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Epignosis View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 10:57
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


There's lots of people yakking about how the world will end in 2012 because of a Mayan calendar.  It's ridiculous, but it doesn't bother me.
 
 
Could you please explain to me why a jewish book written more than 2 millenium ago is any more believable than a Mayan calendar?


The Bible was written by many different authors over the span of many years and yet remains completely consistent with itself (no I don't expect you to believe that).  I have read many instances of how the miracles of the Bible correspond with what we know scientifically about how the world works (That does not negate my belief in God- it strengthens it).  Most importantly, hundreds of very specific prophecies in the Old Testament are fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ.  I could name some if you'd like.

Regarding the Mayan calendar, I found this to be funny. 

Seriously, most experts on Mayan culture agree that the Mayans did not expect the world to end on 2012.  Jose Arguelles is the individual responsible for the end of the world prophecy, and there isn't a single professional Mayan scholar who supports his ideas (mainly because he, like many Christians do with the Bible, plucked the Mayan calendar from its cultural context and put it in a radically different one).

Don't insult me with the "You believe X, but think Y is ridiculous, so X must also be ridiculous."  That doesn't even make sense.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 11:13
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


There's lots of people yakking about how the world will end in 2012 because of a Mayan calendar.  It's ridiculous, but it doesn't bother me.
 
 
Could you please explain to me why a jewish book written more than 2 millenium ago is any more believable than a Mayan calendar?


The Bible was written by many different authors over the span of many years and yet remains completely consistent with itself (no I don't expect you to believe that). I actually do. Consistent with itself. Not with logic or science.   I have read many instances of how the miracles of the Bible correspond with what we know scientifically about how the world works (That does not negate my belief in God- it strengthens it).  Most importantly, hundreds of very specific prophecies in the Old Testament are fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ.  I could name some if you'd like.

Regarding the Mayan calendar, I found this to be funny.  Broken link.

Seriously, most experts on Mayan culture agree that the Mayans did not expect the world to end on 2012. Me neither. I expect the earth to last a few more billion years till it's engulfed and swallowed by our sun who by then will be a red giant and will fill up the sky, before dying as any star does. Even we human being will not be able to destroy the planet, even though we're really trying.  Jose Arguelles is the individual responsible for the end of the world prophecy, and there isn't a single professional Mayan scholar who supports his ideas (mainly because he, like many Christians do with the Bible, plucked the Mayan calendar from its cultural context and put it in a radically different one). Obviously, I can't agree with those ridiculous "theories" by this Arguelles guy. But you didn't say that in your post, you just said "the Mayan calendar" so it led me to ask the question about why the hebrew 2000+ year old book over the native-american 600 year old civilization... We know much more about other pre-colombine civilizations like the Incas and their nonsense is just as nonsensical as, IN MY VIEW, the Bible's....  

Don't insult me with the "You believe X, but think Y is ridiculous, so X must also be ridiculous."  That doesn't even make sense.That argument lacks logic. I haven't used it. I never try to insult you. That we disagree 100% in religious  views doesn't mean I have anything against you nor do I have to insult you. You usually explain your beliefs very well so it interested me to understand this "mayan vs bible" argument that I myself saw arisiing from your post.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 11:21
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


There's lots of people yakking about how the world will end in 2012 because of a Mayan calendar.  It's ridiculous, but it doesn't bother me.
 
Would this be before or after the Olympics?Wink Perhaps this is the excuse we need to pull out and develop interstellar travel instead Ouch
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 11:26
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


There's lots of people yakking about how the world will end in 2012 because of a Mayan calendar.  It's ridiculous, but it doesn't bother me.
 
 
Could you please explain to me why a jewish book written more than 2 millenium ago is any more believable than a Mayan calendar?


The Bible was written by many different authors over the span of many years and yet remains completely consistent with itself (no I don't expect you to believe that). I actually do. Consistent with itself. Not with logic or science.   I have read many instances of how the miracles of the Bible correspond with what we know scientifically about how the world works (That does not negate my belief in God- it strengthens it).  Most importantly, hundreds of very specific prophecies in the Old Testament are fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ.  I could name some if you'd like.

Regarding the Mayan calendar, I found this to be funny.  Broken link.

Seriously, most experts on Mayan culture agree that the Mayans did not expect the world to end on 2012. Me neither. I expect the earth to last a few more billion years till it's engulfed and swallowed by our sun who by then will be a red giant and will fill up the sky, before dying as any star does. Even we human being will not be able to destroy the planet, even though we're really trying.  Jose Arguelles is the individual responsible for the end of the world prophecy, and there isn't a single professional Mayan scholar who supports his ideas (mainly because he, like many Christians do with the Bible, plucked the Mayan calendar from its cultural context and put it in a radically different one). Obviously, I can't agree with those ridiculous "theories" by this Arguelles guy. But you didn't say that in your post, you just said "the Mayan calendar" so it led me to ask the question about why the hebrew 2000+ year old book over the native-american 600 year old civilization... We know much more about other pre-colombine civilizations like the Incas and their nonsense is just as nonsensical as, IN MY VIEW, the Bible's....  

Don't insult me with the "You believe X, but think Y is ridiculous, so X must also be ridiculous."  That doesn't even make sense.That argument lacks logic. I haven't used it. I never try to insult you. That we disagree 100% in religious  views doesn't mean I have anything against you nor do I have to insult you. You usually explain your beliefs very well so it interested me to understand this "mayan vs bible" argument that I myself saw arisiing from your post.


Gotcha.  I appreciate that.

You can fix the link yourself (click it, and then check the web address.  There's a vowel that was taken out thanks to the auto-censor). LOL

Anyway, just because a book is 2000+ years old doesn't make it true or false.  I spend an awful lot of time pouring through it to see if it is true.  I don't understand 100% of it, but I don't understand 100% of a physics text book either.  Still, I have been amazed by how accurate the Bible portrays many phenomena (it just uses a different language- they obviously didn't know what "red algal bloom" was, for instance, when describing the Nile turning into blood). Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 11:42
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

  Still, I have been amazed by how accurate the Bible portrays many phenomena (it just uses a different language- they obviously didn't know what "red algal bloom" was, for instance, when describing the Nile turning into blood). Smile

Wasn't Moses responsible for this? 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 11:44
All I can say.. it takes a lot of love (a.k.a faith) to be able to interpret every weird event in the bible in such a way that makes sense... Probably that distinguishes believers from non-believers... if scientists prove something, it's proven. if not, we tend to doubt or even to not believe. We will not go trying to find meaning into events that at first appear incredibly absurd...unless it can be done scientifically...
 
But doubt, as anything, can't be turned into a religion, at least IMO. So I just doubt things. I don't really know anything.
 


Edited by The T - June 18 2009 at 11:46
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 11:57
Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

  Still, I have been amazed by how accurate the Bible portrays many phenomena (it just uses a different language- they obviously didn't know what "red algal bloom" was, for instance, when describing the Nile turning into blood). Smile

Wasn't Moses responsible for this? 


Moses was merely an agent.  The Bible is clear that it was God doing the plagues (yes, scientifically- it's actually really really cool).

Exodus 7

 1 Then the LORD said to Moses, "See, I have made you like God to Pharaoh, and your brother Aaron will be your prophet. 2 You are to say everything I command you, and your brother Aaron is to tell Pharaoh to let the Israelites go out of his country.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 12:06
By the way, I created this thread and I have never expressed my position...
 
First of all, just to clarify, I'm NO satanist. I've read Levey's Bible (the only kind of rational way to understand satanism) but so individualistic and narcissistic a system is too much even for me. believieng in Satan without believing in the  God would be the ultimate stupidity. But please remember: one, I love the pentagram; two, with the pentagram I kind of say "preacher stay away!"; three, I'm a metal guy.... LOLEvil Smile
 
My family has always been extremely liberal. My father has all his life been a deist (never actually labeling himself,... but from what I can conclude, that's the closest label I can use for him). My mother a non-practising catholic, who believes in a God but not in the church or priests or rituals anymore. My 8-year older sister lives in Germany and she also believes in faith, not in a particular faith. She believes that faith is good (she had to battle cancer and it helped), but not necessarilly faith in a particular creed.
 
My grandmother (RIP) was a devout catholic, a very good person, extremely good, what you call a "true believer", one that practised the teachings, not just prayed every day. She was slightly narrow-minded in some areas but she was born in 1926, I understand that.
 
My country is very catholic as most southamerican countries, and I always disagreed, because of my personality, to let others tell me what to believe. I never believed a guy in a weird dress could be called my "father" nor would i ever use that word for anybody but my dad. I have always hated mind-control. When i was child, I used to believe at leats in the new testament little more.... And, believe me, I used tpo pray....
 
I continued till I was a young adult believeing that somebody above could hear me... But I realized my faith was just self-serving: I just wanted he to hear me when i needed him to, not when I had to do any sacrifice. Even in my bad years I continued to "believe" even though it was obvious I was alone in my stupidity. I realized that I had never really believed. all i ever did was blame someone else, not me. And even better if that blame-object was an unexisting omnipotent god!
 
With time I realized all my views since  was a teenager were the opposite of most religiions: abortion, drugs, sex, celibacy, personal life, etc, etc, etc....I hated a church that was rich while people were poor... I realized I never believed the world had been created nor that Jesus was anything else but one if the greatest man who ever lived, not nobody's son.... I read more and more... I came to america and hated the fanatics (I always did, that's whay I always wear a pentagram ring on my right hand...) finally, one day I woke up and said "stop this bullsh*t... I have never believed.... nor will i ever do...)
 
I don't believe in the existence of god, I think it's highly unlikely. I believe Jesus was a great man, better than most of them, but just a carpenter's son. I believe in freedom of the mind and of the being. And I believe in science. But I don't know anything. I just not-believe...  
 
 
(I believe in Dream Theater though.... TongueLOL)


Edited by The T - June 18 2009 at 12:10
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 12:06
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

  Still, I have been amazed by how accurate the Bible portrays many phenomena (it just uses a different language- they obviously didn't know what "red algal bloom" was, for instance, when describing the Nile turning into blood). Smile

Wasn't Moses responsible for this? 


Moses was merely an agent.  The Bible is clear that it was God doing the plagues (yes, scientifically- it's actually really really cool).

Exodus 7

 1 Then the LORD said to Moses, "See, I have made you like God to Pharaoh, and your brother Aaron will be your prophet. 2 You are to say everything I command you, and your brother Aaron is to tell Pharaoh to let the Israelites go out of his country.

It is really cool, but unfortunately, not a plague. It was a naturally occuring event. Just like the parting of the sea. Some of the other plagues are odd, like the hail and fire as well as the first born.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 12:13
Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

  Still, I have been amazed by how accurate the Bible portrays many phenomena (it just uses a different language- they obviously didn't know what "red algal bloom" was, for instance, when describing the Nile turning into blood). Smile

Wasn't Moses responsible for this? 


Moses was merely an agent.  The Bible is clear that it was God doing the plagues (yes, scientifically- it's actually really really cool).

Exodus 7

 1 Then the LORD said to Moses, "See, I have made you like God to Pharaoh, and your brother Aaron will be your prophet. 2 You are to say everything I command you, and your brother Aaron is to tell Pharaoh to let the Israelites go out of his country.

It is really cool, but unfortunately, not a plague. It was a naturally occuring event. Just like the parting of the sea. Some of the other plagues are odd, like the hail and fire as well as the first born.


So you wish to argue semantics? Fine. The Hebrew word translated "plague" is "nega," which literally means "wound" or "disease."  By using the word "nega," God was going to "wound" Egypt.

All of the "wounds" of Egypt, including the death of the first born (if you follow the culture of the Egyptians) makes perfect scientific sense.  This is the best book I've ever read on the subject:




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 12:19
One mustn't forget that atheism and agnosticism 100+ years ago was severely frowned upon.  Very few people spoke out about not believing in God in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Therefore many of these scientists of a religious persuasion, may well have had doubts but could just not mention it.

Look at how the Catholic Church shunned Galileo originally too.

Anyhow, on the other side of the coin, many of today's scientific beliefs originated in the Middle East and with Islam.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 13:09
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

  Still, I have been amazed by how accurate the Bible portrays many phenomena (it just uses a different language- they obviously didn't know what "red algal bloom" was, for instance, when describing the Nile turning into blood). Smile

Wasn't Moses responsible for this? 


Moses was merely an agent.  The Bible is clear that it was God doing the plagues (yes, scientifically- it's actually really really cool).

Exodus 7

 1 Then the LORD said to Moses, "See, I have made you like God to Pharaoh, and your brother Aaron will be your prophet. 2 You are to say everything I command you, and your brother Aaron is to tell Pharaoh to let the Israelites go out of his country.

It is really cool, but unfortunately, not a plague. It was a naturally occuring event. Just like the parting of the sea. Some of the other plagues are odd, like the hail and fire as well as the first born.


So you wish to argue semantics? Fine. The Hebrew word translated "plague" is "nega," which literally means "wound" or "disease."  By using the word "nega," God was going to "wound" Egypt.

All of the "wounds" of Egypt, including the death of the first born (if you follow the culture of the Egyptians) makes perfect scientific sense.  This is the best book I've ever read on the subject:





You see, this is what gets me. If it means "wound" or "disease", why not put in the Bible just that. Instead it sounds like some grand production. A Bible with consistent footnotes with translation facts would help everyone out.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 13:18
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by el dingo el dingo wrote:

[
 
 
 
Give me the boy at the age of seven and I will give you the man.
 
Scary IMO, very scary.
 
 
 
This could only scare a person who doesn't want to understand what he said.
 
It's often to listen sports trainers or teachers to say they rather teach small chidren, because when they receive teen agers, many of them are already full of bad habits and vices.
 
That's what Saint  Ignatius said, only if he teaches a pupil since he's very young, he can be sure he's clean and ready to learn.
 
That's why Jesuits teach children only if they start with them in kindergarten, because some of the older teens are already corrupt, and that's something easy to prove.
  
Iván
 
Fair point Ivan - I went to a CofE school where I guess the Jesuit movement wasn't given the best Press, as it were, and that statement from St Ignatius was taught to us as a one-liner and therefore out of context. It's not that I don't want to understand what he said, merely that I wasn't inspired enough to find out the full background to the words - and we certainly weren't taught the whole story. It actually came up in a poetry class about Gerard Manley Hopkins.
 
Taken out of context the statement does seem scary, but in the context you have placed it with your explanation it no longer does. I understandSmile
It's not that I can't find worth in anything, it's just that I can't find worth in enough.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 13:18
Why not learn the original languages?  Wink

Translation is an art, not a science.  Translating anything presents numerous challenges and obstacles.  On top of that, many people use the King James Version (completed in the 1600s), which itself almost needs a translation these days!  LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 13:25
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Why not learn the original languages?  Wink

Translation is an art, not a science.  Translating anything presents numerous challenges and obstacles.  On top of that, many people use the King James Version (completed in the 1600s), which itself almost needs a translation these days!  LOL

Think of the benefits if translations were included. I mean, back in the day, as a child and teen, studying the Bible in Parochial schools, none of the meanings were discussed. Why is it not done as such?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 13:28
Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Why not learn the original languages?  Wink

Translation is an art, not a science.  Translating anything presents numerous challenges and obstacles.  On top of that, many people use the King James Version (completed in the 1600s), which itself almost needs a translation these days!  LOL

Think of the benefits if translations were included. I mean, back in the day, as a child and teen, studying the Bible in Parochial schools, none of the meanings were discussed. Why is it not done as such?


Well, today we have study Bibles, which include footnotes and comments on the side to aid understanding.  I find many of them a bit shallow, however.

I should also add, Rich, that often times we don't have exact words to match the ideas presented by ancient words, and vice versa.  For example, the ancient Hebrews might say "my bowels are troubled" without meaning that they have bad gas!  The bowels (like the heart) were considered a seat of human emotion by many ancient cultures.  Yet some translators don't use "bowels," they use "heart" despite what the original language says (to aid meaning).  And worse still, we have words that meant one thing a hundred years ago that no long carry that meaning!

If you want a literal translation, I recommend Robert Young's Literal Translation (YTL).



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 13:56
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Why not learn the original languages?  Wink

Translation is an art, not a science.  Translating anything presents numerous challenges and obstacles.  On top of that, many people use the King James Version (completed in the 1600s), which itself almost needs a translation these days!  LOL

Think of the benefits if translations were included. I mean, back in the day, as a child and teen, studying the Bible in Parochial schools, none of the meanings were discussed. Why is it not done as such?


Well, today we have study Bibles, which include footnotes and comments on the side to aid understanding.  I find many of them a bit shallow, however.

I should also add, Rich, that often times we don't have exact words to match the ideas presented by ancient words, and vice versa.  For example, the ancient Hebrews might say "my bowels are troubled" without meaning that they have bad gas!  The bowels (like the heart) were considered a seat of human emotion by many ancient cultures.  Yet some translators don't use "bowels," they use "heart" despite what the original language says (to aid meaning).  And worse still, we have words that meant one thing a hundred years ago that no long carry that meaning!

If you want a literal translation, I recommend Robert Young's Literal Translation (YTL).


Bible study? We had Bible dictation back in the day. We were basically told, "this is how it is". But the idea of those better versed in language helping out in understanding could have made a big difference. Regardless, I feel that something so important shouldn't be so complicated.


Edited by StyLaZyn - June 18 2009 at 13:56
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 15:05
Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Why not learn the original languages?  Wink

Translation is an art, not a science.  Translating anything presents numerous challenges and obstacles.  On top of that, many people use the King James Version (completed in the 1600s), which itself almost needs a translation these days!  LOL

Think of the benefits if translations were included. I mean, back in the day, as a child and teen, studying the Bible in Parochial schools, none of the meanings were discussed. Why is it not done as such?


Well, today we have study Bibles, which include footnotes and comments on the side to aid understanding.  I find many of them a bit shallow, however.

I should also add, Rich, that often times we don't have exact words to match the ideas presented by ancient words, and vice versa.  For example, the ancient Hebrews might say "my bowels are troubled" without meaning that they have bad gas!  The bowels (like the heart) were considered a seat of human emotion by many ancient cultures.  Yet some translators don't use "bowels," they use "heart" despite what the original language says (to aid meaning).  And worse still, we have words that meant one thing a hundred years ago that no long carry that meaning!

If you want a literal translation, I recommend Robert Young's Literal Translation (YTL).


Bible study? We had Bible dictation back in the day. We were basically told, "this is how it is". But the idea of those better versed in language helping out in understanding could have made a big difference. Regardless, I feel that something so important shouldn't be so complicated.


I'm sorry you had Bible dictation.  It's good for leaning rote things, but the God of the Bible is not a rote God.

Anyway, as I mentioned, translating something is always a complicated affair, but it's not without it's rewards.  If it's any consolation, I study both Hebrew and Greek (I'm fluent in neither), but I'm available to you or anybody with a question. Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2009 at 15:19
Oh my Godless world,

The burden of proof is on the believers,

and no science can prove the existence of a Zues, a Quetzalcoatl or a Jehovah sitting up there in the sky and demanding the Vatican gets a tithe

The little indrawn mathematicians who can prove a widget rotates at X speed can't prove that the Holy Dalai Lama is divinely fit to be autocrat of Tibet,

The little indrawn astronomer who can prove background radiation can't prove that once again, medieval Aquinas's ridiculous cosmological argument has stretched but not snapped again!

Where did the idea of Jehovah come from?

WHAT ROLE HAS RELIGION PLAYED IN HUMAN SOCIETY?

REMEMBER, BOYS AND GIRLS, HOW THE KING WAS DIVINELY CHOSEN TO RULE AND EXPLOIT THE PEASANTS, WHO WOULD HAVE TO WAIT FOR HEAVEN!

PROPAGATION OF A "GOD" IS A SOCIOLOGICAL PHENOMENON CORRESPONDING TO SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND IS AS LAW GUIDED AS THE PRACTICE OF WIPING OUR BUTTS

One day Humanity will see "God" as sensible as "natural" Slavery of the Greeks and Americans, as Feudalism, War, and Capitalism.

The ghastly bible will be reserved for museum studies

(I hope this gains more attention than my previous posts)


Edited by RoyFairbank - June 18 2009 at 15:28
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2009 at 02:15
Ok...
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