Sunday, November 4, 2012

How ecosystems became the new walled gardens | PandoDaily

Back in the 1990s, when nearly every newspaper story about the World Wide Web seemed to include some mention of the Wild West, offering Internet newbies a safe environment was a sound business model. In 1999, America Online made $4.8 billion in revenue by offering a reliable Internet connection and a walled garden of content. But soon enough the Web outside AOL?s walls became more secure (and much more compelling), and people found its walled garden to be less of a fortress and more of a prison.

In 2012, the walled garden is back as a business model used by nearly every giant involved in the Web today: Apple, Google, Amazon, Twitter, Facebook. The new walled garden takes different forms ? some through their mobile OS, some through a ubiquitous service ? but each walled garden is designed to create an alluring experience for consumers. They all rely on an ecosystem of developers, content publishers, and others that took them years to cultivate. They are the primary connection points for consumer to today?s Web, the way portals and online services like AOL were a dozen years ago.

These days, though, companies don?t talk about walled gardens. They talk about ecosystems ? a vague piece of business jargon that means a broader alliance of companies and creative individuals serving the business model of a tech leader. It?s getting harder for smaller companies to make money on the Web without going through one of these ecosystems. And consumers are finding themselves corralled inside them too, increasingly in ways that feel confining. Because the more pressure these Web giants face to keep profits growing, and the more the competition among them increases, the less they want consumer straying away from them.

Most famously, Apple has ?curated? its App Store into a walled garden, rejecting apps for reasons some found to be frivolous but that Apple insisted preserved the user experience it wanted to create. But increasingly, the walls that give iOS its rigid structure aren?t just shielding consumers from glitchy or troublesome apps, they are corralling consumers into spending more money with Apple instead of one of its competitors.

Earlier this year, Seth Godin was told by Apple one of his ebooks was rejected because it carried too many links to Amazon?s site (Amazon is a partner of Godin?s). Anyone using iOS 6 is familiar with a more infamous example, where the Google Maps app that became a part of daily life was replaced with the far buggier Apple Maps. Buying a new iPhone, I found it very simple to transfer my songs and other data from my old phone to my new one with iCloud. But a potentially costly one, since I had far more than 5 gigabytes of data to transfer. Using iCloud would require me to spend $20 for every extra 10 gigabytes I wanted to move. Instead, I resorted to an intermediary program: iTunes, a cumbersome software interface that has barely evolved from what Apple designed for the original iPod.

Apple built a platform intended to offer a consumer experience that fits Apple?s vision of the mobile web. But the further Apple pushes toward that vision, the more complex the execution becomes ? until there are not just snafus like Siri and Maps, but there are people who are loyal Apple customers complaining about Apple. A platform, after all, is a system. And as systems grow more complex they become more rigid. Every brick Apple lays down to strengthen its platform, at some point, ends up building bigger walls that leave its customers feeling more and more confined.

And it?s not just Apple moving in this direction. Facebook is another example often cited as one of the Web?s new masons. The site attracted hundreds of millions of users precisely because it offered a chance to share content with selected friends. But as Facebook evolved, it began to control how users accessed the rest of the web. You are free to roam beyond the perimeters of Facebook.com but you are strongly urged to share with its advertisers where you are going, what you are doing, what songs you?re listening to, and what you are buying.

Twitter serves a smaller community of members, but it?s followed a similar path. In an effort to increase revenue and build relationships with big advertisers, Twitter introduced stricter API guidelines, angering developers of many Twitter-based apps as well as the many people who came to use them. Twitter is younger and smaller than other companies pursuing walled-garden business models, and may have more to lose if users and developers object.

Google has evolved from a spartan search page that was content to send people to other sites (preferably through its sponsored links) into a small empire of features and products serving Google ads. As Larry Page has redesigned the company?s offerings around the ?social spine? of Google+, he?s introduced controversial features like Search Plus Your World, which placed Google+ pages high up in search results.

Amazon, meanwhile has been building its readymade ecosystem of ebooks and video around its Kindle Fire tablet, a device designed to deliver Amazon?s own content to users. But the Kindle Fire, like the Kindle, is aimed at longtime Amazon customers, who are loyal enough to pay for its Prime subscription service. Amazon may have the strongest walled garden since AOL itself, yet because it?s marketed primarily at Amazon?s customers, it?s likely to see the least resistance.

Most of these companies didn?t start off as rivals, but as they grew they expanded into each other?s markets. Amazon is taking on Apple with tablets, while Apple is competing with Google with iAd, while Google is pushing back against Facebook with Google+. And so on. The bigger they get, the more they compete. The more they compete, the more incentive they have to keep customers inside their respective walled gardens.

Of course, all of these companies will describe themselves as open. When in fact that word means so many different things now, it hardly means anything anymore. Everyone loathes closed environments. In his memo railing against Flash, Steve Jobs promoted Apple?s commitment to open standards. Google recently bragged about how ?screen independence is at the core of our strategy.? Facebook allows its users to roam the Web using its ?Open Graph?. But all of these bids for openness are just a part of a bigger plan to keep consumers corralled inside their respective gardens.

For now, most consumers aren?t complaining too loudly about these walled gardens as they jump from one to another. But as dealing with these companies becomes more troublesome, there will be more resistance. In time, that will leave the door open for someone, or many people, to offer a compelling alternative without any walls at all. That, after all, led to the downfall of AOL so many years ago.

Photo via sportsilliterate on Flickr.

Source: http://pandodaily.com/2012/11/03/how-ecosystems-became-the-new-walled-gardens/

james neal jackie robinson virginia tech emancipation proclamation april 16 tornadoes mitch hedberg

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Flowers, ritual, horse race mark Day of the Dead

Artists perform an indigenous dance called Huaylia at the Virgen de Lourdes cemetery where relatives converge to honor friends and family who have passed, marking the Day of the Dead holiday, in Lima, Peru, Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. The holiday honors the deceased on Nov. 1, coinciding with All Saints Day and All Souls' Day on Nov. 2. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

Artists perform an indigenous dance called Huaylia at the Virgen de Lourdes cemetery where relatives converge to honor friends and family who have passed, marking the Day of the Dead holiday, in Lima, Peru, Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. The holiday honors the deceased on Nov. 1, coinciding with All Saints Day and All Souls' Day on Nov. 2. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

A couple arrange a bouquet of flowers to place on a grave at the Virgen de Lourdes cemetery where relatives converge to honor friends and family who have passed, marking the Day of the Dead holiday, in Lima, Peru, Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. The holiday honors the deceased on Nov. 1, coinciding with All Saints Day and All Souls' Day on Nov. 2. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

A Voodoo believer dressed as a Gede, or spirit, gestures from the top of a tomb as he takes part in a Voodoo ritual dedicated to Baron Samdi and the Gede family of spirits on the Day of the Dead at the National Cemetery in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Dieu Nalio Chery)

A woman rests next to the tomb of a relative in the cemetery in San Antonio Aguascalientes, Guatemala, where many converge to honor friends and family who have passed, marking the Day of the Dead holiday, Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. The holiday honors the deceased on Nov. 1, coinciding with All Saints Day and All Souls' Day on Nov. 2. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

Tanner Newman, 14, adds a photo of his grandfather to a D?a de los Muertos altar in Cody Booth's Spanish class at Kennewick High School, Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012 in Kennewick, Wash.. The Mexican holiday is also celebrated in other Latin American countries and pays respect to loved ones who have died. (AP Photo/The Tri-City Herald, Kai-Huei Yau) LOCAL TV OUT; LOCAL RADIO OUT KONA

(AP) ? Mexicans cleaned the bones of dead relatives and decorated their graves with flowers and candy skulls. In Haiti, voodoo practitioners circled an iron cross at a cemetery and poured moonshine to honor their ancestors. Some Guatemalans held a wild horse race to remember the dead.

Across the Western Hemisphere, people are paying homage to lost relatives in observances that began Thursday on All Saints Day and continue Friday with All Souls Day.

The combined celebration known in many places as the Day of the Dead is a particularly colorful and macabre festival in Mexico that harks back to the Aztecs but has become part of Roman Catholic traditions.

"In the European-Christian notion of death, our loved ones go far away and we're left to survive on our own. But in the Mexican case, in Andean countries, the world of the living and the dead co-exist," said Elio Masferrer, an anthropologist who focuses on religious studies in Mexico.

"The living seek help and protection from the dead, especially on the Day of the Dead," Masferrer said.

And while in the Judeo-Christian traditions, the dead go to either heaven or hell based on their behavior on Earth, many in Mesoamerica and Andean countries believe they work for the Gods and are supported by their family members still on Earth, he said.

"It's none of this playing a harp in a cloud, family members have to feed them and between today and tomorrow they will leave their favorite food at the table and leave the door open so they can walk in," Masferrer said.

Families across Mexico took picnics to cemeteries, decorated graves with marigolds and sprinkled holy water on the tombs of their loved ones.

A "rezador" or prayer man whispered The Lord's Prayer at a cemetery in Pomuch in the southeastern state of Campeche, while Paula Maria Cuc Euan, dusted off the bones of her parents.

"I've been doing this since they died," Cuc Euan said as she returned a femur to a wooden crate lined with padded fabric decorated with hand-knitted flowers. "My mom died 32 years ago, and I have been doing this ever since."

Across the border in Guatemala, jockeys drank alcohol before mounting horses on a ride known as "The Death Race." It is celebrated every year in Huehuetenango state, some 168 miles (270 kilometers) from the capital, and tradition holds that if a rider falls during the race it's a sign that farmers will enjoy an abundant harvest.

Peruvians flocked to cemeteries, from low-lying ones on the coast overlooking the Pacific to graveyards high in the snow-capped Andes.

Thousands crowded Lima's Virgen de Lourdes cemetery, the country's largest, to leave flower offerings and dance to Andean music. Hilarion Ramos, 79, left a bouquet of Incan lilies at the grave of his son who died in 1979 at age 2.

"My little boy left 33 years ago, but I don't forget him. I still have the memory of his little face in my mind," said Ramos, who walked a mile (two kilometers) to take his offering to the cemetery.

Musicians played nearby while Lucila Mamani, 62, and her three brothers danced around the grave of her mother.

"Death is very sad so this allows me to remember with joy (the life) of the deceased. That's how we Andeans are. That's why I hire the musicians to play here," Mamani said.

Food played a big role in Bolivia where many people celebrated the "return" of loved ones with full tables.

Fruit, bread and wine were set on a white tablecloth for Blanca Jimenez's dead family members, who were represented by framed photographs next to lit candles.

"It's a re-encounter with our loved ones," Jimenez said.

The celebration permeates all social circles in Bolivia, including the very top of the government. Officials at the foreign relations department set up a large table with paintings of indigenous heroes and social leaders to "welcome their souls."

In Haiti, hundreds of voodoo, or Vodou, practitioners gathered at cemeteries, then marched in street processions to honor their ancestors in Day of the Dead, or "Fet Gede," ceremonies.

Circling an iron cross at a cemetery on the eastern end of the capital, Port-au-Prince, dozens of young men and women took turns pouring rum, moonshine and other libations. A woman wearing a black bra and a purple headband, the signature colors of the festivities, threaded through the crowd in a seeming trance as others looked on.

"Today is the day we come to celebrate the people who have died, the people we haven't seen in a long time," voodoo priest Jean-Robert Pierre said as he carried a bottle of rum. "We're celebrating our ancestors."

Day of the Dead festivities in Haiti are often used as an excuse to act out against social norms, for the voodoo spirits associated with the event are widely seen as rowdy and impulsive.

At a major cemetery in Port-Au-Prince, men and women dressed in top hats and wore ghostly makeup representing the entity Gede, a well-known voddoo spirit. A sign outside the burial site in Creole read: "Remember that you are dust."

__

Associated Press writers Franklin Briceno in Lima, Peru; Carlos Valdez in La Paz, Bolivia; and Trenton Daniel in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, contributed to this report.

__

Luis Andres Henao on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LuisAndresHenao

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-02-Day%20of%20The%20Dead/id-3a2ee22b7cfc4af08c6f84ebde687260

Coptic Christian saturday night live julio cesar chavez jr Topless Kate university of texas UT Austin Lizzie Velasquez

Are You Ready for the Upcoming Tax Bomb?

The Center for Entrepreneurship at West Liberty University is hosting a program entitled, ?The Upcoming Tax Bomb,? to be held at the Capitol Theatre ballroom from 6 ? 8 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 8. The program is free and open to the public.

The panel discussion will feature tax and legal experts who will discuss the 2013 tax changes and what it means to small or family-owned businesses. The panelists will also address questions from the audience during a question-answer segment of the program.

The moderator for the panel discussion will be Dave Flatley ?90, manager of sales and conference services at Oglebay Resort & Conference Center. Prior to his position at Oglebay, he served as vice president of business operations for the Wheeling Nailers Hockey Club. He also worked in media with local radio stations and part-time as a weekend sports anchor with WTRF-TV. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in both Business Marketing and Communications from WLU and is involved with local non-profit organizations, including the Marx Toy Museum, Moundsville, W.Va., where he serves on its board of directors.

Panelists include:

Lapp is president of JHL Tax Service and opened the local Jackson Hewitt Tax Service franchise in 1992 with his father, James Lapp, which has offices in Wheeling, Steubenville, Weirton, Moundsville and Bellaire and services over 6,000 clients. A graduate of The Linsly School, Sam Lapp earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration at WLU, with a specialization in Construction Industry Scheme (CIS). He is enrolled to practice before the Internal Revenue Service. Lapp was awarded ?Exemplary ERO? (Electronic Return Originator) from the Internal Revenue Service in 2001, presented for achieving excellence in electronically filing federal returns. Lapp specializes in individual and small business taxes and is active in the community, volunteering at the YWCA, Wheeling Park High School Band Boosters, and as a deacon at St. Mark?s Lutheran Church.

Minto received his Juris Doctorate degree from the University of Cincinnati College of Law in 1983. He is a Certified Public Accountant licensed to practice in Florida, and an attorney licensed to practice in Pennsylvania and Florida. Minto worked in the tax department of the certified public accounting firm of Ernst & Whinney (now Ernst & Young) from 1985 through 1987 and from 1987 through January 1988, he was employed by Carbis, Walker and Associates. In 1988, he entered the practice of law with Frank Mast & Associates where he represented individuals and charitable and business entities in federal, state, local and international tax planning and implementation issues. In January 1995, he joined the law firm of Volk, Robertson & Hellerstedt where he worked in both the Pittsburgh and Weirton, W.Va., offices. In February 1997, Minto opened his own law office. Minto served two consecutive terms as councilman for the Borough of Franklin Park, was the chairman of the Allegheny County Civil Service Commission from 1998 ? 2000.

Seachrist is president of the accounting firm of Seachrist, Kennon & Marling, A.C., and is a resident of Wheeling. He earned his Bachelor?s of Science degree in Business Administration from Drexel University. Seachrist has a diverse background with 39 years of public as well as private accounting experience. Prior to his association with Seachrist, Kennon & Marling, he was a partner with the firm of Seachrist & Kennon, Certified Public Accountants. Before that he was a partner with Kacsmar, Hennen & Seachrist. Prior to that, Seachrist was chief financial officer and controller at Boury Enterprises. He also was the sole proprietor of the firm of Public Accounting and before that he was a corporate accountant for Y&O Coal. He began his professional career as a staff accountant at John Wisemann & Company. Seachrist has assisted attorneys with litigation matters and has experience in restructuring organizations, cost reductions, debt restructuring and monitoring cash flow. He has worked with individuals on personal financial planning and estate planning.

A cash bar and hors d?oeuvres will be available for the first hour of the panel discussion, from 6 ? 7 p.m. For more information or to RSVP for the event, please contact Dawn Minor at 304-336-8699.

Source: http://westliberty.edu/news/news/are-you-ready-for-the-upcoming-tax-bomb/

jimmer fredette mall of america mennonite smokey robinson smokey robinson pulmonary embolism packages

How Cable News Outlets Select Undecided Voters

www.hollywoodreporter.com:

Forget Candy Crowley or Martha Raddatz -- the breakout TV stars of the presidential election have turned out to be the so-called "undecided voters."

Read the whole story at www.hollywoodreporter.com

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/02/how-cable-news-outlets-select-undecided-voters_n_2065228.html

project m rubio colts colts big ten tournament 2012 dennis quaid bruce weber fired

Hurricane Sandy Proves You Can No Longer Avoid Social Media for ...

Hurricane Sandy has taught us a lot about the role of social media. Yes, we heard how in another country it helped?foment a? revolution.?One person?s query on Twitter tipped the world off that the assault on Bin Laden?s compound was in process. One person?s Facebook post?that?he?d been arrested in?a foreign?country got him help from the U.S. Individuals use social media all the time?to help themselves or their cause or they act as?lay reporters.

Hurricane Sandy was different. Maybe it was due to the enormity of the event and the massive amount of people impacted.? Maybe it was because New York City, the presumptive financial capital of the world and home to millions, was due to be hit head on.?Whatever the reason, Sandy showcased the incredible value of?social media as an information?delivery system to 10s of millions by those charged with helping us through the crisis.?Federal and local government, local agencies, public services?and private companies?provided timely and necessary, often critical information, through these channels to millions of people without power.?Most people could only access this information through mobile devices because they had no power. This?told us in no uncertain terms that?the medium had taken its rightful place as a unifier, a recognized centralized emergency response center for dispatching of critical, often life-saving,?information. Here are just a few examples from Facebook (screenshots):


TWITTER: Stories and actual tweets

Emily Rahimi, New York Fire Department?s one-woman response team

If it weren?t for the efforts of Emily Rahimi, even those New Yorkers who hadn?t lost power might have been in the dark. At the helm of the NYFD?s official Twitter feed, she made contact with and provided information to those having difficulty reaching 911. Rahimi also passed along updates from the mayor?s office and urged individuals, through Twitter, not to give up on calling the emergency number, assuring those waiting that help would come.

Mayor Cory Booker?himself set out across his community, driving around Newark and urging residents to be safe and remain inside. He even participated in the relocation of the city?s homeless into shelters. He used Twitter to tell people to remain indoors and to update them on the storm?s developments.

200 Statistics to Help You Wake Up

The public (your clients) are turning to social media?such as Facebook and Twitter for information on how to conduct their lives in a crisis.? But if you don?t believe me here are?more than 200 statistics which may change your mind.? (I?ve shared some, bolded some and you can read more by clicking on the link above.)

General social media and Internet stats:

  • 91% of online adults use social media regularly
  • YouTube users watch more than 3 billion hours of video per month
  • About 1 in 3 blogger are moms/mums (had to cater to both our American and British/AU audience there J) (source: Hubspot)
  • There are more devices connected to the Internet than there are people on Earth (source: AllTwitter)
  • 24% of people have missed witnessing important moments because they are too busy trying to write about them on social networks
  • 83% of people believe platforms like Twitter and Facebook help them make new friends
  • 25% of people believe social networks have boosted their confidence
  • 24% of Americans and 28% of Brits have admitted to lying or exaggerating on a social network about what they have done and/or who they have met
  • 40% of people spend more time socializing online than they do face-to-face (source: AllTwitter)
  • Every minute of the day:
    • 100,000 tweets are sent
    • 684,478 pieces of content are shared on Facebook
    • 2 million search queries are made on google
    • 48 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube
    • 47,000 apps are downloaded from the App Store
    • 3,600 photos are shared on Instagram
    • 571 websites are created
    • $272,000 is spent by consumers online (source: AllTwitter)
  • Internet users spend 22.5% of their online time social networking
  • The web contains more than 8 billion pages
  • There are more than 2.27 billion people online (doubled since 2007)
  • 70% of adult social networkers shop online
  • 53% of active adult social networkers follow a brand
  • 80% of active internet users visit social networks and blogs (Source: AllTwitter)
  • Almost 8 new people come onto the internet every second
  • 79% of online shoppers spend 50% of their online shopping time researching products
  • the average budget spent on blogs and social media has almost tripled in 3 years
  • 57% of marketers acquired customers via blogging
  • 44% acquired customers via Twitter
  • 61% of global internet users research products online
  • US Internet users spend three times longer on social media and blogs than email
  • social media use has increased 356% in the US since 2006
  • the average user spent only 3 minutes on Google+ in Jan 2012
  • 65% of Pinterest?s traffic is from the US
  • there are 152 million blogs on the internet
  • companies that blog have 55% more website visitors
  • 35% of consumer comments on Facebook Pages are compliments
  • 93% of US adult Internet users are on Facebook
  • 9/10 mobile searches lead to action ? over half lead to purchase (source: Hubspot)

Facebook Statistics

  • Each day Facebook users spend 10.5 billion minutes (almost 20,000 years) online on the social network
  • Australians spend 26 minutes, 27 seconds on Facebook each day, New Zealand 30m31s, Singapore 38m46s, United Kingdom 26m27s, France 21m53s, United States 20m46s, India 20m21s, Brazil 18m19s
  • Only 50% of Facebook users have more than 100 friends (source: AllTwitter)
  • There are 955 million active users on Facebook that spend an average of six hours and 35 minutes per month on the network (desktop only)
  • An average of 3.2 billion likes and comments are posted every day
  • Facebook posted a 67 percent year-over-year mobile growth rate (543 million monthly active users on mobile).
  • The 6:35 per month spent on Facebook is nearly double the time (3:20) spent on Google.
  • 58% of users return to the site daily.
  • In an analysis of more than 60 Facebook marketing campaigns, 49 percent reported areturn on investment of more than five times, while 70 percent had a return on investment greater than three times. (source: AllFacebook)

All of this begs the question, ?Are you using social media in a meaningful way which begets business?? Some of you have hemmed and hawed about creating a Facebook business page.? Some of you question the ethics of ?friending? clients or vice versa.? And there are issues about having your clients ?like? your page for fear they would be revealing they are clients.

However, is there anything wrong with creating the page, letting your clients know you do have a page and giving them the option to like the page explaining this potential confidentiality issue and then using it as an additional means of providing generalized information or more critical information in a time of crisis?? By no means should you state they must like the page and that all important information will only be dispensed there.? That?s patently absurd.? But you should?know that people don?t have to ?like? your page to see your message.? They simply have to look up your law firm on Facebook to see what you?ve posted.? They can look up your Twitter handle and see what you?ve posted in your Twitter stream without even having to follow you.? So why not give them your social media information?and post interesting relevant information they can use at all times.

The most important take away for you is?to realize people are increasingly going?to social media first for guidance and important information. For you to not be where they are looking can be impacting your professional relevance and ultimately your livelihood.

About the Author

Susan Cartier Liebel is the Founder & CEO of Solo Practice University?, the #1 web-based educational and professional networking community for solo lawyers and law students. It is her personal mission, through education and authorship, to change the way law schools educate their students and the way the legal community receives solos.
Website | Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn | Google+

Source: http://solopracticeuniversity.com/2012/11/01/you-can-no-longer-avoid-social-media-for-business-sorry/

lawrence o donnell magic johnson jetblue pilot solicitor general neighborhood watch dennis rodman dodgers sale

Friday, November 2, 2012

Greenlee Gazette: Crazy Creationists: Dinosaurs Fled the Flood!

Last night I posted a piece about Mitt Romney' literal belief in his wacky religion. And, I noted that as an atheist, I find 'em all wacky, so I'm not so much singling Mormonism out, as I am saying it's just extra special goofy. But Mitt's not alone in his belief in unbelievable things.

Somehow, I got on the Creation Ministries International mailing list. And these folks are literal believers in the book of Genesis. Just FYI, that's the book that set me on the road to atheism, because it was taught to me at the same time as freshman Earth science. Guess which book won? Anyway, Genesis is chock full of ridiculous things that only the deeply deluded could believe are literal. From the "firmament" to the items set into it, from the cleanliness rules to the list of sacrificial requirements, from the conflicting dual creation stories to there being light before there was a light source? All of it is frankly unbelievable.

But nothing is more ridiculous than the flood story. Forget that there are (again) two conflicting Noah's Ark stories, and different numbers of animals in each. There are problems with the size of the boat. There are problems with the technology of building such a boat. There's the problem of how every kind of animal got to the middle east, and then re-dispersed themselves back to from whence they came. There are the uncomfortable facts about feeding and housing these animals for such an extended period, and what they would do about the waste. How did they keep the animals from eating each other, or the humans? How did they transport the bacteria, viruses, insects, arachnids and amoeba? How did the sealife and freshwater animals survive in the stirred up, seawater/rainwater/sediment-filled water? How did plantlife and fungi survive submerged for 100 days? And we're not even talking about where the water came from, and where it went! Why would an "all-loving" god murder his "children," no matter how disobedient they were?

On top of this is the question of dinosaurs. Why doesn't the Bible mention dinosaurs? Well, some try to parlay allusions of "dragons" and whatnot into dinosaurs, but it's a stretch. It actually makes the bible sound more like a bunch of fables to me. So, the question is, if man coexisted with dinosaurs, why do they get such scant coverage in the Bible? Why weren't they on the Ark? Did Noah take dinosaur eggs, rather than full-grown T-Rexes and Stegosauri? Why isn't it mentioned?

Obviously, it isn't mentioned, because the writer(s) of Genesis never heard of dinosaurs, and thus couldn't write about them. They didn't realize that the sun is the source of our light, so they could say it was created after light. They didn't know how clouds, the atmosphere, the orbits of the moon and planets, or stars in the universe worked, so they made crap up about the celestial bodies being placed in a bowl that separated the waters of heaven and earth. There are so many, countless, obvious problems with Genesis, an irreligious person like me just stands with my mouth agape. How can any adult take these fairy tales seriously?

And then I get my latest installment of further attempts at devising a narative that makes sense out of a book that really doesn't.? You know what I liken groups like Christian Ministries International to? I liken them to Rankin-Bass. You know, the studio that made such holiday classics as, Santa Claus is Comin' to Town, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and The Year Without a Santa Claus. In those holiday specials, they took all of the implausibilities in the Santa Claus story, and explained them in such a way as to keep kids believing it just a little while longer. And as kids, we wanted to believe. That's all this foolishness is.

If you are interested (and I hope it's only for amusement value), you can find this group here: Christian Ministries International.

Source: http://greenleegazette.blogspot.com/2012/11/crazy-creationists-dinosaurs-fled-flood.html

lil kim progeria what will my baby look like gary carter died cmas cmas tcu

SHOCK: 72 Hours After Grid-Down: Starvation, Supply Shortages ...

A recent study noted that the majority of people have enough food in their pantries to feed their household for about three days and that seemingly stable societies are really just nine meals from anarchy. With most of us dependent on just-in-time transportation systems to always be available, few ever consider ?the worst case scenario.

For tens of thousands of east coast residents that worst case scenario is now playing out in real-time. No longer are images of starving people waiting for government handouts restricted to just the third-world.

In the midst of crisis, once civilized societies will very rapidly descend into chaos when essential infrastructure systems collapse.

Though the National Guard was deployed before the storm even hit, there is simply no way for the government to coordinate a response requiring millions of servings of food, water and medical supplies

Many east coast residents who failed to evacuate or prepare reserve supplies ahead of the storm are being forced to fend for themselves.

Frustration and anger have taken hold, as residents have no means of acquiring food or gas and thousands of trucks across the region remain stuck in limbo.

Limited electricity has made it possible for some to share their experiences:

Via Twitter:

  • I was in chaos tonite tryin to get groceries?lines?for shuttle buses, only to get to the no?food?left & closing early (link)
  • I?m not sure what has shocked me more, all the communities around me destroyed, or the 5 hour?lines?for gas and?food. (link)
  • Haven?t slept or ate well in a few days. Hope things start getting better around here soon (link)
  • These days a lot of people are impatient because they?re used to fast things. Fast?food, fast internet, fast?lines?and fast shipping etc. (link)
  • Glad Obama is off to Vegas after his 90 minute visit. Gas?lines?are miles long.. Running out of?food?and water. Great Job (link)
  • Went to the Grocery store and?lines?were crazy but nail salon was empty so I?ve got a new gel manicure and some Korean junk?food (link)
  • So f*cking devastated right now. Smell burning houses. People fighting for food. Pitch darkness. I may spend the night in rockaway to help (link)

Things are starting to become horrific for the unprepared, as food lines stretch for miles and Meals-Ready-To-Eat are in short supply:

(above images via Gothamist)

With mass transit out of service and no gas, residents have no choice but to commute by foot. Survival Blog founder James Rawles has referred to the masses of starving people who will roam the streets in a post-collapse world as the Golden Horde ? here?s a small taste of what that will look like:

The situation has become so desperate?that some have been forced to resort to rummaging through the garbage for food:

Video:

?We?ve seen everyone here from the elderly, to families with children??

A simple 72 hour survival kit and some basic hurricane preparedness?would have prevented days of heartache for residents of stricken areas.

The vast majority of those waiting in mile-long long food lines, rummaging through the trash, and?criticizing?their government officials for a slow and insufficient response have no one to blame but themselves.

This may be harsh ? but it?s true.

We wish all those having a difficult time dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy the best going forward.?Perhaps it will be a wake-up call for the rest of the nation.

Hurricane Sandy, while disastrous, is not nearly as bad as it could have been.

It has happened before. It will happen again. Prepare or suffer the consequences.

Author: Mac Slavo
Views: Read by 3,582 people
Date: November 1st, 2012
Website: www.SHTFplan.com

Copyright Information: Copyright SHTFplan and Mac Slavo. This content may be freely reproduced in full or in part in digital form with full attribution to the author and a link to www.shtfplan.com. Please contact us for permission to reproduce this content in other media formats.

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Source: http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/shock-72-hours-after-grid-down-starvation-supply-shortages-food-lines-no-clean-water-no-gas-transportation-standstill-independent-reports-pics-and-video_11012012

kevin rose sessions march madness scores doonesbury padma lakshmi daughtry lakers trade