Blog Archive

31 October 2018

Woman survives six days in Arizona desert


 Safety The car landed in a mesquite tree
A motorist survived six harrowing days alone along a remote Arizona riverbed after crashing through a fence and landing in a tree, officials said Wednesday.
The unidentified 53-year-old woman lost control of her car on rain-slicked U.S. Route 60 near milepost 117 on Oct. 12 in Wickenburg, Arizona, about 65 miles north of Phoenix, according to the Arizona Department of Safety.
She was wearing a t-shirt, shorts and flip-flops and survived on grass and water before she was found nearly a week later, said rescuer and local rancher David "D.J." Moralez.
"I don't know if she could have made it there another night," Moralez, 30, told NBC News. "She was in pretty rough shape when we found her."
The woman's car fell about 50 feet down a ravine, "landing in a mesquite tree where it remained suspended above the ground," the department said. She remained in the tree-top car for several days before finally climbing out to seek help, authorities said.
Then finally on Oct. 18, a state Department of Transportation (ADOT) crew was working along U.S. 60, corralling a cow, when Moralez happened to be driving and spotted his brother Zachary on that crew.
The rancher stopped to chat with his brother and just as they were ending their chance meeting, they spotted a hole in the fence where the car had crashed.

The brothers called 911 and they eventually found human footprints along the Hassayampa river bed that led them to the severely dehydrated woman resting under a tree.
Her eyes were swollen and she could barely move with broken ribs, a dislocated shoulder and head injury when the brothers and Department of Safety Trooper Caleb Hiegel got to her, according to Moralez.
"'Will you please help me,'" the woman asked, according to Moralez. "I said, 'That's what we're here for.' She said she was screaming for help but no one heard her."
A helicopter came to the riverbed and airlifted the woman to a hospital.
"The diligence of the ADOT crew and teamwork of everyone involved is exemplary and to be commended," Arizona Department of Safety Col. Frank Milstead said. "Due to their outstanding efforts, this woman's life was saved."

Moralez, a sixth-generation cattle rancher, said his parents always taught him and his brother to be aware of their surroundings, and look out for broken fence line — because cows could get loose.

30 October 2018

Liberal policies are largely a history of ignoring wisdom


 liberal social policies is a largely a history of ignoring the wisdom of logic 

More truth to show how the lies form and people are often misled!
Let freedom ring!
Blog: Absolute Truth Some Wisdom and Intercourse...
by Kerminator

Great Society programs were causing just as many problems
* The history of 1960s liberal social policies was largely a history of ignoring the wisdom of logic *
Date: 2/13/2017 ... viewed 278 times
Race Relations and Law Enforcement
January 2015 • Volume 44, Number 1 • Jason L. Riley
Editorial Board Member, Wall Street Journal
Jason L. Riley

Jason L. Riley is an editorial board member and a senior editorial page writer at the Wall Street Journal, where he writes on politics, economics, education, immigration, and race. He is also a FOX News contributor and appears regularly on Special Report with Bret Baier.
Previously, he worked for USA Today and the Buffalo News. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English from the State University of New York at Buffalo.

He is the author of Please Stop Helping Us: How Liberals Make It Harder for Blacks to Succeed.
Download Issue

The following is adapted from a speech delivered on January 30, 2015, at Hillsdale College’s Allan P. Kirby, Jr. Center for Constitutional Studies and Citizenship in Washington, D.C., as part of the AWC Family Foundation Lecture Series.

Thomas Sowell once said that some books you write for pleasure, and others you write out of a sense of duty because there are things to be said—and other people have better sense than to say them.
My new book, Please Stop Helping Us, falls into that latter category. When I started out as a journalist 20 years ago, I had no expectation of focusing on race-related topics. People like Sowell and Shelby Steele and Walter Williams and a few other independent black thinkers, to my mind at least, had already said what needed to be said, had been saying it for decades, and had been saying it more eloquently than I ever could. But over the years, and with some prodding from those guys, it occurred to me that not enough younger blacks were following in their footsteps. It also occurred to me that many public policies aimed at the black underclass were just as wrongheaded as ever. The fight wasn’t over.

A new generation of black thinkers needed to explain what’s working and what isn’t, and why, to a new generation of readers. And the result is this book, which I hope will help to bring more light than heat to the discussion of race.

The book is not an autobiography or a memoir, but I do tell a few stories about growing up black and male in the inner city. And one of the stories involves a trip back home to Buffalo, New York, where I was born and raised. I was visiting my older sister shortly after I had begun working at the Wall Street Journal, and I was chatting with her daughter, my niece, who was maybe in the second grade at the time. I was asking her about school, her favorite subjects, that sort of thing, when she stopped me and said, “Uncle Jason, why you talk white?” Then she turned to her little friend who was there and said, “Don’t my uncle sound white? Why is he tryin’ to sound so smart?”

She was just teasing, of course. I smiled and they enjoyed a little chuckle at my expense. But what she said stayed with me. I couldn’t help thinking: Here were two young black girls, seven or eight years old, already linking speech patterns to race and intelligence. They already had a rather sophisticated awareness that, as blacks, a white-sounding speech was not only to be avoided in their own speech but mocked in the speech of others.

I shouldn’t have been too surprised by this, and I wasn’t. My siblings, along with countless other black friends and relatives, teased me the same way when I was growing up. And other black professionals have told similar stories. What I had forgotten is just how early these attitudes take hold—how soon this counterproductive thinking and behavior begins.

New York City has the largest school system in America. Eighty percent of black kids in New York public schools are performing below grade level. And a big part of the problem is a black subculture that rejects attitudes and behaviors that are conducive to academic success. Black kids read half as many books and watch twice as much television as their white counterparts, for example. In other words, a big part of the problem is a culture that produces little black girls and boys who are already worried about acting and sounding white by the time they are in second grade.

Another big part of the problem is a reluctance to speak honestly about these cultural shortcomings. Many whites fear being called racists. And many black leaders have a vested interest in blaming black problems primarily on white racism, so that is the narrative they push regardless of the reality. Racism has become an all-purpose explanation for bad black outcomes, be they social or economic.
If you disagree and are white, you’re a bigot. If you disagree and are black, you’re a sell-out.
The shooting death of a young black man by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, last year touched off a national discussion about everything except the aberrant behavior of so many young black men that results in such frequent encounters with police. We talked about racial prejudice, poverty, unemployment, profiling, the tensions between law enforcement and poor black communities, and so forth. Rarely did we hear any discussion of black crime rates.

Homicide is the leading cause of death for young black men in the U.S., and around 90 percent of
 the perpetrators are also black. Yet for months we’ve had protesters nationwide pretending that our morgues are full of young black men because cops are shooting them. Around 98 percent of black shooting deaths do not involve the police. In fact, a cop is six times more likely to be shot by someone black than the opposite. The protestors are pushing a false anti-cop narrative, and everyone from the president on down has played along.

Any candid debate on race and criminal justice in this country would have to start with the fact that blacks commit an astoundingly disproportionate number of crimes. Blacks constitute about 13 percent of the population, yet between 1976 and 2005 they committed more than half of all murders in the U.S. The black arrest rate for most offenses—including robbery, aggravated assault, and property crimes—is typically two to three times their representation in the population. So long as blacks are committing such an outsized amount of crime, young black men will be viewed suspiciously and tensions between police and crime-ridden communities will persist. The U.S. criminal justice system, currently headed by a black attorney general who reports to a black president, is a reflection of this reality, not its cause. If we want to change the negative perceptions of young black men, we must change the behavior that is driving those perceptions. But pointing this out has become almost taboo. How can we even begin to address problems if we won’t discuss them honestly?

“High rates of black violence in the late twentieth century are a matter of historical fact, not bigoted imagination,” wrote the late Harvard Law professor William Stuntz. “The trends reached their peak not in the land of Jim Crow but in the more civilized North, and not in the age of segregation but in the decades that saw the rise of civil rights for African Americans—and of African American control of city governments.”

The Left wants to blame these outcomes on racial animus and poverty, but back in the 1940s and ’50s, when racial discrimination was legal and black poverty was much higher than today, the black crime rate was lower. The Left wants to blame these outcomes on “the system,” but blacks have long been part of running that system. Black crime and incarceration rates spiked in the 1970s and ’80s in cities such as Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, and Philadelphia under black mayors and black police chiefs. Some of the most violent cities in the U.S. today are run by blacks.

Some insist that our jails and prisons are teeming with young black men due primarily to racist drug laws, but the reality is that the drug laws are neither racist nor driving the black incarceration rate. It’s worth remembering that the harsher penalties for crack cocaine offenses that were passed in the 1980s were supported by most of the Congressional Black Caucus, including Rep. Charles Rangel of Harlem, who at the time headed the House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control. The crack was destroying black communities and many black political leaders wanted dealers to face longer sentences. In other words, black legislators in Washington led the effort to impose tougher drug laws, a fact often forgotten by critics today.

When these laws passed, even their opponents didn’t claim that they were racist. Those charges came later, as the racially disparate impact of the laws became apparent. What’s been lost in the discussion is whether these laws leave law-abiding blacks better off. Do you make life in the ghetto harder or easier by sending thugs home sooner rather than later? Liberal elites would have us deny what black ghetto residents know to be the truth. These communities aren’t dangerous because of racist cops or judges or sentencing guidelines. They’re dangerous mainly due to black criminals preying on black victims.

Nor is the racial disparity in prison inmates explained by the enforcement of drug laws. Blacks are about 37.5 percent of the population in state prisons, which house nearly 90 percent of the nation’s inmates. Remove drug offenders from that population and the percentage of black prisoners only drops to 37 percent. What drives black incarceration rates are violent offenses, not drug offenses. Blacks commit violent crimes at seven to ten times the rate that whites do. The fact that their victims tend to be of the same race suggests that young black men in the ghetto live in danger of being shot by each other, not cops. {A major fact not discussed by many of the current Black leadership!}
Nor is this a function of blacks being picked on by cops who are “over-policing” certain neighborhoods. Research has long shown that the rate at which blacks are arrested is nearly identical to the rate at which crime victims identify blacks as their assailants. The police are in these communities because that’s where the 911 calls originate.

If liberals want to help reverse these crime trends, they would do better to focus less on supposed racial animus and more on ghetto attitudes towards school, work, marriage, and child-rearing. As recently as the early 1960s, two out of three black children were raised in two-parent households. Today, more than 70 percent are not, and the number can reach as high as 80 or 90 percent in our inner cities. For decades, studies have shown that the likelihood of teen pregnancy, drug abuse, dropping out of school and other bad social outcomes increase dramatically when fathers aren’t around. One of the most comprehensive studies ever undertaken in this regard concluded that black boys without a father are 68 percent more likely to be incarcerated than those with a father—that overall, the most critical factor affecting the prospect of young males encountering the criminal justice system is the presence of a father in the home. All other factors, including family income, are much less important.

As political scientist James Q. Wilson said, if crime is to a significant degree caused by weak character, if weak character is more likely among children of unmarried mothers, if there are no fathers who will help raise their children, acquire jobs, and protect their neighborhoods, if boys become young men with no preparation for work, if school achievement is regarded as a sign of having sold out—if all these things are true, then the chances of reducing the crime rate among low-income blacks anytime soon is slim.

Many on the Left sincerely want to help the black underclass. The problem is that liberals believe bigger government is the best way to help. But having looked at the track record of government policies aimed at helping the black underclass, I’m skeptical.

{The results speak for themselves!}

This year marks the 50th anniversary of President Lyndon Johnson’s commencement speech at Howard University. Johnson had signed the Civil Rights Act a year earlier and would sign the Voting Rights Act two months later. And he used the speech to talk about what the government should do next on behalf of blacks. These two laws marked merely the end of the beginning, he said:
That beginning is freedom, and the barriers to that freedom are tumbling down. Freedom is the right to share, share fully and equally, in American society—to vote, to hold a job, to enter a public place, to go to school. . . . But freedom is not enough. . . . You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, “you are free to compete with all the others,” and still justly believe that you have been completely fair. . . . The next and the more profound stage of the battle for civil rights [is] . . . not just equality as a right and a theory but equality as a fact and equality as a result.
But what if Johnson was mistaken?

What if there are limits to what government can do beyond removing barriers to freedom?
What if the best that we can hope for from our elected officials are policies that promote equal opportunity?

What if public policy makers risk creating more problems and barriers to progress when the goal is equal outcomes?

{It appears that much was said and then the racial Black issue was turned into an anti-white payback issue - with instead of non-discrimination it became a gov't pushed reverse discrimination!}
The civil rights struggles of the mid-20th century exemplified liberalism at its best. The 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act outlawed racial discrimination in employment and education and ensured the ability of blacks to register and vote. All Americans can be proud of these accomplishments. But what about the social policy and thinking that arose from the ruins of Jim Crow? Good intentions aside, which efforts have facilitated black advancement, and which efforts have impeded it?

In 1988, right around the 25th anniversary of the Great Society, Harvard sociologist Nathan Glazer published a book called The Limits of Social Policy. Glazer analyzed Great Society programs from the perspective of someone who believed that government action was the best way to improve a lot of blacks. But his assessment humbled him. He concluded that in many ways, the Great Society programs were causing just as many problems as they were solving— those good intentions aren’t enough.

Unlike Nathan Glazer, many policymakers today are still riding high on good intentions. They don’t seem particularly interested in reconsidering what has been tried, even though 50 years into the war on poverty the result isn’t pretty. While gains have been made, significant racial disparities remain in some areas and black retrogression has occurred in others. The black-white poverty gap has widened over the past decade and the black poverty rate is no longer falling. The black-white disparity in incarceration rates today is larger than it was in 1960. And the black unemployment rate has, on average, been double the white rate for five decades.

{This appears that the gov't reverse discrimination did not work as planned?}
Confronted with these statistics, liberals continue to push for more of the same solutions. Last year, President Obama announced yet another federal initiative aimed at helping blacks—an increase in preschool education, even though studies (including those released by his own administration) have shown no significant impacts in education from such programs. He said that he wants to increase reading proficiency and graduation rates for minority students, yet he opposes school voucher programs that are doing both. He continues to call for job-training programs of the sort that study after study has shown to be ineffective.

Fred Siegel, an expert on urban public policy, has written extensively about the liberal flight from evidence and empiricism that began in the 1960s. The Left, wracked by guilt over America’s diabolical treatment of blacks, decided to hold them to different standards of behavior. Blacks, Siegel writes, were invited to enter the larger society on their own terms. Schools, which had helped poor whites, ceased incorporating poor blacks from the South into the mainstream culture.

Discipline as a prerequisite for adult success was displaced by the authentic self-expression of the ill-educated. Blacks were not culturally deprived but simply differently-abled—more spontaneous and expressive and so forth. Liberals tried to improve conditions for blacks without passing judgment on antisocial black culture. And this sort of thinking continues to this day. Walter Williams once wrote that he’s glad he grew up in the 1940s and ’50s before it became fashionable for white people to like black people. He received a more honest assessment of his strengths and weaknesses, he says, than black kids today are likely to receive from white teachers and employers who are more interested in being politically correct.

{I can agree with Walter Williams since I too grew up in the semi-segregated south-land there was not all the race conflict of today! We had very good race relations in our family history!}

After George Zimmerman was acquitted in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, President Obama explained the black response to the verdict this way. Blacks understand, he said, that some of the violence that takes place in poor black neighborhoods is born out of a very violent past in this country and that the poverty and dysfunction that we see in those communities can be traced to that history. In other words, Obama was doing exactly what the Left has been conditioning blacks to do since the 1960s, which is to blame black pathology on the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow.
{It is almost as if it was planned by the Democrat Party!}

This is a dodge. That legacy is not holding down blacks half as much as the legacy of efforts to help. Underprivileged blacks have become playthings for intellectuals and politicians who care more about reveling in their good intentions or winning votes than advocating behaviors and attitudes that have allowed other groups to get ahead. Meanwhile, the civil rights movement has become an industry that does little more than monetize white guilt. Martin Luther King and his contemporaries demanded black self-improvement despite the abundant and overt racism of their day. King’s self-styled successors, living in an era when public policy bends over backward to accommodate blacks, insist that blacks cannot be held responsible for their plight so long as someone, somewhere in white America, is still prejudiced.

The more fundamental problem with these well-meaning liberal efforts is that they have succeeded, tragically, in convincing blacks to see themselves first and foremost as victims. Today there is no greater impediment to black advancement than the self-pitying mindset that permeates the black culture. White liberals think they are helping blacks by romanticizing bad behavior. And black liberals are all too happy to hustle guilty whites.

Blacks ultimately must help themselves. They must develop the same attitudes and behaviors and habits that other groups had to develop to rise in America. And to the extent that a social policy, however well-intentioned, interferes with this self-development, it does more harm than good.
This concept of self-help and self-development is something that black leaders once understood quite well, and at a time when blacks faced infinitely more obstacles than they face today. Asked by whites in 1865 what to do for freed blacks, Frederick Douglass responded: “I have had but one answer from the beginning. Do nothing with us! . . . If the apples will not remain on the tree of their own strength . . . let them fall! . . .

And if the Negro cannot stand on his own legs, let him fall also. All I ask is, give him a chance to stand on his own legs!” Douglass was essentially saying, give blacks equal opportunity and then leave them alone.

Booker T. Washington, another late 19th-century black leader who had been born a slave, once said that it is important and right that all privileges of the law be granted to blacks, but it is vastly more important that they are prepared for the exercise of these privileges.

Douglass and Washington didn’t play down the need for the government to secure equal rights for blacks, and both were optimistic that blacks would get equal rights eventually, although neither man lived to see that day. But both men also understood the limits of government benevolence. Blacks would have to ready themselves to meet the challenge of being in a position to take advantage of opportunities once equal rights had been secured.

The history of 1960s liberal social policies is largely a history of ignoring this wisdom
** All { parentheses were added by the blogger}



Il ne change jamais




 La joie est un cadeau de Dieu qui nous a été donné lors du salut.

Jean 16:33 "Je vous ai dit ces choses, afin que vous ayez la paix en moi. Dans le monde, vous aurez des tribulations; mais prenez courage, j'ai vaincu le monde."Le monde connaît la joie et le bonheur en proportion directe avec leurs circonstances. Les mauvaises circonstances produisent la dépression et le chagrin, tandis que les bonnes circonstances produisent la joie et la paix. C'est de la servitude et pourtant cela ne doit pas nécessairement être le cas d'un chrétien.


 
Notre joie ne dépend pas des choses, mais de la personne de Jésus-Christ. Il est notre paix et notre joie.


Nous tirons parti de cette joie et de cette paix au milieu de la tribulation pour que nos esprits et nos cœurs restent sur les choses au-dessus et non sur les choses de cette terre. Les choses invisibles de Dieu sont éternelles, tandis que les problèmes visibles sur la terre ne sont que temporaires. Tous les problèmes de cette vie deviennent très sombres lorsque nous les comparons à la gloire de Dieu qui est la nôtre à travers Jésus.


Nous pouvons toujours nous réjouir dans le Seigneur (Phil. 4: 4), car se réjouir est une action et non une réaction à notre environnement. La joie est un cadeau de Dieu qui nous a été donné lors du salut. Il a été placé dans notre esprit né de nouveau et il ne fluctue pas et ne diminue pas; c'est constant. Le Seigneur a mis la joie en nous et nous devons le "résoudre" en choisissant d'obéir à cet ordre dans les Écritures.


Il nous est commandé de nous réjouir "EN SEIGNEUR". Beaucoup de gens n'éprouvent pas la vraie joie parce que leur joie réside dans leurs circonstances. C'est-à-dire qu'ils attendent de se réjouir lorsque les choses vont bien dans leur vie, et cela n'arrive pas très souvent. Nous sommes censés "nous réjouir dans le Seigneur toujours". {Toujours!}


Cela signifie que nous sommes supposés nous réjouir de ce que le Seigneur est et de ce qu'il a fait pour nous.


Il ne change jamais (Héb. 13: 8) et sa miséricorde et sa compassion sont nouvelles chaque matin (Lam. 3: 22-23).

26 October 2018

Persecution is a token



John 15:19 "If you were of the world, the world would love their own: but because you are not of the world, because I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hates you."
 

We should not think it is strange to be persecuted. "All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution" (2 Tim. 3:12). We can actually rejoice because we are being persecuted for Jesus' sake, and the Lord will be with us in the midst of the persecution. When we stand before Him, there will be more than ample reward.

Persecution is a token that those persecuting you are under conviction.
 They realize that they are not living what your words or actions are advocating and in self defense, they attack you, who they perceive is the source of their conviction. If you understand this, it makes persecution much easier to take. They aren't just mad at you; they are convicted. When the gospel is presented in the power of the Holy Spirit, there will always be either revival or riot, but not indifference.

In the midst of persecution, Satan will try to convince us that the strife is all our fault. If he succeeds, then we back down and the pressure is off his followers. However, Jesus suffered continual rejection and persecution, yet we know that the problem was not with Him, but with those who rejected Him.
Jesus makes it clear that persecution is an inevitable part of living a godly life, so that we will not fall prey to introspection and self-condemnation when rejection comes. If our sinless Savior was rejected, then certainly we will be too. Don't feel guilty or condemned when persecution comes. 
 The Word strips people of the disguises they have been hiding their sins behind, and the result is persecution.

"Sleep Inertia."







Every morning, people sleepily drag themselves out of bed, wandering through a brain fog that seems to take forever to dissipate. Early risers will deny it exists, but evidence in a new paper in the journal NeuroImage suggests otherwise. The University of California, Berkeley team behind the study also reveal the one way to get through it.

The term for that cognitive fog is “sleep inertia,” but before the current study we’ve never been quite sure why people experience it, says Raphael Vallat, Ph.D., the lead study author and post-doctoral fellow at The University of California, Berkeley. In the paper, he proposes a reason why it exists: Even when the body is awake and moving in the morning, its brain is asleep in some capacity for some time after.

“When we wake up from sleep, our brain does not immediately switch from a sleep state to a fully awakened state but rather goes through this transition period called sleep inertia that can last up to 30 minutes,” Vallat tells Inverse. “During this period, the brain progressively switches from sleep to normal wakefulness, and so does our mental/cognitive performance.”
sleeping in
The brain fog you experience each morning has a name: "sleep inertia."
To demonstrate how real this transitional period is, Vallat had 34 participants take 45-minute naps in which they entered two periods of deep sleep known as N2 and N3. (They didn’t, however, enter rapid eye movement (REM) sleep — the deepest type of slumber.) When they woke up, Vallat tested their alertness with two subtraction tests, one five minutes after waking up and another one 25 minutes after waking up.

As anyone who’s experienced brain fog might expect, the subjects tended to make more mistakes right upon awakening — and their brain scans hinted at why.
When we’re awake, the brain oscillates between two different “modes” that occur in two separate circuits: a focused, task-active mode (which we use when reading or being productive) and a non-focused, task-negative mode (which is for mind-wandering). While we’re awake, we switch between these two modes: When the task-active mode is functional, there is usually a decrease in activity in the task-negative circuit. 

What makes the period of “sleep inertia” different, Vallat says, is that the brain struggles to switch fluidly between circuits.
Related video: A neuroscientist explains what happens to your brain on sleep deprivation.
“So, it’s as if our brain was not really able to switch between these two modes, and as a consequence, we also found that our participants had lower performance during sleep inertia in a mental calculation task,” he says.
Vallat’s results show that during the “sleep inertia” period, the brain slowly regains the ability to switch between these two modes, divided by “functional segregation.” He believes that it takes about 30 minutes to fully achieve this.
Unfortunately, Vallat laments, there’s not much we can do to speed up the wakeup process. Not even a caffeine boost is a true solution.

“There are some results that show that caffeine increases the functional segregation between the task-active and task-negative networks, thus enhancing the brain’s abilities to switch between these two modes,” Vallat says. But it may not actually work fast enough to cut through the sleep inertia.
“First, caffeine takes 30 to 60 minutes to reach its peak level, and we know that sleep inertia usually dissipates in 30 minutes, so even before the caffeine would actually start to have a strong action on your body,” he adds.

Instead of attempting to caffeinate through a period of slow brain functioning, Vallat recommends that perhaps the only real tonic for sleep inertia is time.
“The best thing to do is certainly to wait for a few minutes before making any important decisions or hitting the road, especially if you feel that you have just woken up from a deep slumber,” he recommends.

Abstract:

The first minutes following awakening from sleep are typically marked by reduced vigilance, increased sleepiness and impaired performance, a state referred to as sleep inertia. Although the behavioral aspects of sleep inertia are well documented, its cerebral correlates remain poorly understood. The present study aimed at filling this gap by measuring in 34 participants the changes in behavioral performance (descending subtraction task, DST), EEG spectral power, and resting-state fMRI functional connectivity across three time points: before an early-afternoon 45-min nap, 5 min after awakening from the nap and 25 min after awakening. Our results showed impaired performance at the DST at awakening and an intrusion of sleep-specific features (spectral power and functional connectivity) into wakefulness brain activity, the intensity of which was dependent on the prior sleep duration and depth for the functional connectivity (14 participants awakened from N2 sleep, 20 from N3 sleep). Awakening in N3 (deep) sleep induced the most robust changes and was characterized by a global loss of brain functional segregation between task-positive (dorsal attention, salience, sensorimotor) and task-negative (default mode) networks. Significant correlations were observed notably between the EEG delta power and the functional connectivity between the default and dorsal attention networks, as well as between the percentage of mistake at the DST and the default network functional connectivity. These results highlight (1) significant correlations between EEG and fMRI functional connectivity measures, (2) significant correlations between the behavioral aspect of sleep inertia and measures of the cerebral functioning at awakening (both EEG and fMRI), and (3) the important difference in the cerebral underpinnings of sleep inertia at awakening from N2 and N3 sleep.

25 October 2018

hfecell.info

6cstevec,

go to hfecell.info this new site is easier to find the information on, the attachments and file downloads cant be seen unless you register, free, and the same or better info.

The pdf gives a basic dry cell assembly and construction, you just take your available materials and make changes that will work with what you have or can buy. The fill & gas holes are important as to their placement, top for gas, bottom for fill, DUH! you say, well a centered hole along a flat top line will cause gas to cover a top portion of the plates, reducing effective production area, while gas fills the area looking for an escape. Place the holes so that rising gas finds the hole easily.

The seals or gaskets should be as narrow as possible so they cover the least amount of plate area, again you don't want to cover gas production area unnecessarily.

You can place bolt holes in the plates and seals to keep everything aligned, and insulated, but they take up precious plate area too. Placing bolts alongside the plates with insulator covering takes more planning, and can help align the plates if placed correctly, and close enough to the seals and plates.

My design in the pdf isn’t the only shape to use, look at it, redesign it, improve it, it’s your skills that determine the final outcome.

I’m running a similar one, with a +-+- config using 22 plates, with 1/32 gasket material from Advanced Auto Parts and .010 SS from Fastenal (302 SS, the same material as on your car for SS parts), and end frame plates from scrap 1/2″ Acrylic material from our local hockey arena. It pulls 45A in brute force using tap water and puts out 2 l/min. The reservoir is a 2 gal lawn tractor gas tank with added fittings and internal bubbler.

The electric connections can be a problem, but with a little forethought, you can adapt them any way you want and with many different type connectors. My first one, I used as a last resort, because I didn’t think that part thru, 14 gauge wire, wrapped (zig-zagged) around the terminals in a figure 8 pattern, with a connector for power, soldered to the ss, and yes I know ss doesn’t soldier, but the soldier does stick to the copper and flows thru the holes I drilled in the tabs to make secure connections.

Hope this helps.


dioxytetrahydride or SG Gas?



The Science Behind SG Gas


  • Our Discovery
  • The Differences
  • Patent Status

Our Discovery

The science behind the discover of SG GasAfter studying the Intriguing Nature of Water for many years, the lead Chemist and Mechanical Engineer of WIT discovered the Fourth State of Water. The other three states of water are liquid, solid (ice) and steam (or water vapor that condensates back to liquid water). This Discovered fourth state of water is a restructured dioxytetrahydride molecule with a reservoir of electrons that forms a stable homogenous gas or SG (“Suratt Gourley”) Gas.
 The production of this Gas is created using relatively low energy heat in an electromagnetic process. The resulting gas is flammable and the only combustible by-product of this Gas reverts back to the lower energy state of liquid water. One of the phenomenal discoveries is that SG Gas-infused Water stabilizes compounds for years including hydrogen peroxide.
Additional science and molecular theory of Dioxytetrahydride Gas (a.k.a., SG Gas) can be found in our pending patent applications.

L'union avec le Christ.



L'union avec le Christ.
John 15: 4 "Demeurez en moi et moi en vous. Une branche ne peut pas porter le fruit d'elle-même, si elle ne demeure pas dans la vigne; vous ne pouvez plus, à moins que vous ne restiez en moi."
C’est une vérité profonde, c’est la clé pour porter des fruits, mais c’est si facile à oublier. Parce que le fruit est porté sur la branche, il est facile de créditer la branche du fruit, lorsque c’est la vigne qui a tiré la vie de la terre et l’a canalisée à travers la branche.
De même, puisque nous sommes la branche par laquelle la vie de Dieu coule, nous pensons parfois que c'est notre propre sainteté qui produit le fruit.
Au moment où nous pensons de cette façon, nous ne demeurons plus
(nous faisons confiance; nous nous accrochons à) dans la vigne et nous deviendrons stériles
si nous persistons dans cet état d'esprit.
C'est vraiment un grand soulagement si le croyant comprend cela et l'applique correctement. Cela met toute la responsabilité sur Jésus. Notre seule responsabilité est de répondre à ses capacités. De la même manière que vous n’avez jamais vu une branche travaillant pour produire des fruits, tout ce que nous avons à faire est donc de travailler pour entrer

 
Son repos (confiance et dépendance) et confiance totale en Jésus comme notre source (Héb. 4:11).
Si nous demeurons en lui, le fruit viendra naturellement.
C'est notre foi en ce que Jésus a fait pour nous qui nous a sauvés, et notre foi doit continuer à être en Christ, pas en nous-mêmes, pour maintenir le salut. Notre sainteté, notre justice et notre justification sont des dons que nous recevons dans notre esprit à travers Jésus.
Tout comme la vie d'une racine se trouve dans le sol, ou une branche dans la vigne, ou un poisson dans la mer, de même la vraie vie du croyant se trouve dans l'union avec Christ.

About Google TranslateCommunityMobile

The union with Christ.



  The union with Christ.

John 15:4 "Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me."



This is a profound truth, that is the key to bearing fruit, but it is so easy to forget. Because the fruit is borne on the branch, it is easy to credit the branch with the fruit, when it is the vine that drew the life from the earth and channeled it through the branch.

Likewise, since we are the branch through which the life of God flows, we sometimes think that it is our own holiness that produces the fruit. 
The moment we think that way, we are no longer abiding 
(trusting in; clinging to)  in the vine and we will become fruitless 
if we persist in this mind set.

This is actually a great relief if the believer understands this and applies it properly. It puts all the responsibility on Jesus. Our only responsibility is to respond to His ability. In the same way that you have never seen a branch travailing to bring forth fruit, so all we have to do is labor to enter into
 His rest (trust and depend) and completely trust Jesus as our source
 (Heb. 4:11).

If we abide in Him, fruit will come naturally.

It's our faith in what Jesus did for us that saved us, and our faith has to continue to be in Christ, not in ourselves, to maintain salvation. Our holiness, righteousness, and justification are gifts that we receive in our spirits through Jesus.

Just like the life of a root is found in the soil, or a branch in the vine, or a fish in the sea, so the believer's true life is found in the union with Christ.

24 October 2018

Commentaire vivant d'Andrew Wommack.


Toutes les divisions entre chrétiens sont faites par l'homme et non par DieuNote sur Ephésiens 4: 3Le mot grec "SPOUDAZO", qui a été traduit par "s'efforcer" dans ce verset, signifie "utiliser la vitesse, c'est-à-dire faire des efforts, être prompt ou sérieux" (Strong’s Concordance). Donc, nous devons faire tous les efforts pour garder l'unité de la foi, mais nous devons nous rappeler qu'il faut être deux pour être dans l'unité. Nous ne pourrons y parvenir si d’autres ne veulent pas être unis à nous. Comme Paul l'a dit dans Romains 12:18, "S'il est possible, autant que possible en vous, vivez en paix avec tous les hommes."La vie d'aujourd'hui étudie la BibleNote 5 dans Éphésiens 4: 3: Le mot «effort» signifie «un effort consciencieux ou concerté visant un but…. Essayer… par emploi ou par dépense d'effort» (American Heritage Dictionary). L'unité de l'Esprit n'a pas été conservée dans le corps de Christ et, de fait, il y a très peu d'unité parmi les croyants aujourd'hui. Cela a pris des milliers d’années et cela ne sera probablement pas réglé du jour au lendemain. Nous devons nous efforcer d’atteindre l’unité sans être submergés par le problème.Remarque 6 dans Éphésiens 4: 3: Notez que cette Écriture ne nous dit pas de produire l’unité. Il est écrit: «gardons l'unité». Nous, chrétiens, avons déjà tous été unis les uns aux autres par le corps du Christ, et Dieu le Père nous voit tous comme ses enfants.Toutes les divisions entre chrétiens sont faites par l'homme et non par Dieu. Pendant une brève période, l'église a connu l'unité ici sur terre. Quels que soient les conflits et les divisions qui se sont produits, nous, croyants, sommes toujours un en Christ et nous vivrons dans une unité parfaite pendant toute l'éternité. Nous sommes maintenant un dans l'Esprit. Nous avons juste besoin de faire l'expérience de cette unité ici sur terre. «Que ton règne vienne. Que ta volonté soit faite sur la terre comme au ciel »(Matthieu 6:10).Dans les prochains versets, Paul a donné sept arguments qui prouvent que nous sommes vraiment un en Christ Jésus.Toutes les divisions entre chrétiens sont faites par l'homme et non par Dieu

23 October 2018

We must do the same.

***  We must do the same.

John 14:28 "Ye have heard how I said unto you, I go away, and come again unto you. If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, I go unto the Father: for my Father is greater than I."

Jesus stated His union with the Father so clearly that He was accused of blasphemy more than once. This statement about the Father being greater than Jesus must harmonize, not contradict other claims.
A key to understanding this is given in Philippians 2:6-8, where Paul states that Jesus didn't think it was robbery to be equal with God, but humbled Himself, taking on the form of a servant -
(speaking of His humanity).

 Jesus was equal to God in His divine nature but He made Himself inferior to the Father in regard to His humanity. Jesus didn't lose any of His deity when He became a man, but He did clothe it in flesh and submit it to the consequent limitations. In this sense, the Father was greater than Jesus.

Jesus is the pre-existent God who chose to become a man so he could redeem us by His own blood sacrifice. When He became a man, He was still one hundred percent God in His spirit, but His physical body was one hundred percent human. His body was sinless, but it was still flesh and subject to the natural things we all experience. The physical Jesus had to grow in wisdom and in stature.

When Jesus was born, His physical mind did not know all things. He had to be taught how to talk, walk, eat, and so forth. He had to learn that He was God in the flesh and accept that by faith. His physical mind grew in awareness of who He was. He had the witness in His spirit, but His physical mind had to "take it by faith"- the same way that we do when we believe who we are in the spiritual realm. Jesus' mental comprehension of His deity was something He learned and accepted by faith. Jesus had to become aware of His true identity through revelation and knowledge.

We must do the same.

21 October 2018

BC / AD or Liberal Logic?



Read on about the mess to conceal and confuse the reference to the birth of Christ!

This article is about the year numbering system.
**  {part from:}
https://www.wikipedia.org/
For the book, see Ab Urbe Condita Libri.

Following on Roman coins bear the following:

Antoninianus of Pacatianus, usurper of Roman emperor Philip in 248.

It bears the legend ROMAE  AETER[NAE] AN[NO] MIL[LESIMO] ET PRIMO,
"To eternal Rome, in its one thousand and first year". 
{The key word is 1001 years}

AUC, in either case, is a convention that was used in antiquity and by classical historians to refer to a given year in Ancient Rome. 


Ab urbe condita literally means "from the founding of the City," while anno urbis conditæ means "in the year since the City's founding." Therefore, the traditional year of the foundation of Rome, 753 BC, would be written AUC 1, while AD 1 would be AUC 754. The foundation of the Empire in 27 BC would be AUC 727.

Usage of the term was more common during the Renaissance, when editors sometimes added AUC to Roman manuscripts they published, giving the false impression that the convention was commonly used in antiquity.

{Which is a falsehood because -  In reality, the dominant method of identifying years in Roman times was to name the two consuls who held office that year. In late antiquity, regnal years were also in use, as was the Diocletian era in Roman Egypt after AD 293, and in the Byzantine Empire after AD 537, following a decree by Justinian.


**  Way back before many cared or had any real relevant reason to know or understand the calendar date system - folks just passed on a day at a time!

In modern western history the " Roman Empire " had become the key player and thus had set the date at the period of the life of Christ!

Eventually, the AD/BC way of marking history won the day and remained mostly unchallenged in the West until the late 21st century {When Liberal Socialist} started to play with the prevailing calendar of over 2000 years - In recent days it has become common practice to use the abbreviations CE (common era) and BCE (before common era) to mark history. The dates remain the same but the religious connotations are removed.

**

The Anno Domini (AD) year numbering was developed by a monk named Dionysius Exiguus in Rome in AD 525, as a result of his work on calculating the date of Easter. Dionysius did not use the AUC convention but instead based his calculations on the Diocletian era.
This convention had been in use since AD 293, the year of the tetrarchy, as it became impractical to use regnal years of the current emperor. Thus Easter was, the year AD 532 was equated with the 248th regnal year of Diocletian. The table counted the years starting from the presumed birth of Christ, rather than the accession of the emperor Diocletian on 20 November AD 284, or as stated by Dionysius: "sed magis elegimus ab incarnatione Domini nostri Jesu Christi annorum tempora praenotare… " ("but rather we choose to name the times of the years from the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ …").

[2] Blackburn and Holford-Strevens review interpretations of Dionysius which place the Incarnation in 2 BC, 1 BC, or AD 1.[3]

It has later been calculated[by whom?] (from the historical record of the succession of Roman consuls) that the year AD 1 corresponds to AUC 754, based on the epoch of Varro. Thus,

    AUC 1 = 753 BC

    AUC 753 = 1 BC

    AUC 754 = AD 1

    AUC 1000 = AD 247

    AUC 2753 = AD 2000

    AUC 2770 = AD 2017

    AUC 2771 = AD 2018

  In 2011 the BBC fully adopted using BCE

 to mark history; their explanation gives a good representation of the reasons for the change:
As the BBC is committed to impartiality, it is appropriate that we use terms that do not offend or alienate non-Christians.

{1) Which by its very implication is just copy of the pre-Liberal - original dates: which just serves as a fresco to bring doubt and confession.

2) Then really after noting that several of the major world religions and nations (such as China and India) have their own systems of the calendar - which they use. So who are we fooling?}

In line with modern practice, BCD/CE (Before Common Era/Common Era) are used as a religiously neutral alternative to BC/AD. Yet it is not Christian Religiously neutral - because they still refer to the birth of Christ!

Otherwise using all of the other various calendars would just seem to bring confusion and doubt to the simple over well used over 2000-year-old calendar system! Not to count all the history books and other data that would have to correct?

You are free to believe whatever - we will stick with the original over 2000-year-old proven calendar system - with the original BC / AD {Christ Centered} calendar! 

But then there is Liberal Logic to contend with!

au système de calendrier original, vieux de plus de 2000 ans!



Continuez à lire sur le désordre pour dissimuler et confondre la référence à la naissance du Christ!
Cet article concerne le système de numérotation des années.** {une pièce de:}https://www.wikipedia.org/Pour le livre, voir Ab Urbe Condita Libri.
Les pièces de monnaie romaines suivantes portent ce qui suit:
Antoninianus de Pacatianus, usurpateur de l'empereur romain Philippe en 248.
Il porte la légende ROMAE AETER [NAE] AN [NO] MIL [LESIMO] ET PRIMO, "À la Rome éternelle, en sa mille et unième année".{Le mot clé est 1001 ans}
Dans l'un et l'autre cas, AUC est une convention qui a été utilisée dans l'Antiquité et par les historiens classiques pour faire référence à une année donnée dans la Rome antique.

Ab urbe condita signifie littéralement "de la fondation de la ville", tandis qu'anno urbis conditæ signifie "l'année de la fondation de la ville". Par conséquent, l'année traditionnelle de la fondation de Rome, 753 av. J.-C., s'appellerait AUC 1, tandis que AD 1 serait: AUC 754. La fondation de l'Empire en 27 av. JC serait de 727 AUC.
L'utilisation du terme était plus courante à la Renaissance, lorsque les rédacteurs ajoutaient parfois AUC aux manuscrits romains qu'ils publiaient, donnant la fausse impression que la convention était couramment utilisée dans l'Antiquité.
{Ce qui est un mensonge parce que - En réalité, la méthode dominante d'identification des années à l'époque romaine consistait à nommer les deux consuls qui occupaient cette fonction cette année-là. À la fin de l'Antiquité, les années royales étaient également utilisées, de même que l'époque de Dioclétien en Egypte romaine après 293 et ​​dans l'Empire byzantin après 537, à la suite d'un décret de Justinien.

** De nombreuses années auparavant, de nombreuses personnes se souciaient vraiment du système de la date du calendrier ou avaient une raison réelle de le connaître - les gens venaient de passer un jour à la fois!
Dans l’histoire occidentale moderne, «l’empire romain» était devenu le principal acteur et avait donc fixé la date à l’époque de la vie du Christ!
Finalement, la manière AD / BC de marquer l’histoire a fait son chemin et est restée pratiquement inchangée dans l’Ouest jusqu’à la fin du 21e siècle {quand le Parti socialiste libéral} a commencé à jouer avec le calendrier dominant de plus de 2000 ans - il est devenu une pratique courante utiliser les abréviations CE (époque commune) et BCE (avant l'époque commune) pour marquer l'histoire. Les dates restent les mêmes mais les connotations religieuses sont supprimées.
**
La numérotation des années Anno Domini (AD) a été développée par un moine nommé Dionysius Exiguus à Rome en 525 après JC, à la suite de son travail sur le calcul de la date de Pâques. Dionysius n'a pas utilisé la convention de la Commission de l'Union africaine, mais a basé ses calculs sur l'ère Dioclétienne.Cette convention était en vigueur depuis l'an 293 de notre ère, l'année de la tétrarchie, car il devint impraticable d'utiliser les années royales de l'empereur actuel. Ainsi, à Pâques, l'année 532 fut assimilée à la 248ème année royale de Dioclétien. Le tableau comptait les années à partir de la naissance présumée du Christ, plutôt que de l'avènement de l'empereur Dioclétien le 20 novembre 284, ou selon ce que disait Dionysius: "sed magis elegimus ab incarnatione Domini nostri Jesu Christi annorum tempora praenotare ..." (" mais nous choisissons plutôt de nommer les temps des années à partir de l'incarnation de notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ… ").
[2] Blackburn et Holford-Strevens passent en revue les interprétations de Dionysius qui situent l'Incarnation en 2 av. J.-C., 1 av. J.-C. ou en l'an 1. [3]
Il a ensuite été calculé [par qui?] (À partir du compte rendu historique de la succession des consuls romains) que l'année AD 1 correspond à l'ASC 754, basée sur l'époque de Varro. Ainsi,

    
ASC 1 = 753 av.

    
ASC 753 = 1 av.

    
ASC 754 = AD 1

    
ASC 1000 = 247 après JC

    
ASC 2753 = AD 2000

    
ASC 2770 = AD 2017

    
ASC 2771 = AD 2018

  
En 2011, la BBC a pleinement adopté l'utilisation de BCE

 
marquer l'histoire; leur explication donne une bonne représentation des raisons du changement:La BBC étant attachée à l'impartialité, il convient d'utiliser des termes qui n'offensent pas et n'aliénent pas les non-chrétiens.
{1) Ce qui, par son implication même, n’est que la copie du pré-libéral - les dates originales: ne sert que de fresque pour apporter le doute et la confession.
2) Ensuite, vraiment, après avoir noté que plusieurs des grandes religions et nations du monde (telles que la Chine et l'Inde) ont leurs propres systèmes de calendrier - qu'ils utilisent. Alors, qui trompons-nous?}
Conformément à la pratique moderne, BCD / CE (Before Common Era / Common Era) est utilisé comme une alternative neutre sur le plan religieux à BC / AD. Pourtant, les chrétiens ne sont pas neutres sur le plan religieux, car ils font encore référence à la naissance du Christ!

Sinon, l'utilisation de tous les autres calendriers semblerait apporter de la confusion et du doute au simple système de calendrier bien utilisé de plus de 2000 ans! Ne pas compter tous les livres d'histoire et autres données qu'il faudrait corriger?

Vous êtes libre de croire ce que vous voulez - moi et ma famille, nous allons nous en tenir au système de calendrier original, vieux de plus de 2000 ans!

Il est le grand "je suis!"


Blog: Mon chemin de vie insolite ....par kerminator
Ne manquez pas Dieu en regardant dans la mauvaise direction
** Le Seigneur veut que nous nous concentrions sur lui par la foi et non sur les choses physiques qu'il utilise. **
Date: 21/10/2018

** Comme nous manquons souvent le merveilleux qui est vraiment juste devant nous!

Jean 14: 7"Si vous m'aviez connu, vous auriez aussi connu mon Père; vous le connaissez désormais et vous l'avez vu."

Connaître Jésus, c'est connaître le Père. Ce n'est pas seulement parce que Jésus a fait exactement ce qu'il a vu faire à son Père, mais Jésus était Dieu dans la chair.

Les disciples n'ont pas réalisé que voir Jésus était voir Dieu. Ils attendaient quelque chose de plus. Il nous manque souvent de voir que Dieu agit dans nos vies et dans nos circonstances, parce que nous recherchons quelque chose de prodigieux. Bien qu'il soit vrai que Dieu est totalement génial, il ne choisit généralement pas de se manifester de cette manière.

Dieu a parlé à Élie non pas dans le feu, le vent ou un tremblement de terre, mais d'une voix douce et basse. Selon les normes de l'homme, Jésus n'est pas venu sur cette terre en grand, mais est né de parents pauvres dans une étable. Esaïe 53: 2 dit que Jésus n'avait ni forme ni beauté qui nous ferait penser qu'il était autre chose qu'un simple homme.

Paul révèle dans 1 Corinthiens 1: 27-29 que Dieu choisit de faire les choses de cette façon, afin qu'aucune chair ne se glorifie en sa présence. Le Seigneur veut que nous nous concentrions sur lui par la foi et non sur les choses physiques qu'il utilise. Dans l'Ancien Testament, lorsque le Seigneur utilisa des instruments visibles pour libérer son pouvoir, les Israélites en firent des idoles.

Tout comme les disciples ont vu Jésus sans se rendre compte que ce qu'ils ont vu était Dieu, de même, Dieu est infiniment impliqué dans notre quotidien, mais il nous manque parce que nous sommes aveuglés par notre esprit charnel. La principale raison pour laquelle Dieu choisit d'utiliser ceux qui ne sont rien par rapport aux normes du monde est pour que personne d'autre ne prenne le crédit des grandes choses qui ont été accomplies.

Dieu n'a impressionner personne! Il est le grand "je suis!" Pourquoi chercher plus loin?

How we miss the stupendous which is really right before us!

** How we often miss the stupendous which is really right before us!

John 14:7 
"If ye had known me, ye should have known my Father also: and from henceforth ye know him, and have seen him."



Knowing Jesus is knowing the Father. This is not only because Jesus did exactly what He saw His Father do, but Jesus was God in the flesh.

The disciples didn't realize that seeing Jesus was seeing God. They were expecting something more. Many times we miss seeing God work in our lives and circumstances because we are looking for something stupendous. Although it is true that God is totally awesome, He doesn't usually choose to manifest Himself in that way.

God spoke to Elijah not in the fire, wind, or an earthquake, but in a still, small voice. Jesus didn't come to this earth in a grand way by man's standards, but was born to poor parents in a stable. Isaiah 53:2 says that Jesus had no form nor beauty that would make us think that He was anything more than a mere man.

Paul reveals in 1 Corinthians 1:27-29, that God chooses to do things this way so that no flesh will glory in His presence. The Lord wants us to focus on Him through faith and not concentrate on the physical things He uses. In the Old Testament when the Lord did use visible instruments to release His power, the Israelites made idols out of those things.

Just as the disciples saw Jesus but didn't realize that what they saw was God, likewise, God is infinitely involved in our everyday lives, but we miss Him because we are blinded by our carnal minds. The primary reason that God chooses to use those who are nothing by the world's standards is so that no one else will take the credit for the great things that are accomplished.

God does nort have to impress anyone!  He is the Great " I Am! "


Featured Post

The most powerful message ever preached in past 50 years !

 AWMI.com  **  The most powerful message ever preached in past 50 years !  10 Reasons It's Better to Have the Holy Spirit ...

Popular