-
Posts
35323 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
1
Everything posted by Park Life
-
Indeed. However I think Barca only need to break them once and I reckon the floodgates will open. Waiting for the customary pen.
-
That has to be the worst substituton in the history of Euro football.
-
Barca playing 4 against 6 in postive areas. No hope if they carry on like this. I'd take Yaya off.
-
Need to go 343 Barca, Pep the stupid fuck. Get Henry and Bojan on.
-
He should have just come out fighting and stood by what he said the dope. Every slip is a chance to spin. This is OLD LABOUR style bungling.
-
It's a SF ffs they're all gonna cheat.
-
Everything you need is in Camden. Stay away from the WEnd.
-
Shit hadn't thought of that.
-
These are my issues with NEW Labour, or perhaps the way Billy Liar dragged the party sideways and to the right.
-
Keep till 21 see how he goes with a few Pl outings.
-
If you only read one read this one. 33 of 34 people found the following review helpful: 4.0 out of 5 stars This Is How "Black Programs" Really Are, November 21, 2006 By Terry Sunday This review is from: The Hunt for Zero Point: Inside the Classified World of Antigravity Technology (Hardcover) When I first came across Nick Cook's "The Hunt for Zero Point" in a bookstore, I scoffed at the subtitle: "Inside the classified world of antigravity technology." As an aerospace engineer, historian and dyed-in-the-wool skeptic, I figured it was probably full of mystical, pseudo-scientific nonsense that would appeal only to those with absolutely no understanding of how the world works. Surely, I thought, it would offer nothing of value to knowledgeable, sophisticated, discriminating readers. In fact, I initially lumped it into the same category as Philip Corso's "The Day After Roswell," which remains possibly the most shamelessly self-serving, manifestly ridiculous and blatantly fabricated "true story" ever concocted. Then, later, I checked a copy of "The Hunt for Zero Point" out of the library and read it. My opinion is now completely different. I highly recommend it if you are interested in learning about an obscure, previously unknown aspect of aerospace history that, if true, has major implications for the future of nearly every high-technology enterprise on Earth. Mr. Cook has impressive qualifications. He served for over a decade as the Aviation Editor of the highly respected aerospace journal "Jane's Defence Weekly." His knowledge of the people, companies, hardware, technology and politics of today's "military/industrial complex" is extraordinary. Quite simply, he gets it right. A useful way to gauge the knowledge and attention to detail that an author brings to his work is to check if he defines acronyms correctly. Mr. Cook does. As best I can tell, he also gets right every person, place, date, event and company that he mentions--at least, the ones that I could verify. Finally--and this is most unusual--he even gets the name of one of America's largest aerospace corporations right. The name is "Lockheed Martin," not "Lockheed-Martin." Virtually every author who mentions the company inserts a hyphen in the name that should not be there. "Attention to detail" means getting things like this right, and Mr. Cook does so.
-
Important stuff. IMO the future will bring the marriage of exotic physics/philosophy.
-
Cheers mate. Put it up bro, I'm sure Nicos and Chez would do good ones as well.
-
What a cunt. ....and a total waste of a bullet I've been in Hamburg since easter shagging Mrs P. mods can check ip.
-
It's light reading.
-
1. The Seth Material - Channeled by Jane Roberts The Seth material in its entirety is probably one of the greatest metaphysical works ever written. The material is highly complex and philosophical and discusses the fundamental spiritual nature of reality. All the material has been archived at Yale library. The core teachings of the Seth Material are based on the principle that mind creates matter,[16] and that each individual creates his or her own reality through thoughts, beliefs and expectations,[5][17][18][19][20], and that the "point of power" through which the individual can effect change is in the present moment.[18] The Seth Material discusses a wide range of metaphysical concepts, including the nature of God, referred to in the Material as "All That Is"[21][19] and sometimes "The Multidimensional God" (who takes its form in many parallel or probable universes);[22] the nature of physical reality;[22] the origins of the universe;[21] the limitless nature of the self and the "higher self";[18][20] the story of Christ;[8] the evolution of the soul and all aspects of death and rebirth, including reincarnation and karma, past lives, after-death experiences, "guardian spirits", and ascension to planes of "higher consciousness";[8][18][20][23] the purpose of life and the nature of good and evil; the purpose of suffering;[20] multidimensional reality,[24] parallel lives[5] and transpersonal realms.[18][23] 2. Conversations with God - Books 1,2 & 3 by Neale Donald Walsch Can change your entire perspective on reality through logic and give an alternative philosophical model. Conversations with God (CwG) is a sequence of books written by Neale Donald Walsch, written as a dialogue in which Walsch asks questions and God answers.[1] The first book of the Conversations with God series, Conversations with God, Book 1: An Uncommon Dialogue, appeared on bookshelves in 1995, and quickly became a publishing phenomenon, staying on the New York Times Best-Sellers List for 137 weeks. The succeeding volumes in the trilogy also appeared prominently on the List. In an interview with Larry King, Walsch described the inception of the books as follows: at a low period in his life, Walsch wrote an angry letter to God asking questions about why his life wasn't working. After writing down all of his questions, he heard a voice over his right shoulder say: "Do you really want an answer to all these questions or are you just venting?"[2] Though when he turned around he saw no one there, Walsch felt answers to his questions filling his mind and decided to write them down. The ensuing dialogue became the Conversations with God books. 3. Fingerprints of the Gods by Graham Hancock Good introduction into the field of alternative models on history, unorthodox methodology and thinking. Helps question the orthodox, or dogmas of everything mainstream there after. This book got me questioning and inquiring about advanced ancient civilizations as well as extraterrestrials. 4. Hunt for Zero Point by Nick Cook Published by Century Random House in the UK in 2001 and Broadway Books in the US in 2002, details his ten-year investigation into efforts to crack the Holy Grail of aerospace propulsion: anti-gravity technology. The book reached No.1 in the Amazon.com non-fiction chart and no.3 on the general list. Other works by Cook include: "Angel Archangel" and "Aggressor", and a number of ghost-written books including The Sunday Times Bestseller "Sabre S. 5. The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle This book probably would better have been titled a 'Treatise on the Ego'. Possibly the best book every written on the Ego in simple terms, and how to achieve a mental state of joy by releasing negative egotistical thought patterns. This book I believe is the ultimate tool for achieving blissful meditation as well. The explanations in this book are worth their weight in gold. Get them and read them. Peace.
-
The main problem with democracy innit?
-
Can I ask everyone to check their smoke alarms?
Park Life replied to Lazarus's topic in General Chat
What if it's really cold outside? -
igitalGlobe's QuickBird commercial remote sensing satellite imaged the Mt. Ararat "anomaly" in 2003. This image has never seen by the public until now. The anomaly is surrounded below by very rugged-looking strato-volcanic rock; however, the texture of the feature in question is relatively smooth and appears to be made of a different substance. Credit: DigitalGlobe Case closed, break out the bread and wine yo!!
-
I don't mind contemplating a Deist God who may have created the universe - though I doubt he exists - but that concept does not relate in anyway to man made Gods like Yahweh. How can you doubt something exists if you have no data to go on? Surely that is as much a belief systim? Yes? As you were. Theres no positive evidence which is where the requirement lies. I just said I don't mind contemplating before dismissing it - unlike the Theist Gods which aren't even worth that much effort. Yeah but tbh we are like a grain of sand at the backof the beach arguing the sea don't exist.