PSacramento, I don't think that's what we meant about volunteering.
But you're welcome to join us and "put it out there" for discussion.
~Sue
tonight was our first meeting... had a fun time with some friendly, free-thinking atheist/humanists from diverse backgrounds.
2nd wednesdays each month.
book discussions, attending lectures, volunteering, outdoor activities like hiking were discussed.
PSacramento, I don't think that's what we meant about volunteering.
But you're welcome to join us and "put it out there" for discussion.
~Sue
tonight was our first meeting... had a fun time with some friendly, free-thinking atheist/humanists from diverse backgrounds.
2nd wednesdays each month.
book discussions, attending lectures, volunteering, outdoor activities like hiking were discussed.
Hi Sylvia, there are some pretty forsaken places in NJ your friend could have ended up instead. Morristown isn't really even a "city" by comparison, at least the way I see it. Large parts of Morris are still semi-rural, with protected parklands and water. Very rich in early American history, too.
At the meetup we had people from Washington state, Texas and Tennessee who talked about adjusting to life here. It's not all Newark and the Turnpike! I love living in this region, yet Manhattan is still less than an hour away. So I feel I have the best of both worlds.
BTW, one of the people just happened to attend school in Alabama. He was telling us AL is a "positive law" state, meaning the laws cover what you can do, as opposed to what you cannot do. Interesting!
~Sue
tonight was our first meeting... had a fun time with some friendly, free-thinking atheist/humanists from diverse backgrounds.
2nd wednesdays each month.
book discussions, attending lectures, volunteering, outdoor activities like hiking were discussed.
*bumping*
i was just reading brenda lee's "out of the cocoon" and found an idea that i share just to let some steam off.. according to the fable, satan (this guy .
The reason he rebelled is mentioned in genesis: He wanted to be worshipped.
tonight was our first meeting... had a fun time with some friendly, free-thinking atheist/humanists from diverse backgrounds.
2nd wednesdays each month.
book discussions, attending lectures, volunteering, outdoor activities like hiking were discussed.
Tonight was our first meeting... had a fun time with some friendly, free-thinking atheist/humanists from diverse backgrounds.
2nd Wednesdays each month. Book discussions, attending lectures, volunteering, outdoor activities like hiking were discussed. Oddly enough, no human sacrifices.
Check it out here: Morristown Atheist Meetup
~Sue
and do you normally eat more "nice" festive dinner on friday evenings?.
tonight i'm having tacos.
have a great weekend everybody and enjoy your mornings without any early meetings for field service.
I like black walnuts, but not English.
Black ones are hard to find.
For Sylvia and others who favor a particular nut variety: http://www.nutsonline.com/
They began 80 years ago as a family business in Newark, NJ, so they really know nuts!
~Sue
hi, after a couple of years of 'lurking' i thought i'd join up.
i'm an ex-dub from vancouver island.
i've been out of the org for aprox' 10 yrs, after being in it for about 28 years.. i post on "jehovahs witness recovery forum" as 'nightgoat', so i thought i'd wander over here & see how you guys are doing.. recently under went some major shunning from parents & siblings & retaliated with a barrage of 'reverse-shunning' in an effort to teach them how to treat my wife & i.. hope i can be of some encouragement to any, on this board.. my daughter has been a member here for 3 yrs.
Welcome, Rumspringa / Nightgoat!
~Sue
obama lifts a ban on entry into u.s. by h.i.v.-positive peopleby julia preston.
published: october 30, 2009. .
president obama on friday announced the end of a 22-year ban on travel to the united states by people who had tested positive for the virus that causes aids, fulfilling a promise he made to gay advocates and acting to eliminate a restriction he said was rooted in fear rather than fact.. .
By JULIA PRESTON
Published: October 30, 2009
President Obama on Friday announced the end of a 22-year ban on travel to the United States by people who had tested positive for the virus that causes AIDS, fulfilling a promise he made to gay advocates and acting to eliminate a restriction he said was “rooted in fear rather than fact.”
At a White House ceremony, Mr. Obama announced that a rule canceling the ban would be published on Monday and would take effect after a routine 60-day waiting period. The president had promised to end the ban before the end of the year.
“If we want to be a global leader in combating H.I.V./AIDS, we need to act like it,” Mr. Obama said. “Now, we talk about reducing the stigma of this disease, yet we’ve treated a visitor living with it as a threat.”
The United States is one of only about a dozen countries that bar people who have H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS.
President George W. Bush started the process last year when he signed legislation, passed by Congress in July 2008, that repealed the statute on which the ban was based. But the ban remained in effect.
It was enacted in 1987 at a time of widespread fear that H.I.V. could be transmitted by physical or respiratory contact. The ban was further strengthened by Congress in 1993 as an amendment offered by Senator Jesse Helms, Republican of North Carolina.
Because of the restriction, no major international conference on the AIDS epidemic has been held in the United States since 1990. Public health officials here have long said there was no scientific or medical basis for the ban.
Under the ban, United States health authorities have been required to list H.I.V. infection as a “communicable disease of public health significance.” Under immigration law, most foreigners with such a disease cannot travel to the United States. The ban covered both visiting tourists and foreigners seeking to live in this country.
Once the ban is lifted, foreigners applying to become residents in the United States will no longer be required to take a test for AIDS.
In practice, the ban particularly affected tourists and gay men. Waivers were available, but the procedure for tourists and other short-term visitors who were H.I.V. positive was so complicated that many concluded it was not worth it.
For foreigners hoping to immigrate, waivers were available for people who were in a heterosexual marriage, but not for gay couples. Gay advocates said the ban had led to painful separations in families with H.I.V.-positive members that came to live in this country, and had discouraged adoptions of children with the virus.
Gay advocates said the ban also discouraged travelers and some foreigners already living in the United States from seeking testing and medical care for H.I.V. infection.
“The connection between immigration and H.I.V. has frightened people away from testing and treatment,” said Rachel B. Tiven, executive director of Immigration Equality, a group that advocates for gay people in immigration matters. She said lifting the ban would bring “a significant public health improvement.”
“Stigma and exclusion are not a sound basis for immigration policy,” Ms. Tiven said.
Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, who led the effort to repeal the ban, said it had now “gone the way of the dinosaur.”
But, Mr. Kerry added, “it sure took too long to get here.”
International health officials said lifting the ban would end a much-criticized inconsistency in United States health policy, with Washington playing a leading role in AIDS prevention in Africa and other countries with severe epidemics, but preserving restrictions that in practice prevented international AIDS researchers and activists from gathering at conferences here.
In 1989, a Dutch AIDS educator, Hans Verhoef, was detained for several days in St. Paul when he tried to attend a conference. Since then, people involved with AIDS issues have not organized meetings here.
“We think this is going to give a very positive image of where the United States is going in terms of eliminating stigma and discrimination in relation to H.I.V.,” Dr. Socorro Gross, assistant director of the Pan American Health Organization, said Friday.
my wife and i want to start looking afresh at the bible, go back to basics as it were.. what have people here found to be the best approach?.
what translations of the bible would you reccomend (i have the nwt).
what commentaries / texts have people found most useful?.
http://www.studylight.org/
Interlinears, Parallels, Commentaries, Concordances, Lexicons, etc. plus a whole lot more... for free!
~Sue
the latest blog post on my trip to kenya.... http://itravelalot.wordpress.com/2009/10/28/staying-downtown-nairobi/.
Hi Confession, just a note to say I have been thoroughly enjoying you and your beautiful wife's travelogue. Thanks for sharing your journey with us!
Most of the first-hand experiences I heard about Africa came from JW missionaries... who never really seemed to connect with local people because they weren't family, but rather "the assignment."
This instead is the "real life" JW's are discouraged to postpone for themselves until... whenever. Glad to see you two are living it in the here and now.
~Sue