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and other Homeostatic Truths


    Timely, significant updates

      Objective press? ... No such thing.
      Next best option? ...

      Fresh takes, from any spot along the spectrum,
      with as clear a labelling as possible.

      There is the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly--on all sides.
      Open minds create the possibility of Mutually Assured Understanding.

        Peace, Shalom, Assalam Alaikum...



Highlights


Bo-Hi Pak
Watergate: 30 Years Ago


Mark Twain
The War Prayer


Sun-Myung Moon
Address on the 50th Anniversary of the Founding of the FFWPU


CHEON-IL GUK
Proclaiming Peace

George Stallings
I Am . . .
living in the key
of g minor

SKS Press
I AM Radio
(Premium Broadcast)

Arnaud de Borchgrave
Mideast fighting without end?


Sang-Hun Lee
God's Message to the United Nations

Four Corners
American Dreamers

UN.ORG
Infonation

Jacob Lund Fisker
GENUINE PROGRESS INDICATOR-- GPI

Rosemary Horton
Economic Indicators

Pacific Research
World and U.S. Indices



News Sites

Africa Action
ABC News
Asia Times
Behind The Homefront
Black Commentator
Black Electorate
Common Dreams
Counter Punch
Cutting Edge
Drudge Report
Economist
Family Federation
Foreign Policy In Focus
Global Free Press
Guardian
Haaretz
Independent
IOL (S. Africa)
Information
-- Clearinghouse

Intervention
Islam Online
Khilafah
Korea Herald
Korea Times
Middle East Times
Muslimedia
News Making News
Occupation Watch
Polling Report
Raiders
Rense
Roadsters
Segye Times
Serendipity
The Voice
Truth Out
UN.org
UPI
Washington Times
Wikipedia
World Tribune


Previous Reports

Waseem Shehzad
Two years after 9/11

William Bunch
Why Don't We Have Answers to These 9/11 Questions?

Geobopological Survey
Assorted Secret Societies (true/false)



Click Here for More Stories.


archives / Aug-Sept / Oct-Nov / Dec-Jan / Jan-Feb / Mar-Apr / May-June / July-August / Sept-Oct / Next Month /

November-December 2004

Our World Today
the good and the bad...


General News

Some of the Good

James Neff
God's Anointed One
Was Elected-Be Afraid

a letter to James from the 51%

Hello! I believe what we have here as far as the 2004 elections is a close tie between the devil and God. Not Kerry and Bush. And God prevailed obviously and placed the most morale person in office during the "end times".

Abortion and Christanity are reasons for my voting for Bush along with the gay marriage ban! I have been rejoicing since Bush's (the good Lord aboves Win!) victory. He is a family and moral man and believes in the sanctity of marriage, honesty, anti-choice/pro life. He is going back to the beliefs of our founding fathers of the U.S.A.

Of course since God is with Bush the world hates him because they don't want to turn to the bible and away from their vile-sinful lifestyles that are abominable to God. Jesus was hated by the world too. Doesn't it make since when you are born again TRULY through the blood of Christ the world would hate you too? Well, that is Bush. Wake-up. Bush sincerely cares about this nation because he has the love of God living within him. So, it is ones choice to accept Christ or not. If not they send themselves to hell by living in opposition to Gods rule. Don't blame him.

click title above for replies


Karl W. B. Schwarz
A Conservative Christian Republican
Demands more Truth from Bush

"Every investigation has been suppressed by the Bush Administration and I am one Republican that is watching closely at how many Democrats are just rolling over for it – the Iraq lies, 9-11 and who did it and why, the Valeria Plame matter, the Afghanistan pipeline, the Aqaba pipeline, the privatization of Iraqi assets that is infuriating the Iraqis, and many more misdeeds that are not being looked into and the truth being put on the table for all to see."

Choi Soung-ah
Relationship with U.S. is Changing

In his first public address on the Korea-U.S. alliance since last week's presidential election in the United States, Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon reiterated the need for Seoul and Washington to stand side-by-side in a "horizontal relationship."

"The Korea-U.S. alliance is going through a historic turnover," Ban said yesterday in a forum in Seoul.

"It is hopeful that the Korea-U.S. alliance should develop into an equally, evenly horizontal relationship stemming from a mutually beneficial standpoint."

. . . Regarding a possible role change for South Korean troops stationed in Iraq, Ban said "the government is not assuming such a possibility."

"As approved by the National Assembly with public support, the government will maintain the (troops) role and mission of rebuilding and peacekeeping in Iraq."

Michael Jenkins
Hope for A New America and The Fourth Israel - 120 Women of Faith

Yo-Han Lee
Who Washed Your Fallen Nature?

The life of faith exists in order to remove your fallen nature. It is not God or Jesus but the person of more sinfulness than you who removed your fallen nature. Existing churches believe that Jesus saves them. That is not true. The person who has more fallen nature than you only can wash your fallen nature. Then in this life the person whom you hate most and dislike most takes care of your fallen nature. The way to remove it is to connect yourself with God's position on one hand and be persecuted yourself by those people on the other. Unless you have God on one hand, you cannot bear it. . . .


Some of the Bad

JOHN W. DEAN
Understanding the 2004 Presidential Election:
Beyond the Polarized Electorate,
And The Republicans' Superior Voter Turnout

With four years of evidence, Kerry supporters - realists that they are, who have learned to watch what Bush and Cheney do, rather than what they say - will hardly be persuaded that this administration seeks a new era of bipartisanship. That is particularly true given that the President suggested at his recent press conference that the divisiveness will end when everyone agrees with his positions. Little wonder there is widespread depression.

The sensible take on the next four years will not be found in the President's faux offers of thorny olive branches with very short stems. Bush and Cheney are not going to trim their sails, and with the ship of state listing dangerously starboard, no one should expect smooth sailing for the next four years. Humility does not come easily to these men of hubris. Rancor should be expected. Indeed, it may be necessary to keep them from sinking us all.


Robin Cook
The world is fated to
four more years of brutal confrontation
Bush will now celebrate by putting Falluja to the torch

Dahr Jamail
The Fire Is Spreading

. . . Today, two churches in Al-Dora were destroyed by car bombs which detonated 5 minutes apart. When the injured and dead were taken from the scenes to Yarmouk Hospital, the hospital was car bombed. At least 8 people died it the hospital car bombing.

"We are looking at this just as numbers," says Salam with a deep breath, "But this is 8 families. This is 8 families that are suffering now."

5 policemen were killed in Al-Dora as well-not by car bomb, but by fighting with the resistance.

The growing fire of resistance has spread into the political realm in Iraq as well. The Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS) has called upon people not to vote in the upcoming election. . . .

Another man I met with today, Haythem, expressed his feelings about the occupation, Falluja, and the martial law.

"Iraq is pregnant with an American fetus," he pauses for emphasis and says, "And we need birth control pills." He sits for a moment, and after making a toast with a soft drink adds, "Long life to Falluja."

Gregg Krupa
Clogged VA delays Iraq vets' care
Growing U.S. backlog holds up treatment and disability claims for up to six months.

Thom Hartmann
Evidence Mounts That
The Vote May Have Been Hacked

Daniel Patrick Welch
Arma-geddon Sick of You
World to US as Americans prepare to level Fallujah

. . . Deaf to the coming terror for the residents of Fallujah, and blind to its inevitable consequences, we watch (or mostly, don't) as air strikes reduce the small Nazzal Emergency Hospital , run by a Saudi charity, to rubble. Insurgents strike back with a range of attacks across a wide swath of central Iraq , killing more than 30 and wounding almost 60 others, among them over 20 Americans.

A nervous habit of mine is to replay a song over and over in my head, like a musical worry stone. The past couple days it has been Bob Dylan's God On Our Side. And not for nothing. Some of the troops poised to pounce on Fallujah were praying to Jesus and playing Christian rock. Colonel Gary Brandl of the United States Marine Corps commented: 'The enemy has a face. It is Satan's. He is in Fallujah, and we are going to destroy him.'

The sheer terrifying stupidity of these commanders is reflected in the mentality of those up the chain (obviously—hence Gitmo and Abu Ghraib). A recent eye opener came from an interview of a Bush aide by Ron Suskind. The aide waxed philosophical about the great divide between those who make reality (Bush and his angels, I suppose), and those who simply study it. He actually used the term ¡°reality-based community,¡± which I find pretty fitting and ironic in a strange way...

The slaughter at Fallujah will be a watershed event in the collapse of the American empire, echoing across the next hundred years. This is hardly hyperbole; the world is already sick of US arrogance and bullying. And it's about to get immeasurably worse¡¦

Bo-Hi Pak
Watergate: Tragic Failures

Sun-Myung Moon
Address on the 50th Anniversary of the Founding of the FFWPU

God's Homeland and the Peace Kingdom
Are Built on the Foundation of
the Realm of His Liberation and Release


Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004



War(s) On Terror?

Erik Leaver
The Iraq Quagmire Deepens

. . . UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, wrote to President George W. Bush last week, ¡°The threat or actual use of force not only risks deepening the sense of alienation of certain communities, but would also reinforce perceptions among the Iraqi population of a continued military occupation.¡±

These perceptions that Kofi Annan refers to have been reinforced by the high toll ordinary Iraqis have paid in bloodshed. The British medical journal The Lancet recently reported a Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health study that found there have been 100,000 ¡°excess deaths¡± of civilians in Iraq since the U.S. invasion began. The Johns Hopkins researchers cited U.S. air strikes on towns and cities as responsible for many of the deaths. . .

The aerial bombings in Fallujah will surely add to the rising death toll of civilians as well as insurgents. Worse, the attacks will not make Fallujah--nor any other part of Iraq--¡°safe for democracy.¡± Imagine if Cincinnati, Ohio, a city of Fallujah¡¯s size, were destroyed ten weeks before the election was to take place. Elections would make little sense in the aftermath of such destruction.

Furthermore, the attacks in Fallujah will spur more violence in surrounding towns, such as Samarra, where more than 30 people were killed this past weekend, making the country less safe and unlikely to be able to hold honest elections in January. But there are three other reasons why the assault on Fallujah is posed to further sink the U.S. in a quagmire with no exit...

Kirsten Anderberg
Mothers and Children, Run and Hide!

Imagine walking down the street in your town, and finding yourself in a hailstorm of pamphlets, from another country, being dropped on you from an airplane above, telling the women and children to leave town, now, as war is impending and they will be in harm's way. I can only imagine such a scene, as I have never lived in a war zone...

I can imagine walking down my street and picking up one of those fliers, and reading that women and children need to flee the town. In my real situation, as a single mother, with no family and coming from poverty, with no car or savings, I can only imagine rushing home to pack our belongings, in a panic. I suppose you would need to put on your best walking shoes, if you had any. And your warmest coats. Candles and matches seem like they would be good, but maybe that would be a luxury. Socks would be nice if you had any. Something to carry water in. Food that could be transported. Utensils for eating and cooking. Any medicinal compounds and supplies. Necessary tools, scissors, knives, needles, thread, rope. A comb and toothbrush? Papers, such as birth certificates and passports. Phone numbers and addresses of people in other places that maybe could help me. Herb and Plant identification booklets. Pen, paper. Plastic sheets, tarps, anything waterproof. Clothing. Any maps I had of the region. One toy for child, perhaps, if there was room. And the heaviest of all, bedding. All of this I would need to be able to carry on my back for many miles and many days. While being responsible for a child in tow as well. I feel there is great pain and suffering among the residents of Fallujah right now. Mothers are going through packing their things, just as I have described, to make way for the Americans. . . .

John Kaminski
American Sunset

. . . The lies used to justify the continuing slaughter of innocent people in Iraq fester like an infected scab on the psyche of the American people, who have become so twisted in their pursuit of narcotized tranquility that they are now even cheering the deaths of their own children who come home in boxes we are not allowed to see. How much more insane can it get before blissful blackness will alleviate our misery?

If souls were faces, Americans would gaze into their bathroom mirrors each morning and see their rotting skin covered with oozing sores, putrescent pustules of their suicidal disease caused by their intransigent focus on tormenting trivialities, caused by their willing ignorance of their soldiers - their own children - raping Iraqi children, blowing Iraqi families to bits, then, as their deeds set into their curdled spirits, coming home and hanging themselves in the shattering silence of realizing their own horrified depravity.

Do you have a child in the military?

Chances are fairly good - if he is still alive - he has become a murderer, or a rapist, or that he has become sickened to the point that his life is ruined, which means that your life is ruined, if you have any feelings at all.

This is America 2004. A willing blindness drapes the land like a shroud, where old men beat their war drums and young men say, "hey, this is really cool!" in the millisecond before they lose a limb to a land mine, or frag an unknown family into bleeding bits of twitching protoplasm. . . .


SUSAN ELAN
Draft coming, students told
While working for The New York Times, war correspondent and author Christopher Hedges covered fighting in Central America, the Balkans and the Middle East, including Iraq during the first Gulf War

. . . The reservists and National Guard members who make up half of the U.S. forces are stretched to the breaking point and need relief, he said, and the draft is the only way to assemble the numbers needed. Reintroduction of the draft will be made in the name of the war on terrorism soon after an attack in the United States or abroad, he predicted.

"The war in Iraq will no longer be an abstraction," he said. "It will become deeply personal. In the next few weeks look for shifts in administration policy leading in the direction of an escalation of the war". . .

Those who confuse his anti-war stance with an anti-soldier position are mistaken, Hedges said. "War in the end is always about betrayal. Betrayal of the young by the old, of soldiers by politicians and idealists by cynics."


Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004



War(s) of Terror -- Africa Again?

JAMES RON
U.S. doing the right thing in Sudan

The U.S. war on terror has largely been a disaster, exacerbating existing conflicts, provoking new ones, and running up huge financial debts. The occupation of Iraq is chaotic, opium-exporting warlords run Afghanistan, and the "counterterrorist" tactics of President George Bush's close ally, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, are crudely destructive.

Yet, in the Horn of Africa, the Bush administration is doing some real good. U.S. officials are condemning a brutal policy of ethnic cleansing by government-allied militias in Darfur, a vast region in western Sudan, and have used their influence to successfully promote a truce that may save thousands of lives.


Riek Machar
COLONIAL BRITIAN HANDS OVER
SOUTH SUDAN TO THE NORTH

Instead of establishing an advisory council for South Sudan similar to that of North Sudan, the resolutions of the Administrative Conference held in Khartoum in 1946 surprisingly advocated the colonisation of South by North Sudan. It must, however, be pointed out that the conference took the decision at the back of the people of South Sudan as they were not represented and because the conference was meant for administrators in North Sudan only, the British administrators in South Sudan did not attend. Consequently, this unexpected outcome revealed the conspiracy between the British and the North Sudanese supported by Egypt to hand over South Sudan to North Sudan as a colonial territory. Certainly, this plan provoked bitter reaction from the South Sudanese and their sympathisers.


Olivier Barlet
The modernity of genocide
A burning question remains : why the horror ?

. . . What is behind the genocides of the twentieth century if it is not the egocentrism and insecurity accompanying the affirmation of the individual's autonomy which characterizes modernity ? The temptation to project onto the other what is ours is strong. And a Rwandan proverb tells us : "Nta wiyanga nk'uwanga undi (Nobody hates himself more than he who hates others)".

In their quest to surpass, artists open themselves up to all influences and facilitate the removal of projections. They thus explore a fraternity in which the identities of each and everyone are no longer the centre of human identities : not a fraternity of blood, but a fraternity of sharing.


United Press International
WHO: AIDS is world's major health problem

NEW YORK, May 11 (UPI) -- A United Nations report describes AIDS as a disaster for the world's poor countries and the leading cause of death among those aged 15 to 59.

"Changing History" is the first World Health Organization report devoted entirely to HIV/AIDS, which has killed more than 20 million people since it was first recognized during the early 1980s.

The report emphasizes that AIDS is mainly a disease of poor people and poor countries. Last year, an estimated 5 million people worldwide became infected and 3 million died.


Boyd Ed Graves
The U.S. patented CURE for AIDS

In October 1977, the United States patented a "method for curing AIDS" patent #5676977. The product is called TETRASIL/IMUSIL and is a one-time injection/infusion that eliminates bacterial pathogens in the blood system of an individual. It is this cheap and effective cure for AIDS that is the subject of my presentation.

As a 29-month recipient of this one time injection, I further submit that we have an effective and cheap remedy for AIDS that is ready now. Our goal in bringing this information to the international community is to serve as a conduit for the necessary global “double blind?efficacy clinical trials of this U.S. patented CURE for AIDS.

Compassion Response Network
What is Tetrasil?

Youtopia Institute
What the heck is holding up the train
on this cure, here?

Boyd Ed Graves
The U.S. patented CURE for AIDS

Ian Gurney
Graves urges U.N. to acknowledge AIDS cure
AIDS cure recipient celebrates his first two years Jan. 10, 2004

Boyd Ed Graves
A history of US secret human experimentation

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004






What is Institutionalised Terror?

Charles Glass
Offensive compared to Terrorist Tactics

The US condemned Syria for the assault that is believed to have cost 10,000 civilian lives. The Syrian army destroyed the historic centre of Hama, and it rounded up Muslim rebels for imprisonment or execution. Syria's actions against Hama came to form part of the American case that Syria was a terrorist state. Partly because of Hama, Syria is on a list of countries in the Middle East whose regimes the US wants to change.

Iraq's American-appointed Prime Minister, Iyad Allawi, declared a state of emergency on Sunday to assume powers reminiscent of those wielded by Saddam Hussein: to break up public gatherings, enter private houses without warrants and detain people without trial. Perhaps in waging war against the Iraqis who want to expel the Americans and topple America's chosen Iraqi leaders, the insurgents have compelled the US and its Iraqi allied regime to behave like the two Baathist regimes that they believed were so totalitarian they had to go.

Scott Ritter
Squeezing jello in Iraq

. . . American military planners expected to face thousands of Iraqi resistance fighters in the streets of Falluja, not the hundreds they are currently fighting. They expected to roll up the network of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and his foreign Islamic militants, and yet to date have found no top-tier leaders from that organization. As American forces surge into Falluja, Iraqi fighters are mounting extensive attacks throughout the rest of Iraq.

Far from facing off in a decisive battle against the resistance fighters, it seems the more Americans squeeze Falluja, the more the violence explodes elsewhere. It is exercises in futility, akin to squeezing jello. The more you try to get a grasp on the problem, the more it slips through your fingers.

While the Bush administration has suppressed the formation of militia units organized along ethnic and religious lines, the 36th Battalion should be recognized for what it really is – a Kurdish militia, retained by the US military because the rest of the Iraqi Army is unwilling or unable to carry the fight to the Iraqi resistance fighters.

The battle for Falluja has exposed not only the fallacy of the US military strategy towards confronting the resistance in Iraq, but also the emptiness of the interim government of Iyad Allawi, which is so far incapable of building anything that resembles a viable Iraqi military capable of securing its position in Iraq void of American military support.


Wikipedia
Private Military Corporations

Andrew Buncombe and Kim Sengupta
Secret U.S. Jails Hold 10,000

Agence France Presse -- Jan 2003
Canadian Sues US for Deporting Him to Syria for Torture

Patrick Radden Keefe
Iraq: America's Private Armies

More shocking than the revelation, in the Taguba Report on abuses at Abu Ghraib, that contractors in civilian clothes roamed freely in the prison, answering to no one and effectively outside the chain of command, is the fact that neither of the two contractors declared in the report to be "either directly or indirectly responsible for the abuses" has been indicted for any crimes. It has recently emerged that in an astonishing lapse on the part of American legislators, the actions of the tens of thousands of contractors in Iraq are not governed by any comprehensive body of criminal law...

Professor Manning Marable
9/11: Racism in a Time of Terror

I think that as Americans, we must also make a clear distinction between "guilt" and "responsibility." The Al Qaeda group is indeed guilty of committing mass murder. But the United States government is largely responsible for creating the conditions for reactionary Islamic fundamentalism to flourish. During Reagan's administration, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) provided over three billion dollars to finance the mujahadeen's guerilla war against the Soviet Union's military presence in Afghanistan. The CIA used Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence, or secret police, to equip and train tens of thousands of Islamic fundamentalists in the tactics of guerilla warfare. . . .

There is a clear link between 9/11 and the shameful political maneuvering committed by the U.S. at the United Nations World Conference Against Racism held in Durban, South Africa, only days before the terrorist attacks. There the U.S. government opposed the definition of slavery as "a crime against humanity." It refused to acknowledge the historic and contemporary effects of colonialism and racial segregation on the underdevelopment and oppression of the non-European world. The majority of dark humanity is saying to the United States that racism and militarism are not the solutions to the world's major problems. Transnational capitalism and the repressive neoliberal policies of structural adjustment represent a dead end for the developing world. We can only end the threat of terrorism by addressing constructively the routine violence of poverty, hunger, and exploitation that characterize the daily existence of several billion people on this planet. Racism is, in the final analysis, only another form of violence. . . .

Thom Hartmann
The Genetically Modified Bomb

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004






Historisists... Ain't that odd?

Warren Hedges
New Historicism Explained

Mark Steyn
New Believe it or not,
it wasn't just rednecks who voted for Bush
A Perspective 'for' those who praise 'the mandate'

William Rivers Pitt
Worse Than 2000: Tuesday's Electoral Disaster

The Washington Dispatch
Palm Beach County Logs
88,000 More Votes Than Voters

Sam Parry
George W. Bush's vote tallies, especially in the key state of Florida, are so statistically stunning that they border on the unbelievable.

disinfopedia.org
Michael Ledeen--Total War
Major Player in this GroupThink?

The Economist
Leo Strauss (The Upside)

Ashbrook.Org
Leo Strauss (Midlands)

Wikipedia
Leo Strauss (Downside)

Rudolph Steiner
Ahriman

Robert S. Mason
Baconian and Goethean Science

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004






Israeli-Palestinian Re-unification

STEVEN ERLANGER
Twin Bus Bombings in Israel Kill at Least 15 and Wound Dozens

BEERSHEBA, Israel, Aug. 31 — Six months of relative quiet in Israel were exploded in dramatic fashion today, as two suicide bombers blew up two buses 100 yards apart in this southern town, killing at least 16 people, including a 4-year-old, and wounding more than 100 others.

Arjan El Fassed
Israel killed 436 Palestinians in past 'quiet' six months

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004






North and South Korean Re-unification

Na Jeong-ju
Outcry Growing Over Hostage Handling

Yoo Dong-ho
US Criticized for Withholding News of Kim Abduction

The crux of the allegations of a U.S. cover-up is that the Seoul government confirmed its plan to dispatch an additional 3,000 troops to Iraq, on July 18, the day after Kim was [announced] kidnapped. By the accounts of the Seoul government, it wasn’t aware of the incident. This has touched off speculation that the U.S. didn’t inform Seoul of the kidnapping in order to enable the South Korean government to press ahead with its confirmation of the dispatch plan. Experts say that if the kidnapping had been known to the public, the government would have had a very hard time in pushing ahead with the unpopular dispatch plan.


The Chosun Ilbo
Kerry on
Korean Re-Unification

Moon Sun-Myung
North and South, East and West; Proclaiming "God's Fatherland and the Era of the Peace Kingdom" in 2004

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004






African Re-unification

Ellen Knickmeyer
Ivory Coast:
Why the One-Time "Paris of Africa"
Is Sliding Into War, and Why It Matters
An AP News Analysis

Sundiata Acoli
Prison Struggle

The Talking Drum
ASSATA SHAKUR

Salih Booker & Ann-Louise Colgan
Africa Policy Outlook 2004

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004






Completed Testament
Good News / bad news


Frontlines / Spiritual-Physical Resurrection


Eliezer Glaubach-Gal
Pilgrimages to Jerusalem Historical Lessons (Jewish-Christian-Muslim)

American Clergy Leadership Conference
Exchanging the Cross for the Crown
CHRISTIAN LEADERS TO CARRY CROSS, THEN TAKE IT DOWN IN EFFORT FOR PEACE AND RECONCILIATION

Rev. Michael Jenkins
Special "Israel" Report / The Jerusalem Declaration

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004





Frontlines / Sexual Identity

Russell D. Moore
Homosexuality, Racism, and
the Eclipse of the Gospel

Carlton Johnson
Cultural diversity and Moral diversity are
two different constructs
...

Steve Chin
Marriage is multicultural

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / July-August 2004






Frontlines / Species-Race Identity

Celia Farber
On: Dr David Ho's Cures
Science Fiction

In 1996 a scientist claimed he'd found a way to defeat AIDS. In the wave of euphoria that followed, a batch of new drugs flooded the market. Four years later, those drugs are wreaking unimaginable horror on the patients who dared to hope. What went wrong?

Ask NOAH
Mycoplasma Pneumonia (Atypical Pneumonia, Walking Pneumonia)

Gulf War illnesses dot.com
Mycoplasma and New Respiratory Illnesses Including SARS

Sharon Briggs
Mycoplasma and Chronic Fatigue and
Immune Dysfunction Syndrome (CFIDS)
HISTORICAL ASPECTS

Tom Kennedy
The Common Cause
Medical Research prospective on
Mycoplasma and Sars

Donald W. Scott, MA, MSc
Common Mycoplasmas - Now Weaponized,
Pathogenic, and Deadly

Dr. Joseph Mercola
TESTING FOR MYCOPLASMA IN YOUR BODY

Polymerase Chain Reaction Test; Blood Test; ECG Test; Blood Volume Test; Doxycycline treatment

Advocate Freedom dot.com
Mycoplasmas

Minjok Han
Mounting Evidence

Becky McCall
Brain fingerprints under scrutiny

Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / July-August 2004






Words of Wisdom -- Let it be...?

Peace in Corporate Life

Yusuf al-Khabbaz
Developing alternatives to
the Western pattern of "modern" education

NON-WESTERN EDUCATIONAL TRADITIONS: ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO EDUCATIONAL THOUGHT AND PRACTICE, by Timothy Reagan. New Jersey and London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2000. 2nd ed.: pp. 263; pbk. $23.


Peace in Family Life

Steve Chin
Marriage is multicultural

As an evangelical Christian, I believe and affirm the biblical model of the family. But as an Asian-American, it is clear to me that the traditional family is not just a Western construct. The traditional family is an Asian construct as well-because it's universal.

"It is by the great rite of marriage that mankind subsists the myriad generations," the philosopher Confucius said, around the year 500 B.C.

Buddhist Perspectives
Filial Piety


Return To
Previous Reports in this Category / Sept-Oct 2004







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Family Federation for World Peace
and Unification

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