Friday, November 30, 2012

You think I'm bad on FB, you should try working with me. Actual IM session I just had:

11/30/2012
Jerry Mesner 9:12 AM
<Vendor> is good for the 15th. You want to proceed?
<no response>
Oh for god's sake learn to multitask.
<no response>
Ok, having not heard back from you in 30 seconds, I'll cancel with them.
<no response>
I'm so alone.
<no response>
There's NOBODY here.
<no response>
AA's gone, BB's, CC's gone, DD's gone.
<no response>
I am forlorn and verklempt.
<no response>
And I don't even know what that means, something to do with bad hair product.
<no response>
Fine.
<no response>
I'm leaving
<no response>
This conversation is WAY too one sided.
<no response>
All you you you
<no response>
Goodbye.
<no response>
I mean it.
<no response>
Jerry Mesner 9:20 AM
HI!
<no response>
Are you there now?

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" Grouse take 2 "

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"Henry's Raven"

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" Moody Henry "

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" Suburb storm-ready"

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Grouse

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When the English stormed the Emerald Isle in the 17th century, they took everything that was worth taking and burned everything else. Thereafter, the Irish had no land, no money, no future. That left them with words, and words became books, and books, ing

Link: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444868204578064483923017090.html (sent via Shareaholic)

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 When the English stormed the Emerald Isle in the 17th century, they took everything that was worth taking and burned everything else. Thereafter, the Irish had no land, no money, no future. That left them with words, and words became books, and books, ingeniously coupled with music and alcohol, enabled the Irish to transcend reality.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Picard, Max: World of Silence - Book Reviews - House of Hermits - Hermitary

Mt Doug barefoot run: so cold my foot shrunk

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Wendel's on BC Ferries. #hopeformankind #niceworkDiane

Nice work!

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Henry's Palette

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Cool: Tulsi Gabbard, First Hindu Elected To Congress, Will Swear In On Bhagavad Gita, Sacred Hindu Text

When Tulsi Gabbard, a Hawaii resident who made history this month at the first Hindu elected to Congress, attends her swearing in ceremony in January, she's poised to mark another first in American politics: Gabbard will take her oath over the Bhagavad Gita, a sacred Hindu text.

While no religious ceremony is legally required for those elected to Congress and the Senate, many choose to take oaths of office over Christian and Jewish texts, and Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison, a Muslim, took his oath over a Quran. But Gabbard's use of a non-Abrahamic text will be unique and is symbolic of the growing religious diversity of Congress.

"For the Hindu Americans it is a historic moment ... It is a matter of pride that finally someone not only from our own faith, but someone who is a practicing Hindu, will be sworn in the Congress on one of our most sacred books," said Anju Bhargava, founder of Hindu American Seva Charities and a former member of the White House's Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships.

"It is my hope is that this swearing in will be another learning opportunity for our country about Hindus and Gita. Another step towards bringing the knowledge and values of Gita even more prominently to the American political landscape so that it becomes part of the everyday vocabulary in applying the moral principles in our political arena," said Bhargava, whose organization works to promote Hindu participation in civic life.

The Bhagavad Gita, which is often referred to as the Gita, is one of several Hindu texts, but Gabbard has said it's her primary sacred text. It is comprised of 700 verses and 18 chapters of the famed Mahabharata epic and is told in the form of a dialogue between Arjuna, a warrior-prince, and Krishna (God), in which they discuss his role and philosophical concepts in the Sanatana Dharma (Universal Order), which is popularly known as Hinduism.
...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/19/tulsi-gabbard-first-hindu-congress-bhagavad-gita_n_2159249.html
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Henry's Raven

Suburb storm ready

Henry

Barefoot run up and down Mt Doug in a storm yesterday.

So windy at the top had to take my glasses and hat off or sacrifice them to mother nature's whims. 

Diptic

Monday, November 12, 2012

Bingo: amherststudent.amherst.edu: A Marriage Between Buddhism and Science

B. Alan Wallace "87 is not the typical Amherst alumnus. Author of more than 20 books on Buddhism and science and a practicing Buddhist monk for the entirety of his time at the College, he now goes on meditative retreats for months on end, performing psychological experiments in a lucid dream state to attempt to discover the true nature of reality, happiness and suffering.

Finding His Own Path

Wallace was born to a devoutly Christian family and spent his youth travelling the world with his Protestant theologian father. However, he was strongly interested in science from a young age and struggled to reconcile his passion for science with his deeply spiritual upbringing.

"I was looking for an integration of truth and meaning. Christianity offered meaning, but I couldn't tell whether it was true; science offered truth, but I couldn't see any meaning in it. I was looking for a true and meaningful life, and I didn't see any real options or promising avenues," Wallace said.

When he went to the Univ. of California-San Diego in 1968 to study ecology, he soon became disillusioned with both his classes and America in the turmoil of the Vietnam War. Seeking a change of scenery, he spent his junior year abroad, studying at the Univ. of Göttingen in Germany, where he first discovered Tibetan Buddhism. He quickly became engrossed by Tibetan culture and religion, discontinuing his university education and spending months in a local Buddhist monastery studying under the guidance of German monks. At last, he had found a belief system that united his love of science with his search for meaning.

"I found what I was looking for in Tibetan Buddhism. It's very deeply experiential; it's very sharp, very rational and intelligent - and it's also profoundly meaningful. To my mind, it's a true, comprehensive science of the mind that I haven't found anywhere else. It's both scientific and also deeply spiritual," Wallace said.

During his time at the German monastery, a flier arrived announcing a year-long class on Tibetan Buddhism for Westerners taught in Dharamsala, India under the supervision of the Dalai Lama in exile. After meditating on the opportunity and seeking guidance from his lama at the monastery, Wallace decided to enroll in the course and traveled to India to begin perhaps the most transformative period of his life.
Staying in the home of the Dalai Lama's personal physician, Wallace fell in love with the freedom and intellectual fulfillment offered by his studies. After three months in the program, at the age of 21, Wallace had his first personal meeting with the Dalai Lama, and instantly knew he had found his mentor.

"I knew I found my spiritual guide or guru or lama if you'd like. He's been my teacher ever since," Wallace said...

http://amherststudent.amherst.edu/?q=article/2012/11/12/marriage-between-buddhism-and-science
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Opednews.com: The Community Organizer versus the Bain Capital Manager

Recently on Morning Joe David Frum, lamenting Mitt Romney's presidential bid fiasco, said, "Mitt Romney could have been a really good president . . ." but he was "twisted into pretzels . . . the people that put cement shoes on his feet are now blaming him for sinking." There are lots of recriminations to go around, and blaming Mitt Romney for the loss in his second-time bid for the presidency is just one. Yet this does not compute. It defies simple logic. They twisted him in pretzels but he "would be a really good president." Ironically, this would-be-really-good president, Mitt Romney, allowed himself to be twisted in pretzels and had cement shoes put on his feet without resistance. Mr. Romney did not push back against this but if he did it's clear he did not succeed.

Romney as president would not have had to do much. On this point Grover Norquist said, "All we have to do is replace Obama. We are not auditioning for fearless leader. We don't need a president to tell us in what direction to go. We know what direction to go. We just need a president to sign this stuff. Pick a Republican with enough working digits to handle a pen to become president of the United States. His job is to be captain of the team, to sign the legislation that has already been prepared." The would-be-really-good president never shared anything about his time at Bain Capital, his taxes over 10 years, his signature legislative achievement, Romney Care, or his governorship of Massachusetts. This would-be-really-good president/manager's raison d'être for being president is repealing Obama Care and privatizing Social Security and Medicare to funnel more money to rich people like himself as tax breaks, because he has said rich people create jobs and 47 percent of Americans are takers. This would-be-really good president went abroad and insulted the Brits and pissed off the Palestinians. He accused the president of leading from behind, and of bowing down to foreign leaders. Gov. Romney thinks Russia is the greatest threat to the United States. And he seems to have been rattling the sabers against Iran (and maybe China, too)...

http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Community-Organizer-ve-by-Seymour-Patterson-121112-324.html
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Good article: Jonathan Chait on the Democrats' Class-War Triumph -- New York Magazine

Link: http://nymag.com/news/features/obama-class-war-2012-11/ (sent via Shareaholic)

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Sunday, November 11, 2012

Suntan lotion is so overrated

Cimg2379

My equator, near the Costa Rican-ish border,  several years ago. #impeccablechoices #KenHeganforsomereason

Suntan lotion is so overrated

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My equator, near the Costa Rican-ish border,  several years ago. #impeccablechoices #KenHeganforsomereason

Fast Company: The Leadership Genius Of Abraham Lincoln

The greatness of Napoleon, Caesar or Washington is only moonlight to the sun of Lincoln. His example is universal and will last a thousand years.... He was bigger than his country - bigger than all the Presidents together... and as a great character, he will live as long as the world lives. - Leo Tolstoy, 1909


Move over, Mitt Romney and Barack Obama. With the 2012 election finally decided, our thoughts now move to Abraham Lincoln, widely regarded as the greatest president in American history.

Lincoln resurfaces this month thanks to the release of Steven Spielberg's new movie depicting our sixteenth President's final days in office - as he seeks to abolish slavery, end the Civil War, and save the Republic. Of course, even before seeing the film, we already know that, just six days before being assassinated, Lincoln succeeded at all these stunning ambitions.

That Lincoln was one of the most effective leaders in world history is a notion fully supported by his extraordinary accomplishments. But I've long wondered whether workplace leadership could be substantially improved were we to better understand - and adopt - the fundamental character traits that made him so remarkably influential with people.

In search of this insight, I recently mustered up the resolve to read all of the nearly 800 pages of in Doris Kearns Goodwin's Pulitzer Prize winning Lincoln biography, Team Of Rivals. My many hours of reading proved well spent.

The profound lesson to be drawn from this book is that Lincoln led brilliantly, not just from his mind, but also his heart. General William Tecumseh Sherman called it his "greatness and goodness."

While Lincoln's exceptional intellectual skills were readily apparent at an extremely early age, his deeply humanitarian instincts very well may be the reason he'll be revered by all future generations. At a time when employee happiness and engagement has reached an all-time low in the U.S., the example of Abraham Lincoln may just be what we need to re-inspire workers everywhere.

Molded By Loss

Born in a log cabin in rural Kentucky, Lincoln grew up in abject poverty. His father never learned to read or write, working as a hired hand with little ambition. While his bright, caring mother taught him to read and spell, she contracted "milk sickness" and died when he was just nine. Routinely lent out to farmers needing workers, Lincoln had virtually no formal schooling. While still a boy, he witnessed the death of his infant younger brother and, later, his beloved older sister.

According to Kearns Goodwin, throughout his entire adult life, "Lincoln neither romanticized nor sentimentalized the difficult circumstances of his childhood." Instead, his acutely painful experiences became the source of life-long compassion and concern for others...

http://www.fastcompany.com/3002803/leadership-genius-abraham-lincoln
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Thursday, November 8, 2012

OM Times Magazine: Seduction of the Mind

By Nita Goyal

Written in visionary fiction , Seduction of the Mind encompasses vast and complex subjects in the realm of mind-body-spirit genre and mysticism. The book, targeting people interested in exploring meditation and non-dual teaching of Vedanta shows how to live a life of abundance, joy and compassion by the power of right perception and awareness.

All of us have at one time or another wondered: Who am I? What is the purpose of Life? How to connect to the indwelling source of Reality? Seduction of the Mind takes us deeper into the structure and dynamics of being individual in relation to the Universe. It shows us how our understanding is veiled by the principle of egoism; thereby we are forced to create a distorted perception of people, things, and events. It is deeply influenced by the teachings of ancient eastern Vedanta text. At times abstract and highly metaphysical, this book takes readers on an incredible journey through the conversations between three characters — Radha, the monk, and the woman in white. As the journey of Radha progresses readers are also gently led into the deeper parts of their mind and soul. Profound concepts such as the mystery of success and failure, illusion of joys and sorrows, principle of ego, fallacy of our perceptions, mystery of physical and subtle world, and the secret of meditation are explored. If you are aspiring to delve deeper into the subject of meditation and mysticism then this book may be your answer.

To learn more, or to purchase Nita Goyal's book Seduction of the Mind, visit: nitagoyal.com

Nita Goyal currently lives in California with her family. When she is not hanging out with her family she is meditating, reading, or writing. Seven years ago Nita Goyal started to go through a spiritual transformation through meditation practices. As her spiritual experiences and insights began to intensify she started writing about them. Soon thereafter she felt a calling to organize her writings into a book. It took her five years to do so. Since then she has a deep desire to share the knowledge with the world and feels honored to be doing so. In the process she wishes to evolve as well. Her spiritual insights have continued to grow and deepen with time. At present she is working on her second book.

http://omtimes.com/2012/11/seduction-of-the-mind/
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WBUR: Golden Age: Mary O'Malley's Dazzling Drawings

Mary O'Malley's untitled drawing.

BEVERLY, Mass. - Mary O'Malley"s dazzling designs have often seemed part jellyfish, part flower, part chandelier - all built from shimmering veils of silvery dots and dashes that glow against black paper. Her new abstract patterns add a new inspiration: "I like to think of them," the Beverly artist writes, "as organically growing architecture."

"I started becoming really interested in architecture, specifically Buddhist and Hindu temples, and that led me to the discovery that the structure of many Hindu temples is based on fractal geometry, which relates to my other work with its connection to patterns in nature," she says in an email...

http://www.wbur.org/2012/11/08/mary-omalley-drawings
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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

The Christian Science Monitor: Election 2012: Has Nate Silver destroyed punditry?

Some pundits were woefully inaccurate in their Election 2012 predictions, but those who relied on data - like Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight blog - did well. "Moneyball" has come to punditry.

Has Nate Silver destroyed punditry? This question arises due to New York Times poll analyst Mr. Silver's accuracy in predicting the 2012 election results and the media context in which that occurred.

For weeks now, some in the traditional punditocracy - the folks who look at a poll, call a campaign official, then consult their gut feelings over lunch - have hammered Silver for his statistics-heavy approach. He gave a false appearance of certainty, they said. He was way too bullish on President Obama's chances, they said. His numbers were skewed, they said...
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/DC-Decoder/Decoder-Wire/2012/1107/Election-2012-Has-Nate-Silver-destroyed-punditry
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The Huffington Post: Robert J. Elisberg: Who Is Most Pissed Off After This Election

I never expected to ever say, "Poor Ann Coulter." But - poor Ann Coulter. I really feel badly for her, in a manner of speaking. But not for the reason you think. Not because Barack Obama was re-elected President of the United States. Rather, I feel bad for her because of her responsibility in that victory.

Remember the famous video where Ms. Coulter says, "If Chris Christie doesn't run we'll nominate Mitt Romney and we will lose"?

Now, I'm sure that many people, Ann Coulter included, think that this statement was prescient and shows her to be oh-so wise in her election prediction. Except that it doesn't. It shows her culpability.

Mitt Romney probably came closer to winning the presidency than any Republican could have this election. If Chris Christie ran, he could never have gotten the Republican nomination in this Republican atmosphere - compared to today's radical far right, Chris Christie is a moderate. That wasn't going to fly with today's Republican electorate. So, Chris Christie wasn't getting the GOP nomination if he ran, despite whatever the weeping Ann Coulter postured.

However, what Ann Coulter did do was help build up the pedestal of Chris Christie among Republicans who didn't really know him. She helped make Chris Christie seem to Republicans that he was The Republican Savior. She helped make Chris Christie's voice so deeply important to Republicans that he became the keynote speaker at the Republican National Convention.

So, when it turned out that Chris Christie wasn't exactly what Ann Coulter suggested he was, nor what she tried to get Republicans to believe, and Chris Christie then publicly and repeatedly and powerfully embraced the strong leadership of President Obama in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, it made Gov. Christie's actions all the more significant to voters...

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-j-elisberg/election-results-2012_b_2086123.html
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Religion Dispatches: Obama and the Death of Normal

I was on an airplane last night as the election was decided. As the plane landed after midnight on the East Coast, I confess that my hand was shaking as I turned on my phone for the news. I did not want to see dishonesty and divisiveness and raw political hackery rewarded. It is hard enough for anyone to actually address the problems, to move this country forward, to make the intransigent American ruling class yield even a yard of the past to the inevitable future. But going backwards last night would have been devastating. I read the returns in silent elation; a business trip had me traveling in business class and the gnashing of corporate teeth all around precluded a full-throated huzzah on my part. I abhor a gloat.

http://www.religiondispatches.org/wire/6601/obama_and_the_death_of_normal/
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Monday, November 5, 2012

Lucid:The Huffington Post: Jim Wallis: God Is Still Not a Republican, Or a Democrat

Co-authored by Jim Wallis and Wes Granberg-Michaelson

During the 2004 presidential election season, Sojourners put out a bumper sticker with these words: "God Is Not a Republican, or a Democrat." The number of orders was overwhelming and we kept running out. The simple message struck a chord among many Christians who were tired of the assumptions and claims by the religious right that God was indeed a Republican, or at least voted a straight-party ticket for the GOP. They also absurdly implied - and sometimes explicitly stated - that faithful Christians couldn't support Democratic candidates. We said that voting was always an imperfect choice in a fallen world, based on prudential judgments about how to best vote our values, that people of faith would always vote in different ways - and that was a good thing for a democracy and the common good.

Our efforts appeared to inject some common sense into our nation's political discourse, but given recent electoral statements and newspaper ads from some conservative Christian leaders, it appears the message bears repeating - God is still not a Republican or Democrat.

Politics always desires to make a handmaiden of religion. And the voice of prophetic faith witnessing to God's intentions for the world's present and future always seems difficult to hear amid the noisy clamor of political rhetoric. We've watched these dynamics, and participated in them, for four decades. During this presidential campaign, we lament the way in which religious faith has been abused, manipulated and neglected in the heated, focus-group-tested sound bites that fill our airwaves and pass for "substantive" policy debates.
...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jim-wallis/god-is-still-not-a-republ_b_2076849.html
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Saturday, November 3, 2012

Great news coverage, thanks Huff Post

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Will Ferrell Wants You To Vote So Bad He Will Eat Garbage, Among Other Enticing Offers

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Wet trail. #25kmrun

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So wet even the lake had puddles in it. #25kmrun

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Picnic table for mermen. #25kmrun

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The truth was laid bare.

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25 km run. Flooded lake trail. Some areas calf deep water. 1/2 barefoot, 1/2 Lunas. #utterlysoaked

Thursday, November 1, 2012

BINGO~CNN Belief Blog: My Take: Billy Graham and Ralph Reed are putting politics before God

Editor's Note: Stephen Prothero, a Boston University religion scholar and author of "The American Bible: How Our Words Unite, Divide, and Define a Nation," is a regular CNN Belief Blog contributor.

By Stephen Prothero, Special to CNN

(CNN)–Why are evangelicals like Billy Graham and Ralph Reed stumping for Mitt Romney? And why are roughly three-quarters of white evangelicals inclined to vote for him?

Because politics matters more to them than religion.

Last year, in a talk at a conference on Mormonism and Islam at Utah Valley University, I asked my Mormon listeners why they had not rushed to the defense of Muslims in controversies such as the one that raged over the Park51 project near ground zero. After all, they have been the victims of religious prejudice. Their founder, Joseph Smith, was killed by a mob of vigilantes.

Given this history, I expected that members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known as Mormons, would feel the sting of anti-Muslim prejudice and speak out against it. But neither Mitt Romney of the GOP nor Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of the Democratic Party did anything of the sort. In fact, Romney issued a statement opposing the construction of the Islamic center.

Why? Because they were thinking and acting as Republicans or Democrats first and Mormons second.

Follow the CNN Belief Blog on Twitter

I see a parallel story playing out this election season with the religious right.

Until quite recently, many evangelicals saw Mormonism as a dangerous cult spreading false theology and dooming its followers to hell. In fact, only after Romney showed up for a meet and greet with Billy Graham in North Carolina earlier this month did the website of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association erase a reference to Mormonism as a "cult."

Did Mormons all of a sudden change their theology? Did Graham change his definition of a "cult"? Of course not. It just became politically expedient for Graham to declassify Mormonism, given the fact that Romney, a Mormon, was the presidential nominee of his beloved GOP.

Ralph Reed, too, is forsaking his theology for his politics, mobilizing his Atlanta-based Faith and Freedom Coalition to place voter guides in Ohio churches in the run-up to election day.

I am old enough to remember when the main purpose of Reed's Christian Coalition and other groups on the religious right was to put born-again Christians in the Congress, the White House, and the Supreme Court. And for decades those who were running those groups saw Mormons as non-Christians.

And don't get me started on Mike Huckabee, who in a recent ad says that a vote for Obama is a vote for your own damnation.

Have LDS Church members repudiated the Book of Mormon as "another testament of Jesus Christ" or their view that the Bible is the word of God only "as far as it is correctly translated"? Have they accepted the Trinity? Rejected their teaching that there are many gods?

As Ben Witherington, Albert Mohler, and many other evangelical thinkers continue to insist: no, no, and no.

CNN's Belief Blog: The faith angles behind the biggest stories

I used to believe that the purpose of the religious right was to infuse American politics with Christian politicians and Christian politics. I no longer believe that. The purpose of the religious right is to use the Christian God for political purposes. Why any Christian, conservative or liberal, can say "Amen" to that is beyond me.

I am perfectly happy to see Reed stump for Romney in Ohio and Graham plump for Romney in an ad in The Wall Street Journal. Just don't tell me they are doing so as Christians. They are doing so as shills for the GOP.

http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2012/11/01/my-take-billy-graham-and-ralph-reed-are-putting-politics-before-god/
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Doesn't get much better than this: http://grooveshark.com/s/Night+Train/1Q5bSj?src=5

what could go wrong?

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CNN leading with more hard hitting stories

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Fox News, not to be outdone by CNN's human interest news-bent

Enough said.

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E = mc2 explains the relationship between energy and mass but the equation itself is made of neither energy or mass. #timothyfreke #hmmmm

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