Tinker
"The
hare limp'd trembling through the frozen grass,"
or the way that I write the same point of view, "Her hair laid limp
trembling in the frozen grass" The Eve of St Agnes by John Keats is a
example of the talent that enriched our culture.
So
the individuality of our uniqueness is the talent that we are adding to
every ones else opinions in our life together. If we can get beyond our
own human frailty's like our jealousy, envy, hatred, we could learn more
and become more comfortable together and no telling what is liable to
come out of that kind of team work.
Look at what we have built already and then consider what
we might even build better in the future with everyone collective
talents.
Some people have some very enjoyable
talents. The art of music alone simply is thrilling to me, as does good
writing, painting, the sciences, building, studying, and knowledge of
all kinds. All of that is what I love about this wonderful life of ours.
This universe of what we see and hear truly can take my breath away
from the shear wonder of it all. But nothing thrills me more than what I
see and feel from the people around me. Because they are truly the
greatest wonder in my world to me.
It is very hard for me to put into words what I see and
feel from the sight of a new born baby, or the touch from my child's
hand, the magical beauty that sparkles from the eyes of a woman, and the
thousand expressions on the face of everyday people that makes us
human, and alive.
I kid you not in spite of everything that I have seen and heard so far I still like people best of all.
Jesus said: Consider the lilies and then you will know...
Luke 12:27 Consider the lilies how they grow: they toil not, they spin not
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
The Birds of Heaven
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ann Coulter
NEW OBAMA PROMISE: IF YOU LIKE YOUR LIFE, YOU CAN KEEP IT
February 19, 2014
What are they supposed to say? This Obamacare website is fantastic! And really, haven't you already read all the magazines in your current doctor's office anyway?
The New York Times has described Obama's repeated claim that you could keep your insurance plan and keep your doctor under Obamacare as a mere slip of the tongue: "Mr. Obama clearly misspoke when he said that."
Misspoke? How exactly does one misspeak, word for word, dozens of times, over and over again?
That wasn't misspeaking -- it was a deliberate, necessary lie. Even Democrats couldn't have voted for Obamacare if Americans had known the truth. It was absolutely vital for Obama to lie about people being able to keep their insurance and their doctors.
Of course, it was difficult for voters to know the truth because every time Republicans would try to tell them, the White House and the media would rush in and call the critics liars.
The White House posted a specific refutation of the "disinformation" about not being able to keep your doctor or insurance plan. That claim, the website said, was being disseminated by Republicans "to scare people."
Their proof consisted of a video of Obama clearly stating, "If you have insurance that you like, then you will be able to keep that insurance. If you've got a doctor that you like, you will be able to keep your doctor."
A video of someone asserting the very fact in dispute does not rise to the level of "evidence," but it was more than enough for MSNBC.
Even when pretending to be critical of Obamacare, liberals lie about the real problems. They tell us they're worried about the percentage of young people signing up for Obamacare. The mix of young and old people in Obamacare is completely irrelevant. It won't help if a lot of young people sign up because their premiums are negligible. Read More »
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http://www.washingtontimes.
FBI suspected iconic 1964 Ali-Liston fight was rigged by mob
The Washington Times
By Thom Loverro
Fifty years ago today, Muhammad Ali “shocked the world” and beat one of the most fearsome fighters ever to put on a pair of boxing gloves, heavyweight champion Sonny Liston.
But what if that storied fight was not what it seemed?
It happened Feb. 25, 1964, at the Miami Beach Convention Center. The film clip and sound bite have now become part of the American story — Liston quitting his stool before the eighth round, a young Cassius Clay, as Ali was known then, bouncing around the ring, waving his hands, yelling to the reporters at ringside who thought he would be killed by the more veteran boxer. “I’m king of the world! I’m king of the world!” Ali proclaimed.
Sports Illustrated named it the fourth-greatest sports moment of the 20th century. The fight also is the foundation of the Muhammad Ali story: the three-year heavyweight championship reign of dominance, followed by his three-year exile as he fought the Vietnam War draft. The Ali-Joe Frazier fights, the upset over George Foreman in Zaire, the reconstruction of Ali from a pariah to a national treasure. All of it begins with a brash Clay “shocking the world.”
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