From Me:

Sunday, January 29, 2006

good ole' days


good ole' days 2
Originally uploaded by adam_goblue.
Here's one that makes a tad bit of
sense.

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Ecumenical Jihad

This is a very good book i just got done reading by Peter Kreeft. I'd high suggest anyone to read it. It's about all religions fighting against evil. To put it one way are enemies are not muslims, or protestants, but are now atheism, abortion, and the other things. (Think of in the Lord of the rings, how dwarfs and elves didn't get along, but they still worked together to fight evil.) Peter Kreeft says God will forge a new alliance in this millenium. He said our alliance won't be us giving up our faiths and saying we are wrong on everything and they are right, but it will mean us working together to fight against satan. He reminds us of the things we can learn from other religions. He doesn't mean all things in other religions are true, but instead he means by learning about other religions we will be reminded of the things our religion has had. Just like when you go over someone else's house and you notice they have a certain something. You remember you have that same thing at your own house. It mentions America as the new rome that is becoming corrupt and the society won't last, just like the roman empire didn't last, if we continue to allow such things. Russians are allowing God back into their schools while America has been trying to take God out.

Saturday, January 21, 2006

A Difficult Battle (A Time to retreat)


Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Claws out over claim China discovered America

By Lindsay Beck and Ben Blanchard
BEIJING (Reuters) - The Chinese are said to have discovered gunpowder, paper and the compass, but it may be too early to claim they discovered America.
A map purported to date from 1418 suggesting a Chinese fleet sailed to America decades before Christopher Columbus was displayed in Beijing Monday, but the piece of yellowing paper is the center of a storm of criticism over its authenticity.
The map, which is said to be an 18th-century copy of the 1418 original, shows both North and South America in unusual detail.
It was bought in 2001 by Chinese lawyer and art collector Liu Gang, who says he did not realize its significance until reading a book by a British writer who claimed a Chinese admiral beat Columbus to the punch.
Gavin Menzies, author of the bestseller "1421: the Year China Discovered America," says Admiral Zheng He led a fleet of 30,000 men aboard 300 ships to the American continent in the 15th century to expand Ming China's influence.
"This map embodies information I believe will help us understand Zheng He's seventh voyage," Liu, who bought the map for $500, told a news conference.
"The map shows us the Chinese explorer has been to America years before Columbus. The map also shows us the Chinese understanding of the entire world."
Yet whether Zheng, a Muslim eunuch known to have sailed as far as southern Africa, beat Columbus to America by more than 70 years is bitterly debated.
Some academics point to a score of inconsistencies in both the book and the map, saying, for example, the map uses language that does not fit the style of Ming China.
"I'm inclined to think that it's a fake," said Geoff Wade, a visiting senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore. "There's absolutely no evidence that the Zheng He voyages went anywhere past the east coast of Africa."
Historical records show that from 1405 to 1433, Zheng, under the orders of Emperor Zhu Di, led China's imperial Star Fleet on seven epic voyages.

China discovers the New World

By Lindsay Beck and Ben Blanchard
BEIJING (Reuters) - The Chinese are said to have discovered gunpowder, paper and the compass, but it may be too early to claim they discovered America.
A map purported to date from 1418 suggesting a Chinese fleet sailed to America decades before Christopher Columbus was displayed in Beijing Monday, but the piece of yellowing paper is the center of a storm of criticism over its authenticity.
The map, which is said to be an 18th-century copy of the 1418 original, shows both North and South America in unusual detail.
It was bought in 2001 by Chinese lawyer and art collector Liu Gang, who says he did not realize its significance until reading a book by a British writer who claimed a Chinese admiral beat Columbus to the punch.
Gavin Menzies, author of the bestseller "1421: the Year China Discovered America," says Admiral Zheng He led a fleet of 30,000 men aboard 300 ships to the American continent in the 15th century to expand Ming China's influence.
"This map embodies information I believe will help us understand Zheng He's seventh voyage," Liu, who bought the map for $500, told a news conference.
"The map shows us the Chinese explorer has been to America years before Columbus. The map also shows us the Chinese understanding of the entire world."
Yet whether Zheng, a Muslim eunuch known to have sailed as far as southern Africa, beat Columbus to America by more than 70 years is bitterly debated.
Some academics point to a score of inconsistencies in both the book and the map, saying, for example, the map uses language that does not fit the style of Ming China.
"I'm inclined to think that it's a fake," said Geoff Wade, a visiting senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore. "There's absolutely no evidence that the Zheng He voyages went anywhere past the east coast of Africa."
Historical records show that from 1405 to 1433, Zheng, under the orders of Emperor Zhu Di, led China's imperial Star Fleet on seven epic voyages.

Saturday, January 14, 2006

Calendar

By papal decree, the Gregorian Calendar replace the Julian in 1582. Only part of the world heeded the change. England and the American colonies finally followed suit in 1752, and Wednesday, September 2, 1752 was immediately followed by Thursday, September 14, 1752.