Hi leec, we can't change our avatars just yet. Here's an alternate method to display the image of your choosing:
http://www.jehovahs-witness.net/forum/announcements/186156/1/Gravatar-MonsterIds-now-supported
Welcome and best regards,
~Sue
betterdaze
JoinedPosts by betterdaze
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80
Tell me about your avatar(not the Gravatars)
by asilentone inmy avatar is a pic of a cool car, obviously.
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betterdaze
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80
Tell me about your avatar(not the Gravatars)
by asilentone inmy avatar is a pic of a cool car, obviously.
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betterdaze
Sylvia, thank you for the reminder to "remain upright, in these, the last daze."
~Sue -
80
Tell me about your avatar(not the Gravatars)
by asilentone inmy avatar is a pic of a cool car, obviously.
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betterdaze
Casper, re: history and meaning. Those heels in your sophisticated (I must say) avatar remind me of a "worldly" boyfriend I brought into "the Truth" over 20 years ago. He had a wicked women's shoes fetish. It was a little weird at first but I could not complain... what girl can say No to, "Hey, let's go to Garden State Plaza and look at shoes for you"?
Sexiest high heels in every color of the rainbow... supporting dowdy floral prairie garb befitting a modest "sister." Gotta love the '80s.
If/when he shows up here, he'll PM you post-haste, before ever posting a word in the forums. Let me know, okay? He still has half an ass cheek left I want to kick.
~Sue
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21
Giving to Charities
by Kristina1972 ini notice the jw's don't really donate to charities.
when i donated to the earthquake in haiti, my husband didn't really say anything about it.
silence usually means he doesn't agree with something because of his religious beliefs.
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betterdaze
Start giving on a local level.
designs, I totally agree. It's the only way you know donations aren't squandered or swallowed up for bogus means. I've seen some 501(c)(3)'s set up solely to enrich halo-wearing thieves.So, they give a pittance to their cause. So what? Most of it is is pocketed for "administration costs." Fancy meals and travel galore. Shame on them.
One guy, kept urging a local volunteer group I was part of to use his business equipment... that we had no need of at all... so he could write it off his taxes as a donation. Never time or money or public advocacy, just "Take my crap when I don't need it, so I can say to the IRS, I gave something." But the minute he needed it for a job, he'd demand it back! Jerk. So it runs both ways.I'd like to have faith that most charities are run legitimately. But it's ones like these that make the Watchtower Swiss Bank Slush Fund appear trustworthy. I gave a little at the KH for Katrina. When I found out later that victims signed over their insurance policies to the WT, I knew I had been exploited. Never again, and I'll do everything I can to keep even a penny out of their offshore coffers.
~Sue -
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Giving to Charities
by Kristina1972 ini notice the jw's don't really donate to charities.
when i donated to the earthquake in haiti, my husband didn't really say anything about it.
silence usually means he doesn't agree with something because of his religious beliefs.
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betterdaze
There's a separate box for Haiti? Not so with Katrina. "Just make your checks out to the Worldwide Slush Fund."
breathing, my JW mother is similar. She supports Amnesty International (because they've advocated for the JWs overseas) and local animal shelters. She likes to think her donations at her KH are for the building's upkeep.
~Sue
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80
Tell me about your avatar(not the Gravatars)
by asilentone inmy avatar is a pic of a cool car, obviously.
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betterdaze
<— How's this for abstract? (It's the Omega/Swan Nebula, or M17. These are some of the paint colors in my home.)
~Sue -
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OMG! I just realized that ALL cats are ATHEISTS!!!
by Elsewhere injust think about it.... have you every seen what happens when you try to baptize a cat???
cats don't like it!!!
cats don't like it because they hate gawd!
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Engineer: "This was not an earthquake disaster"
by betterdaze inthe audience at last tuesdays uc berkeley lecture given by eduardo fierro, one of the first u.s. earthquake engineers to visit post-quake haiti, collectively cringed as fierro showed slide after slide of haphazard columns, brittle frames, and slipshod rods and joints.
this was not an earthquake disaster, fierro said.
fierro, a peruvian native who has worked around the pacific rim, arrived in haiti within two days of the earthquake to investigate the destruction caused to the countrys built environment.
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betterdaze
Engineer: "This was not an earthquake disaster"
The audience at last Tuesday’s UC Berkeley lecture given by Eduardo Fierro, one of the first U.S. earthquake engineers to visit post-quake Haiti, collectively cringed as Fierro showed slide after slide of haphazard columns, brittle frames, and slipshod rods and joints. “This was not an earthquake disaster,” Fierro said. “[This] was caused by people that didn’t know how to use codes, that built things in bad shape. These were the people that caused the tragedy.”
Fierro, a Peruvian native who has worked around the Pacific rim, arrived in Haiti within two days of the earthquake to investigate the destruction caused to the country’s built environment. From Port Au Prince to smaller cities like Leogane, from cathedrals to schools to power plants, Fierro found that the same architectural mistakes were made over and over again:
- Heavy, unsupported block walls: One of the main principles of architecture, Fierro said, is to make structures as light as possible. “These people don’t know that,” Fierro said. He showed multiple slides of houses and buildings constructed with unwieldy slabs of concrete and cinder blocks.- Poor detailing: Fierro pointed out badly made plastic hinges, as well as joints going against “all the rules for earthquake engineering” with small, smooth bars and no hoops.
- Lack of rebars: One of Fierro’s most troubling observations. Steel reinforcement bars—rebars—are what hold up concrete and masonry structures. Most of the collapsed buildings’ rebar was either entirely too frail and thin to support the building—if the building had rebar at all.
- Poorly constructed columns: Columns holding up higher floors were often unreinforced concrete, too brittle to provide sufficient support.
- Bad concrete: Even the Presidential Palace was built using poorly compacted concrete. Also, many buildings had corroded columns, which suggests that beach sands (which retain more moisture than river sands) were used to mix concrete.
- Bad soil: Areas with the most damage were built on top of soft soil.
Fierro concluded the seminar with photographs of local reconstructive efforts currently taking place. Things don’t look much better—new construction is proceeding the same way as before the quake. “Same little columns, same blocks, same lack of rebars,” Fierro said.
But what’s the solution? “Better code and better design isn’t the answer,” Fierro said. He stressed that the rebuilding process must be simple and supervised. One idea: distributing a “cartoonish” booklet depicting the right construction processes – a guide so easy to understand you “don’t have to be an engineer” to read it. -
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CRISIS OF CONSCIOUS, now in Hellenic language
by JustHuman14 inat last this great book now in greek language...this book was translated from the english edition by a jw who was in prison due to neutrality back in the 80's.
for many years, many greek jw's and ex jw's had the photocopied translation done in prison by this ex-jw.. this translation was shocking event to the hellenic jw's and many left the org at that time.
now there is an official copy of this great book by brother franz, god bless him....
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betterdaze
They are not listed on the Commentary Press website, but I found a seller here: http://www.christianbook.gr
Thanks!
~Sue -
33
after a long 2 days, Jookbeard Jnr finally arrived!
by jookbeard ina whopping 8.5lb, at 1755 hrs bright as a button, shattered now!.
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betterdaze
Welcome, baby J.
Congrats to mom and dad!
~Sue