybe a lot of that averages out."

Friday, March 18, 2011

KTL Radio presents THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS feat Sophia Stewart Mother of the Matrix 3/18/2011 - KNOW THE LEDGE RADIO | Internet Radio | Blog Talk Radio

KTL Radio presents THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS feat Sophia Stewart Mother of the Matrix 3/18/2011 - KNOW THE LEDGE RADIO | Internet Radio | Blog Talk Radio
Know The Ledge Radio and Destiny Grind presents "The Mother of the Matrix" Sophia Stewart. Join us as the Red & the Blue Pill join forces with the Oracle Diviners from Destiny Grind to meet the TRUE Oracle of our times, Sophia Stewart. Listen as Ms. Stewart tells her story of perseverance and triumph. Learn how she fought the power of Hollywood to reclaim what was stolen from her, the BILLION dollar grossing Terminator & The Matrix franchises. We will delve into the controversies surrounding her court case and purported victory. Ultimately,discover the TRUE meaning of The Matrix from the Mother herself, the person responsible for birthing our generation into new planetary consciousness.

Worried Californians Purchase Gas Masks, Chemical Suits « CBS Los Angeles

Worried Californians Purchase Gas Masks, Chemical Suits « CBS Los Angeles

Students Protest Ga. Immigration Law

Students Protest Ga. Immigration Law

Blacks, Hispanics lead metro population growth  | ajc.com

Blacks, Hispanics lead metro population growth | ajc.com

Man stopped for speeding leaves behind son, $80K and 7 pounds of pot  | ajc.com

If the accusations are true, you have got to be kidding me!?!?!

Man stopped for speeding leaves behind son, $80K and 7 pounds of pot | ajc.com

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Bully receives HARD concrete body slam REMIX

Well well well, ask and you shall receive.

5-Year-Old Wrestler Demolishes Opponents

Saint Patrick's Day Origin

Saint Patrick's Day is a religious holiday that is celebrated internationally on March 17.  The original color of the holiday is said to have been blue.  Green ribbons and shamrocks were worn in celebration as early as the 17th century.  The holiday is named after Saint Patrick who is the most commonly recognized patron Saint of Ireland.  He was supposedly born 387 and died 461  AD.  The holiday originated as a Catholic Holiday and became an official feast day in the early 17th century.  Saint Patrick was born in Roman Britain.  His family was wealthy, his father and grandfather were both deacons of the church.  Saint Patrick was kidnapped at the age of 16 by what was called Irish Raiders and taken to Ireland as a slave.  He fled back to Britain and studied to be a priest.  In the year of 432 he returned to Ireland as a Bishop to Christianize the Irish from their native polytheism.  Irish folklore tells that one of his teaching methods included using the shamrock to explain the Christian doctrine of the Trinity to Irish people.  It is said that he died on March 17th.  Saint Patrick was known for driving the snakes out of Ireland.  However zoologists say that there never were any snakes in Ireland.  So what "snakes" was he exactly driving out?  Some modern interpretation equates the "snakes" with sin or a symbolic meaning for pagan beliefs or evil.  Therefore Saint Patrick driving the snakes out of Ireland is seen as bringing Christianity into it.

Honestly I have more research that I want to do on this topic.  I've heard discussions of what native people represented the "snakes"  driven out of Ireland and who they actually were.  It is an interesting topic for me personally.  I've even read that the origin of the surname "Coffee" is Irish.  Ok I'm not saying that I'm Irish but I will be looking more into it.

West Coast Hip-hop Crooner Nate Dogg Dies

Peace, blessings and understanding to his family.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Ex-judge in stripper, drug case faces sentence  | ajc.com

Shouldn't any local, state, or federal official be held to higher standards.  Most citizens with charges of possession of firearms, drugs etc would receive more the 15-30 days of incarceration for their charges.  It's like the Politricks and government is a big joke.  There are claims of this judge having drug problems after falling off of a bike and also bipolar issues.  Many people or criminals everyday walk into a court room who also have numerous issues of their own.  Where is the mercy for many of these "regular" citizens? By the way this judge reportedly will have the opportunity to draw in his pension because he resigned after the arrest.
Ex-judge in stripper, drug case faces sentence | ajc.com

2011 AJC Prep Slam Dunk Contest Round 1 Highlights

King: Muslim Radicalization Must Be Probed