It is only out of desperate necessity that I will trust anybody.
LRG
this is a distrust in people.
i experience this more as i get older and i am only 20 yrs old.
does anybody else feel this way.i just see that people are not truly nasty and that things will never get any better..
It is only out of desperate necessity that I will trust anybody.
LRG
john wayne, peter o'toole, alec guiness, james caan, lee marvin, richard burton, elizabeth taylor, charleton heston, kathyrn hepburn, rock hudson, james stewart, clark gable, robert duval, robert de niro, marlon brando, robert redford, paul newman, ... wow what happened to these legends?
today, we just have quasi fluff and nothing more....
i opened my fb mail, and this is what i found:.
jeff - wow - such cynicism!
am ex jw too - 45 years - been free 12 years now.
whats the most depressing song you have ever heard?
i would go with either johnny cash - hurt or gary jules-mad world.
whats the most depressing song you have ever heard?
i would go with either johnny cash - hurt or gary jules-mad world.
whats the most depressing song you have ever heard?
i would go with either johnny cash - hurt or gary jules-mad world.
whats the most depressing song you have ever heard?
i would go with either johnny cash - hurt or gary jules-mad world.
whats the most depressing song you have ever heard?
i would go with either johnny cash - hurt or gary jules-mad world.
but i want to educate myself.
like all jw's, i didn't give a shit about those sorts of things, unless there was an article in the magazine we were placing that month.
and even then, a very shallow understanding is all that i wanted or needed to 'place' the magazine.
Jeff:
The books dealing with the Federal Reserve I recommend are Creature from Jekyll Island by G. Edward Griffin and the novel "Captains and the Kings", which deals with international financiers by Taylor Caldwell. Caldwell's novel begins in 1860s and ends in 1913 and she reveals quite a bit of information through her novel of that time period before the institution of The Federal Reserve system. The book begins with a chilling forward reading it about 40 years after it was first published and it ends with a bibilography of reference books at the end of the novel.
LRG
Joseph Goebels:
"If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military cons ... equences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.”