His method or methodology is so simple, matter-of-fact, and effective!
Was Watchtower teaching anything worthy of being selected by Jesus in 1918/1919?
Read THE FINISHED MYST ERY and find out!
Total bullshit teaching unworthy of Jesus. Judgment rendered: Watchtower does NOT qualify.
Posts by Terry
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14
Is there ANY possibility at all that the WatchTower and the Governing Body has the TRUTH? (You're about to find out)
by Terry inin my opinion, having been a jehovah's witness for twenty years as well as being an ex-jw for forty-three years,is that the following talk as given by peter gregerson, emphatically removes any shadow of a doubt aboutwhether the claim for the faithful slave has any merit whatsoever.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ytcj6smffbk&t=3145s.
note: (references to the publication the finished mystery are given.
you can read the entire book here:https://www.gutenberg.org/files/46016/46016-pdf.pdf.
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Terry
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14
Is there ANY possibility at all that the WatchTower and the Governing Body has the TRUTH? (You're about to find out)
by Terry inin my opinion, having been a jehovah's witness for twenty years as well as being an ex-jw for forty-three years,is that the following talk as given by peter gregerson, emphatically removes any shadow of a doubt aboutwhether the claim for the faithful slave has any merit whatsoever.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ytcj6smffbk&t=3145s.
note: (references to the publication the finished mystery are given.
you can read the entire book here:https://www.gutenberg.org/files/46016/46016-pdf.pdf.
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Terry
In my opinion, having been a Jehovah's Witness for twenty years as well as being an Ex-JW for forty-three years,
is that the following talk as given by PETER GREGERSON, emphatically removes any shadow of a doubt about
whether the claim for the Faithful Slave has ANY MERIT whatsoever.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTcj6SmFfbk&t=3145sNOTE: (references to the publication THE FINISHED MYSTERY are given. You can read the entire book here:
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/46016/46016-pdf.pdf -
11
WHERE do I live? Some people call it COWTOWN
by Terry inwhere do i live?.
people say: cowtown.
i say: it ain't.. i've lived in fort worth all but ten of my seventy-five years.. nobody ever asked me why fort worth is called cow town.. i would guess it is self-evident.. how many of us who live in fort worth realize those two words are gleaming with history?.
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Terry
Nah nah
non non nah nah -
4
(Poppa was a ) GUITAR MAN
by Terry in(poppa was a) guitar manpoppa drank from muddy waters made three sons and then four daughtersmomma owns the things he bought her for a songshe lived like old blind lemonbut his messin’ with wild women done her wrongi found him in new orleans livin’ off one of his darlingsin a jail drunk on rye whisky just becausehe’d broken every law there ever wasi bailed his sorry ass out, took him home and watched him pass outthen he woke up, swore he’d do it all againfriends tell me not to bother, i’ll become just like my fatherin bars on bad guitars like my old manhe’d sing:“there’s no harm in harmony and nothin’ fair about farewell,one of these days i’ll mend my waysor end up down in hell.”_____(i got) one old silver dollar in a suitcase in the parlorpoppa’s porkpie hat and coat are down the hallgonna break a pawn shop window snatch his guitar quick and then gograb a southbound bus to nachadoches townbar chords earn my living, and some women are forgivingwhen i sing the things the lady loves to heargirls with lonely faces sipping beer in lowdown placesguitar man’s the candy for her earnow i sing:“darlin’ i sure love you, my oh my if you piss me off this bird is gonna flyboo-yah - why oh why ohdo i do the thing that makes my baby cry?”______you can live for love or glory but the moral of this storyis that fate determines “what, where, when, and why”some of us are teachers, plumbers, bums, or holy preachersin the end my friend, we’re all a-gonna die_______poppa was a guitar man he sang the blues but had no plannow i’m the acorn from his crooked oak, i play for drunks and sing for mealsor break a window and i stealjust go ahead and laugh but i’m no joke________some cats fall - land on their toes (but that’s just how their story goes)dogs chase cars - run over on the roadi pluck, and slide, and moan and waili got my tiger by its tailall a man can do is bear his load________bar chords earn my living, but some women are forgivingwhen i sing the things the ladies love to hearthose girls with lonely faces sipping beer in lowdown placesthis guitar man is the candy for their ears___________i got one old silver dollar that he left me when he diedmomma cried and called to tell me at the bar.
i told her i was sorry, she said,.
“you know what you are?”i guess i maybe should have, could have lied.
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Terry
(Poppa was a) GUITAR MAN
Poppa drank from Muddy Waters
made three sons and then four daughters
Momma owns the things he bought her
for a song
She lived like old Blind Lemon
But his messin’ with wild women
done her wrong
I found him in New Orleans
livin’ off one of his darlings
in a jail drunk on rye whisky just because
He’d broken every law there ever was
I bailed his sorry ass out,
took him home and watched him pass out
Then he woke up, swore he’d do it all again
Friends tell me not to bother,
I’ll become just like my father
In bars on bad guitars like my old man
He’d sing:
“There’s no harm in harmony
and nothin’ fair about farewell,
one of these days I’ll mend my ways
or end up down in Hell.”
_____
(I got) one old silver dollar
in a suitcase in the parlor
Poppa’s porkpie hat and coat are down the hall
Gonna break a Pawn Shop window
Snatch his guitar quick and then go
grab a southbound bus to Nachadoches town
Bar chords earn my living, and some women are forgiving
When I sing the things the lady loves to hear
Girls with lonely faces sipping beer in lowdown places
Guitar Man’s the candy for her ear
Now I sing:
“Darlin’ I sure love you, my oh my
If you piss me off this bird is gonna fly
Boo-Yah - why oh why oh
Do I do the thing that makes my baby cry?”
______
You can live for love or glory
but the moral of this story
Is that Fate determines “what, where, when, and why”
Some of us are teachers,
plumbers, bums, or holy preachers
In the End my friend, we’re all a-gonna die
_______
Poppa was a Guitar Man
He sang the Blues but had no plan
Now I’m the acorn from his crooked oak,
I play for drunks and sing for meals
Or break a window and I steal
Just go ahead and laugh but I’m no joke
________
Some cats fall - land on their toes
(but that’s just how their story goes)
Dogs chase cars - run over on the road
I pluck, and slide, and moan and wail
I got my tiger by its tail
All a man can do is bear his load
________
Bar chords earn my living, but some women are forgiving
When I sing the things the ladies love to hear
Those girls with lonely faces
sipping beer in lowdown places
This Guitar Man is the candy for their ears
___________
I got one old silver dollar
That he left me when he died
Momma cried and called to tell me at the BarI told her I was sorry, she said,
“You know what you are?”
I guess I maybe should have, could have lied
I said: Poppa was a Guitar Man and so am I
I said:“We don't choose our lives because
I am just what I am!
I’m only what my daddy was…
and
Poppa was a Guitar Man ”
_____________________
I said “Poppa was a Guitar Man”
________________________
I don't know if this is a song, a poem, or just a waste of time! :) -
11
WHERE do I live? Some people call it COWTOWN
by Terry inwhere do i live?.
people say: cowtown.
i say: it ain't.. i've lived in fort worth all but ten of my seventy-five years.. nobody ever asked me why fort worth is called cow town.. i would guess it is self-evident.. how many of us who live in fort worth realize those two words are gleaming with history?.
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Terry
It strikes me as interesting that so few people are interested per se in HISTORY
and yet a town like my own embraces the past culturally. Maybe a balance of
the past and a vision of the future would be best.
Except for a few Billionaires (or not so few) RANCHES are invisible to people in Texas cities.
They mean nothing to everyday people. All of that is romanticized, however.
When I was in Europe (2018) taxi drivers, when asked, said they'd love to come to the U.S.
and visit --wait for it ...wait for it ...LAS VEGAS and DISNEYWORLD!
Two of the least plausible American cities possible! -
14
What sort of people were the JW's who went to prison? Government study tells all
by Terry indo you feel a draft?
(jw’s did-in the 1960s)i thought you might find it interesting to review exactly what the u.s. government thought, studied, and wrote about people of conscience during the vietnam war.what follows comes from official records…more than half of the 27 million men eligible for the draft during the vietnam war were deferred, exempted, or disqualified.
(cortright, david (2008).
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Terry
Vidiot:
Terry - "What sort of people were the JW's who went to prison?"
also Terry - "useful idiots"
Not that you're wrong, but...
...don't be so hard on yourself.
_________
I think I have to own it.
I wasn't kidnapped - my mind was and the instructions I was given
was a conspiracy resulting in co-opting my conscience.
Staying with a spouse who cheats or who beats you is a kind of bewildering "choice" that is
more psychological abuse than elective decision-making.
If nothing else, I was a SUCKER who fell for a bad investment. -
4
Baptists have more in common with JW's than they think
by Terry inhttps://apnews.com/article/baptist-religion-sexual-abuse-by-clergy-southern-convention-bfdbe64389790630488f854c3dae3fd5"leaders of the southern baptist convention, america’s largest protestant denomination, stonewalled and denigrated survivors of clergy sex abuse over almost two decades while seeking to protect their own reputations, according to a scathing 288-page investigative report issued sunday.. these survivors, and other concerned southern baptists, repeatedly shared allegations with the sbc’s executive committee, “only to be met, time and time again, with resistance, stonewalling, and even outright hostility from some within the ec,” said the report.. the seven-month investigation was conducted by guidepost solutions, an independent firm contracted by the executive committee after delegates to last year’s national meeting pressed for a probe by outsiders.. “our investigation revealed that, for many years, a few senior ec leaders, along with outside counsel, largely controlled the ec’s response to these reports of abuse ... and were singularly focused on avoiding liability for the sbc,” the report said.
".
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Terry
The American Baptists are in a whole heap of organizational trouble on all sides. It will be interesting to
see how it all shakes out. -
11
WHERE do I live? Some people call it COWTOWN
by Terry inwhere do i live?.
people say: cowtown.
i say: it ain't.. i've lived in fort worth all but ten of my seventy-five years.. nobody ever asked me why fort worth is called cow town.. i would guess it is self-evident.. how many of us who live in fort worth realize those two words are gleaming with history?.
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Terry
NonCoinCollector
The cattle from Fort Worth often ended up in Abilene, Wichita, and Dodge City, Kansas. Which is were I have spent most of my life. Nice to know a little history from Fort Worth.
NON COIN COLLECTOR :
Is that sort of like "ain't Indian"? -
11
WHERE do I live? Some people call it COWTOWN
by Terry inwhere do i live?.
people say: cowtown.
i say: it ain't.. i've lived in fort worth all but ten of my seventy-five years.. nobody ever asked me why fort worth is called cow town.. i would guess it is self-evident.. how many of us who live in fort worth realize those two words are gleaming with history?.
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Terry
Simon: We're in Calgary, also called "Cowtown"
______
Hmmm, shouldn't it be CAL Town? :) -
11
WHERE do I live? Some people call it COWTOWN
by Terry inwhere do i live?.
people say: cowtown.
i say: it ain't.. i've lived in fort worth all but ten of my seventy-five years.. nobody ever asked me why fort worth is called cow town.. i would guess it is self-evident.. how many of us who live in fort worth realize those two words are gleaming with history?.
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Terry
WHERE DO I LIVE?
People say: COWTOWN
I say: It ain't.
I've lived in Fort Worth all but ten of my seventy-five years.
Nobody ever asked me why Fort Worth is called Cow Town.
I would guess it is self-evident.
How many of us who live in Fort Worth realize those two words are gleaming with history?
-FORT-
A real fort way back in the 1800s protected the army from very upset people "already" living in the territory.
We used to call them Indians.
(Columbus: "Oops, we're not in India?")
Heck - these indigenous tribes even called themselves that.
But - who am I to argue? I'll call them "ain't Indians."
The local Fort was named after a soldier named Worth.
-WORTH-
William Worth, a General in the U.S. Army in the 1840s.
Worth joined the Army when the War of 1812 erupted.
He was only 18 years old.
What’s odd about this?
Worth was reared by deeply religious parents who were Quakers! One suspects an 18-year-old Quaker boy was extremely anxious to get away from a fanatical religious community even if it meant physical danger!
Quakers were rigorous Pacifists.
However...Great Britain had long been interfering with trade on the high seas, kidnapping Americans and impressing them into forced servitude, as well as bribing the ain’t-Indians to attack settlers.
President Madison requested Congress declare war in 1812 and the young Quaker jumped at a chance to demonstrate what a tough apostate Quaker could do to put the kibosh on ‘bad guys.’
In his first battle against the Chippewa (ain’t-Indians), Worth was almost fatally wounded. Afterward, he was awarded the rank of Major for his bravery (if not effectiveness.)
In the next ten years, he fought against the Seminoles and rose in rank again to General after fighting in every major battle between the U.S. and Mexico.
Unfortunately, he died of cholera in 1849. (Drinking bad water.)
If he had been less religious, he'd have been drinking beer or whiskey, eh?
Just .saying..
Do you suppose William Worth is buried in the city named after him?
You’d be wrong. He was buried in Brooklyn, New York. (Don’t ask!)
What is important is that General Worth was considered a great military tactician. He proposed building a series of 10 protective forts to be constructed in the newly won Mexican territory (ain’t-yet-Texas) and one of those forts was named in his honor.
Why? What's so special about a non-liquor-drinking dead Major who was an apostate Quaker? Personally, he was admirable. A real gentleman - and a fabulous mentor.
A big admirer of Worth - a young Major who hero-worshipped Worth had been dispatched to find an ideal spot for one of these forts.
His name was Ripley Arnold.
Arnold established a post on the banks of the Trinity and named it Camp Worth in honor of the late General Worth.
In August 1849, Arnold moved the camp to a north-facing bluff that overlooked the mouth of the Clear Fork.
The US War Department officially granted the name "Fort Worth" to the post on 14 November 1849.
Got that? Okay!
The trouble with ain’t-Indians continued until the U.S. Army abandoned Fort Worth in 1853 at which point it becomes an ain’t-Fort.
An abandoned fort just sitting next to the Trinity River with the sound of crickets and cicadas sounds pretty sad, huh?
Oh sure - a few people remained. But what did they call the place in which they lived?
Let's consider the following...
(Note: armies and settlers from Spain called the area belonging to them, “Tejas”.)
Why?
The indigenous people, Caddo, welcomed them as friends and “Tejas” means “allies.” Or: Friends.
(Ironically, this is what Quakers call each other!)
Over time, before Texas became a sovereign nation in 1836, Texian or Texican referred to any resident, of any color or language.
I tell people I AM A TEXICAN.
______
What is now called Texas existed under 6 different flags in the course of its history.
"Six countries have had sovereignty over some or all of the current territory of the U.S. state of Texas:
1, Spain (1519–1685; 1690–1821),
2. France (1685–1690),
3. Mexico (1821–1836),
4. Republic of Texas (1836–1845),
5. Confederate States of America (1861–1865),
6. The United States of America
______
Here’s the part you need to understand…
The early settlers in the area around Fort Worth were rugged individualists. They flourished and built stores, schools, hospitals, department stores, and all the trappings of what would become a city.
I’ve lived in Fort Worth since 1947 and I recognize the names of these founding fathers on buildings, street signs, parks, and businesses as their legacy as indomitable folk who stuck with their dreams when even the U.S. Army gave up and moved on.
I like that Ft. Worth is named after an Apostate! I’m one too, after all.
________
“So, Terry, is that the whole story? You didn’t explain the Cowtown Ain’t the title of this tale.”
Yes, you’re right.
Hang in and hang on and you’ll be repaid for your patience, gentle reader!
__________
The city of Fort Worth is inside the greater County of Tarrant.
By the time the Civil War broke out in 1860, Tarrant County had 850 slaves to account for and roughly 6,000 whites (who probably were white.) The County flourished with free labor at its core and soon voted to abandon its fealty to other States in America by seceding from the Union.
Was this a prudent business decision, a good Christian decision, a patriotic decision, or just a case of CYA? (Cover yer ass.)
History tells the tale.
Judgment is rendered in the results of that decision by the founding fathers of Fort Worth and Tarrant County.
At the end of the Civil War, Fort Worth was down to a population of 175 persons. If that doesn’t teach you a lesson--you’re never going to learn one.
How did Fort Worth revive its economy?
Glad you asked!
The answer in one word is cattle.
Fort Worth became COWTOWN.
Pause and reflect...
Longhorns stolen and purchased from Mexico were driven up through the middle of Texas toward the well-watered triple branched TRINITY River complex and...Cowtown (Fort Worth.)
Here’s a fast fact for you.
Texas is mostly prairie, grassland, hills and desert, forests, and only ONE natural lake: Caddo.
Texas is FLAT and DRY except for its rivers.
If you’re driving cattle, you’re compelled to follow the grass and the rivers. If you do that, you end up in Fort Worth: Cowtown.
Between 1866 and 1890, 4 million head of cattle passed through Cowtown (Fort Worth.)
Once railroads became established in 1876, the idea of a treacherous land journey through hostile territories was abandoned.
Cowboys spent their money and moved on.
When did COWTOWN become AIN’T COWTOWN?
You ask a lot of questions - don't you?
Well, listen up Pilgrim.
Greenleaf Simpson was a wealthy Boston capitalist, seduced into investing in local stockyards by some fast talk and sweet promises of wealth to come. In 1893, Simpson offered $133 thousand for the local stockyards and he, in turn, lured other Northern capitalists to join him in the meatpacking business. By the year 1900, both Armour and Swift had opened regional processing plants in the area.
The flow of cattle, stock exchanges, slaughterhouses, meat processing industries made Fort Worth the “Wall Street of the West.”
Feeders and Breeders convened regularly at the newly constructed Cowtown Coliseum and an annual Fat Stock Show and Rodeo commenced its tradition.
1923 arrived as $30 million flowed through the local economy.
Over 5 million cattle were processed and rendered by WWII until the boom turned after the war into a bust.
The rise of Interstate highways and the trucking industry replaced transportation of goods by the railroads and the cattle markets shrunk into smaller and smaller venues.
By the 1980s, the 5 million cattle which had once invigorated Fort Worth had shriveled into a pathetic 57 thousand annually.
NEW INDUSTRY
Luckily, a new industry had soon replaced the old one.
This new industry didn’t have to be fed, watered, or driven through prairies or slaughtered and packed for shipment.
The discovery of OIL brought a new source of revenue replacing the cattle industry.
I know I don’t need to explain the oil industry to you. Do I?
Wildcat drilling using venture capital either produced active wells or completely failed.
The trick was finding investors to give you money.
(Historical note: George Bush the younger had a real knack for accepting millions of dollars from his father’s friends and political acquaintances to “invest” in wildcat wells.
Now don't make fun:
None of the wells paid off and young Bush kept the leftover funds for his upcoming career in politics. (That's another story.)
______________
NICKNAMES
Fort Worth has many nicknames such as “Where the West Begins”, “Panther City”, and “Cowtown.”
Having lived here for 70 years out of 74, I can tell you the identity of this city is pretty much a fantasy clinging to a faded past of romantic cowboys and ‘Indians’ and cattle drives, saloons, and a Hell’s Half Acre.
We are actually a metropolitan area of less than a million people, 99% of whom have absolutely nothing to do with COWS!
You're not shocked at that are you?
Fort Worth largely exists because of the largesse of billionaires such as Richard Rainwater and the four Bass brothers.
Forbes magazine published this on March 21, 2016:
“The four billionaire Bass brothers--Sid, Edward, Robert, and Lee--inherited a small fortune from their oil-tycoon uncle four decades ago and have built it up to a combined $8.2 billion.“
If you are a billionaire and you wish to be a large fish in a small pool, Fort Worth is an excellent way to gain notice and attract others who will fuel your fiefdom with talent and funds as well.
For example, Richard Rainwater was a stockbroker hired by Sid Bass who started his own investment firm locally, and with his guidance, the Bass brothers became private equity and hedge fund titans.
As a matter of record, in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, 20 billionaires have made their home, if--for no other reason--Texas is only 1 of 2 states in America that does NOT have a State income tax! Dallas and Fort Worth are about as far north and west as you can go and still have the best of two worlds: rural and homespun as well as modern and cosmopolitan.
(Yes, I have met some--not all--of these philanthropists and Titans and found them to be down-to-earth and ‘just folks’ for the most part.
_____________
LOCAL FACTS
We have a remarkable Library system with amazing donors affiliated with free concerts and programs of the highest quality. The Van Cliburn Competition locally brings superb artistic genius into our city as a source of much pride and celebration.
Bass Hall is a latter-day Opera House with perfect acoustics and lavish architecture as a venue for musicals, concerts, ballet, and mixed events at the highest level of performance.
Check it out for yourself.
MY ROOTS
My great grandmother’s husband was Jim Rushing, a gambler shot in the back by Alderman and Saloon owner, Martin McGrath, here in Fort Worth, in 1894.
(My grandfather was 4 years old at the time.)
Fort Worth, where you could be a policeman and own a saloon at the same time. (Famously, Wyatt Earp earned $1000 a week from his share of saloon business.)
Great grandmaw Florence never quite got over it and told me tales of that time period with tears in her eyes.
I learned to think of our fair city as something not lost in the past, but as a survivor of hard times and bad men and rotten situations brought on by happenstance, bad luck, and wrong-headed decisions.
But we survived, shook off the old ways, and moved ahead to join the real world.
The moral of the story and the point of this article is as follows:
We live here because we don't want to live elsewhere.
That is a choice.
We have a colorful history and I told you way more than you wanted to know. But I'll end by saying this.
We Ain’t Cowtown--we’re a Now town!