| Posts: 6496
It is a foolish tautalogy with no actual meaning.It is so sad that we condemn perfectly normal, healthy, sane and stable people for no good reason simply because some small minded person somewhere in the past got it in their head that their particular all powerful, mysterious, magical deity is a bigot too. There is nothing wrong with being gay, straight or bi, my friend.I wish people who think like you could see how you're perceptions and beliefs are no different than those outlandish, ridiculous beliefs of racist people in the south 50 years ago.That is a most cogent observation Cogent Observer. You weren't kidding when you chose the moniker "Cogent Observer". Cogent Observer is correct. We should be celebrating homosexuality, not condemning it. I mean, where would this country be if we didn't have homosexuals in it? Who cares if they canât produce offspring on their own? I for one will not tolerate intolerance!!! America wouldn't be America if it didn't have morally sound behaviors, like homosexuality, to nurture.
Mother Earth Mother Board
The financial districts of New York, London, and Tokyo, linked by thousands of wires, are much closer to each other than, say, the Bronx is to Manhattan. Today this is all quite familiar, but in the 19th century, when the first feeble bits struggled down the first undersea cable joining the Old World to the New, it must have made people's hair stand up on end in more than just the purely electrical sense - it must have seemed supernatural. Perhaps this sort of feeling explains why when Samuel Morse stretched a wire between Washington and Baltimore in 1844, the first message he sent with his code was "What hath God wrought!" - almost as if he needed to reassure himself and others that God, and not the Devil, was behind it. During the decades after Morse's "What hath God wrought!" a plethora of different codes, signalling techniques, and sending and receiving machines were patented.
Upgradable Cameras, Tiny HD Camcorders and Booth Babes
Samsung's new NV24 HD is a tiny little device that features a 10-megapixel sensor, 24-mm (equivalent) wide-angle lens, 2.5-inch LCD screen and, of course, 720p video recording at 30 fps. It's available in black or silver for around $350. Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired .
Digital Camera: Digitalizing the world!
Each one of us wants to own a digital camera and the market is also flooding with numerous manufacturers. Canon A500 is surely making a great deal. Digital Cameras are liked by almost everyone. Defined as the camera that takes videos or still photographs or both, digitally by recording images on a light-sensitive sensors. Today, the market is flooding with different types of digital cameras from different companies. These digital cameras are incorporated into many devices ranging from PDAs and Mobile phones to vehicles. Canon's power shot A550 camera is one camera which is making camera lovers glued to this digital magic. The A550 is one of the entry-level cameras in Canon's A-series. It adds a larger LCD and more mega pixels of resolution. Other features on the camera include a 4X optical zoom lens, point-and-shoot operations, a VGA movie mode, and SDHC memory cards.
Wild Card/Vacation Day 11 of 12
Only two more shopping days until I return to the final days of the City Council campaigns. Then, we'll have fun taking apart the campaigns. Any dirt yet? Any mudslinging. You know, the good stuff. Or is everyone behaving? My wife is now looking over my shoulder -- literally -- so I have to pretend that I'm just checking ball scores. See ya in two days. Here's Wild Card ... .
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