Tinker
"It hard to bear with nobody to love you, and you're
going nowhere.” That song by the Bee Gees really captures the lost that we feel
from losing the person that you could have truly loved. And of course that is a
very deep personal tragedy that hardly ever goes away. We just somehow learn to
live with the sorrow that over time become a bitter/sweet memory of someone we
once loved, but loss anyway.
Learning to lose is very hard to do and it can take a life
time of trial and error trying to understand how to treat losing something that
you want to win. That real life is what it is and no matter how we personally
feel about life a lot of moment in our life are out of our control. Using some of
the common sense that we have naturally gain from living over the years helps
us to put losing into perspective. And in weighing one lose against the other from
what is really important and what is indeed a real life tragedy. False pride
against real pride and losing only some showmanship embarrassment, against
losing something of real substance in your life. The good seem to suffer just
as much if not more than the bad.
Are you going to be true to yourselves and other, or not,
the choice is yours.
This human tragedy of seeing the captured Jordan pilot being slowly
burned alive is very cruel to us the living, and I think that you already know
what I want to do to those Islamic militant terrorist. So I will only go on
feeling sorry for my country's friends. Because my President Barack Obama wanted to look good
on TV by pulled the U.S. Military out of the Middle East, as Iran started to move
against the other countries and population in the Middle East.
What kind of a man is Barack Obama?
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Published: 11:50 EST, 3 February 2015
Militants fighting for the Islamic State terror group in Syria and Iraq have released a video they claim shows Jordanian pilot Maaz al-Kassasbeh being burnt alive while locked in a cage.
The footage, which is titled 'Healing the Believers' Chests' appears to show the captured airman wearing an orange jumpsuit as a trail of petrol leading up to the cage is seen being set alight.
Flames are seen quickly spreading to the cage where they completely engulf the helpless pilot in images that are far too distressing to publish.
Yesterday Jordan government spokesman Mohammed al-Momeni said the kingdom was doing 'everything' it could to secure the release of Kassasbeh, who was captured by ISIS after his F-16 fighter jet crashed in territory controlled by the militants in Syria in December.
However the statement came with an explicit threat that if 'hero' Kassasbeh came to any harm, Jordan would 'quickly judge and sentence' all those it holds on suspicion of being members of ISIS.
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