Random Thoughts Part 5: Time to Split Again

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WWGD said:
How is/was the storm going there in DC?
Seems to be sticking to predictions of near 2 feet. We officially had around 7 inches as of 10pm last night and it looks to be well over a foot by now. There are some innocent looking drifts in the driveway that will probably take a few hours to clear. We have a plow dedicated to our subdivision and he is working hard right now.
 
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Borg said:
Seems to be sticking to predictions of near 2 feet. We officially had around 7 inches as of 10pm last night and it looks to be well over a foot by now. There are some innocent looking drifts in the driveway that will probably take a few hours to clear. We have a plow dedicated to our subdivision and he is working hard right now.
Thanks, I (really do not) look forward to it coming this way. A lot of flooding dangers, specially to the people who already suffered through Sandy.
 
WWGD said:
Thanks, I (really do not) look forward to it coming this way. A lot of flooding dangers, specially to the people who already suffered through Sandy.
Time to head out for my first pass at shoveling. :nb)
 
Current temperature in Istanbul is 34º F (1º C).
 
Borg said:
Time to head out for my first pass at shoveling. :nb)
I guess I am spoiled, the rental company takes care of it. Good thing I got those snow boots in the going out of business sale. Timberlands for $20. I feel like a vulture buying from dying businesses.
 
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From: http://fox2now.com/2015/01/16/boy-w...its-story-was-a-lie-book-pulled-from-shelves/

"ST. LOUIS, MO (KTVI)- The 6-year-old boy who said he went to heaven and came back to Earth has admitted that the story was false. The best-selling Christian book, “The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven” was released in 2010.

It was co-written by Alex Malarkey and his dad, Kevin, who is a Christian therapist."

Can you believe this? If you wanted to make a book about a bogus story and pass it off as real, would you hire a guy named Alex Malarkey to write it? :oldbiggrin:

Yes, pick me up a copy...

41baltbwikl.jpg


I like how the "Malarkey" is right under "a true story." o0)
 
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DiracPool said:
If you wanted to make a book about a bogus story and pass it off as real, would you hire a guy named Alex Malarkey to write it? :oldbiggrin:
It's kind of hard to believe it's anyone's real name. Makes me wonder if there's also a William Bogus and Samuel Bunk out there.
 
DiracPool said:
From: http://fox2now.com/2015/01/16/boy-w...its-story-was-a-lie-book-pulled-from-shelves/

"ST. LOUIS, MO (KTVI)- The 6-year-old boy who said he went to heaven and came back to Earth has admitted that the story was false. The best-selling Christian book, “The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven” was released in 2010.

It was co-written by Alex Malarkey and his dad, Kevin, who is a Christian therapist."

Can you believe this? If you wanted to make a book about a bogus story and pass it off as real, would you hire a guy named Alex Malarkey to write it? :oldbiggrin:

Yes, pick me up a copy...

41baltbwikl.jpg


I like how the "Malarkey" is right under "a true story." o0)

I am a believer, some kind of Catholic-pagan-agnostic mystic mix but I really don't like books like this and reports of Virgin Mary on toast etc. They are just opportunities for atheists to make fun of believers and make intelligent believers question their faith (should my belief be based on burned toast?)
 
zoobyshoe said:
It's kind of hard to believe it's anyone's real name. Makes me wonder if there's also a William Bogus and Samuel Bunk out there.
Does that mean the book's writer doesn't necessarily use his real name in the cover ? I once made a question about how to publish a book to a publisher and they asked me to provide them my ID card photo.
 
Sophia said:
I am a believer, some kind of Catholic-pagan-agnostic mystic mix but I really don't like books like this and reports of Virgin Mary on toast etc. They are just opportunities for atheists to make fun of believers and make intelligent believers question their faith (should my belief be based on burned toast?)
I too am a believer (Buddhism is here :woot:), on a believing scale of 1 to 5, I place my belief on 3. :biggrin:
 
zoobyshoe said:
It's kind of hard to believe it's anyone's real name. Makes me wonder if there's also a William Bogus and Samuel Bunk out there.

Actually, I just took a second look at it, and there's two Malarkey's that co-wrote it, Kevin Malarkey and his son Alex Malarkey, who's keeping the tradition alive. So does this make the book "Double Malarkey?" I'm wondering...:oldeyes:
 
Silicon Waffle said:
I too am a believer (Buddhism is here :woot:), on a believing scale of 1 to 5, I place my belief on 3. :biggrin:
Similar here. I was raised in agnostic family, than became an evangelical Christian at High school but soon discovered serious logical issues with that type of religion. I officially entered Catholic church 3 years ago at the age of 25. That was a result of meeting some really cool people at university centre for catholic youth. But except for like 2 years during my adolescence, I've never believed anything to be 100% true. It's just that I wish something was true, it would be comforting. But I have no evidence for it. Only some personal experiences, but of course, that is not an evidence.
So, It would be number 3 for me as well.
 
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Silicon Waffle said:
I too am a believer (Buddhism is here :woot:), on a believing scale of 1 to 5, I place my belief on 3. :biggrin:

I wonder about type of Buddhism in your area. Is it philosophical with lots of meditation as we usually think about Buddhism in the West or is it more superstitious, worshipping saints, protection against evil spirits and similar? Because I know there are many types of Hinduism but I'm not really familiar with Buddhism.
 
DiracPool said:
Actually, I just took a second look at it, and there's two Malarkey's that co-wrote it, Kevin Malarkey and his son Alex Malarkey, who's keeping the tradition alive. So does this make the book "Double Malarkey?" I'm wondering...:oldeyes:
I'd say that's a lot of Malarkey. :oldtongue:
 
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Sophia said:
...Is it philosophical with lots of meditation as we usually think about Buddhism in the West or is it more superstitious, worshipping saints, protection against evil spirits and similar? ...
Both I think. :biggrin:

Do people in your area play the game Paper, Scissors, Rock ?:smile:
 
Silicon Waffle said:
Both I think. :biggrin:

Do people in your area play the game Paper, Scissors, Rock ?:smile:
yes :)
and I don't know the einglish name, but the game where you draw a table and draw circles and crosses and try to get 5 in a row :)
 
RockPaperScissorsLizardSpock.jpg

Sheldon's version
 
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fresh_42 said:
...Why do you ask? Did anybody actually played Paper, Scissors, Rock, Spock?

I don't know about the origin of the game. But it shows the interdependence and relativeness of things by the above image.
 
Silicon Waffle said:
I don't know about the origin of the game. But it shows the interdependence and relativeness of things by the above image.
that's an interesting thought. Now I see how it relates to buddhism
 
Hi Silicon Waffle, hi Borg. Whatcha cooking... :smile:
 
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Weird how some words have "fake roots" : minister does not derive from mini, the pastry profiterol does not come from profit
and butter does not come from butt (at least I really hope not.)
 
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WWGD said:
Weird how some words have "fake roots" : minister does not derive from mini, the pastry profiterol does not come from profit
and butter does not come from butt (at least I really hope not.)

No but milk comes from a teat how horrible is that.
 
There's this station on the Antenna TV called "Decades" with Charles Kuralt. This station has all the old cheesy 70's docu-dramas. This weekend they've got the "Kojak binge." I haven't seen Kojak since I was 8 years old. But in this episode I'm watching right now I see at least 5 characters that all appeared in Brian De Palma's "Scarface." What? They even have Salieri from Amadeus:

f-murray-abraham_222345.jpg


Is that all they did to put together Scarface, hijack Kojak and throw in Al Pacino?! o0)
 
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DiracPool said:
There's this station on the Antenna TV called "Decades" with Charles Kuralt. This station has all the old cheesy 70's docu-dramas. This weekend they've got the "Kojak binge." I haven't seen Kojak since I was 8 years old. But in this episode I'm watching right now I see at least 5 characters that all appeared in Brian De Palma's "Scarface." What? They even have Salieri from Amadeus:

f-murray-abraham_222345.jpg


Is that all they did to put together Scarface, hijack Kojak and throw in Al Pacino?! o0)

I have this channel that shows "Starsky and Hutch" , a show, I think, from the 60s-70s, together with other shows and documentaries from that era. I think it is called Cloo.
 
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