I remember the screened in porches as well. Interesting to see how far I've come to appreciate some of those issues after leaving that people "in" still don't see a problem with. I also remember the high rise apartments where you could easily spend all morning, just sitting inside ringing 100 doorbells, waiting 1-2 minutes between each of them, people walking in and out, probably worried about their safety to see 2 big guys in trenchcoats ringing every doorbell and we were just oblivious.
Anony Mous
JoinedPosts by Anony Mous
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16
Opening doors, putting your foot in the door and other dangerous activities
by Anony Mous ini was listening to the news and there is this big brouhaha about someone shooting someone through their front door.
apparently the person tried to open the door of an elderly person, scaring the homeowner and they shot a gun injuring the person.
obvious castle doctrine case.. which made me remember a rather overzealous old pioneer that used the same tactics when he knew the homeowners were home but didn’t want to come to the door, he would start opening the storm doors and try to see if the door was unlocked so he could yell inside.
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16
Opening doors, putting your foot in the door and other dangerous activities
by Anony Mous ini was listening to the news and there is this big brouhaha about someone shooting someone through their front door.
apparently the person tried to open the door of an elderly person, scaring the homeowner and they shot a gun injuring the person.
obvious castle doctrine case.. which made me remember a rather overzealous old pioneer that used the same tactics when he knew the homeowners were home but didn’t want to come to the door, he would start opening the storm doors and try to see if the door was unlocked so he could yell inside.
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Anony Mous
I was listening to the news and there is this big brouhaha about someone shooting someone through their front door. Apparently the person tried to open the door of an elderly person, scaring the homeowner and they shot a gun injuring the person. Obvious castle doctrine case.
Which made me remember a rather overzealous old pioneer that used the same tactics when he knew the homeowners were home but didn’t want to come to the door, he would start opening the storm doors and try to see if the door was unlocked so he could yell inside. His excuse was that if they weren’t home they should lock their doors - the community service of a burglar.
Other pioneers I knew would have the habit of putting their foot in the door so the homeowner couldn’t slam it in his face after they started their “discussion”. More than a few would “count on Jehober” and walk through gates and no trespassing signs.
What other potentially dangerous activities, including some cases of breaking and entering, do you remember some Witlesses get involved in?
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98
Better off PIMA than POMA or POMO.
by ExBethelitenowPIMA inthe situation is many of us are pima and all putting on a front, sometimes saying something we don’t fully believe.
or at least are actually agnostic about but a hope that it’s true.. but it can be useful if someone is really going through a hard time or has something they are very worried about, to say things like well let’s hope there is not much longer of this old system.. this can be useful in an awkward situation where you just don’t know what to do or say.
it’s a little bit of hope that can help when there is nothing else.. my agnosticism just means i won’t look back over decades thinking i wasted my life.
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Anony Mous
@ExBethelitenowPIMA: The fossil record has lots of skulls, not sure if you've ever heard of any of these, which for the major lineages there is plenty of evidence that not only did they co-exist, they also interbred and thus have a shared offspring that influenced each other's evolution until today for H. Sapiens or until they went extinct for other species.
The percentage of Neanderthal DNA in modern humans is about 1 to 2 percent in people of European or Asian background. The percentage of Denisovan DNA is highest in the Melanesian population (4 to 6 percent), lower in other Southeast Asian and Pacific Islander populations. So even humans are for a small percentage other species.
If you want faster proof of evolution, you can buy the tools to run this experiment AT HOME if you really want to see for yourself: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plVk4NVIUh8&ab_channel=HarvardMedicalSchool
Comparative table of homo species:Lineages Temporal range
(kya)Habitat Adult height Adult mass Cranial capacity
(cm3)Fossil record Discovery/
publication
of nameH. sapiens
(anatomically modern humans)c. 300–present[p] Worldwide 150–190 cm (4 ft 11 in – 6 ft 3 in) 50–100 kg (110–220 lb) 950–1,800 (extant) ——
1758H. luzonensis c. 67[97][98] Philippines 3 individuals 2007
2019Denisova hominin 40 Siberia 2 sites 2000
2010[s]H. tsaichangensis
possibly H. erectus or Denisovac. 100[r] Taiwan 1 individual 2008(?)
2015Nesher Ramla Homo
classification uncertain140–120 Israel several individuals 2021 H. floresiensis
classification uncertain190–50 Indonesia 100 cm (3 ft 3 in) 25 kg (55 lb) 400 7 individuals 2003
2004H. neanderthalensis 240–40[94][q] Europe, Western Asia 170 cm (5 ft 7 in) 55–70 kg (121–154 lb)
(heavily built)1,200–1,900 Many 1829
1864H. rhodesiensis
early H. sapiensc. 300 Zambia 1,300 Single or very few 1921
1921H. naledi c. 300[91] South Africa 150 cm (4 ft 11 in) 45 kg (99 lb) 450 15 individuals 2013
2015H. longi 309–138[89] Northeast China 1,420[90] 1 individual 1933
2021H. cepranensis
a single fossil, possibly H. heidelbergensisc. 450[88] Italy 1,000 1 skull cap 1994
2003H. heidelbergensis
early H. neanderthalensis600–300[o] Europe, Africa 180 cm (5 ft 11 in) 90 kg (200 lb) 1,100–1,400 Many 1907
1908H. antecessor 1,200–800 Western Europe 175 cm (5 ft 9 in) 90 kg (200 lb) 1,000 2 sites 1994
1997H. ergaster
African H. erectus1,800–1,300[87] East and Southern Africa 700–850 Many 1949
1975H. rudolfensis
membership in Homo uncertain1,900 Kenya 700 2 sites 1972
1986H. gautengensis
also classified as H. habilis1,900–600 South Africa 100 cm (3 ft 3 in) 3 individuals[83][j] 2010
2010H. erectus 1,900–140[84][k][85][l] Africa, Eurasia 180 cm (5 ft 11 in) 60 kg (130 lb) 850 (early) – 1,100 (late) Many[m][n] 1891
1892H. habilis
membership in Homo uncertain2,100–1,500[h][i] Tanzania 110–140 cm (3 ft 7 in – 4 ft 7 in) 33–55 kg (73–121 lb) 510–660 Many 1960
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25
The corrosive nature of CRT
by LoveUniHateExams indiane abbot has been temporarily suspended from the labour party whilst they investigate her behaviour.. what's she done?.
it was leaked that a first draft of a letter she was going to write had the claim that jews can't experience racism.. the influence of crt is obvious.
according to this warped worldview, there are two types of people, oppressors and oppressed.
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Anony Mous
@cofty: The philosophy that underpinned Fascism (National Socialism and actual Italian Fascism) is Marxism.
Both Hitler and Mussolini quoted Marx and used the ideology as an underpinning for their own and then modified it slightly. Mussolini considered himself a Marxist, and he described Marx as "the greatest of all theorists of socialism." Hitler himself declared that national socialism was based on Marx and argued that the other socialists of the day were basically corrupted socialists, which is the same argument that the Bolscheviks said about the Menscheviks, but they're all still socialists and fought together against the establishments of the day, only disagreeing with each other once it became time to rule (which is typical for all socialists, to date).
Similar argument that JW's make when saying that other religions are "Christendom" and not true Christians or Martin Luther saying that the Pope corrupted Christianity.
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25
The corrosive nature of CRT
by LoveUniHateExams indiane abbot has been temporarily suspended from the labour party whilst they investigate her behaviour.. what's she done?.
it was leaked that a first draft of a letter she was going to write had the claim that jews can't experience racism.. the influence of crt is obvious.
according to this warped worldview, there are two types of people, oppressors and oppressed.
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Anony Mous
often you can’t tell whether someone is Jewish just by looking at them
That is relatively incorrect and is a matter of perspective. Religious Jews are recognizable by the way they dress, most people when they think of Jewish, think of yarmulkes or the brimmed hat or the payot (curled or hairs on the cheek).
There are Jews that are secular that don't keep to those, but even then, in many cases when it comes to attacks on Jewish people (primarily by people of African origin) it's on the religious Jews.
However even if you are a "secular" person of Jewish origin, people from the Middle East that grow up around Israel, know how to recognize visual traits of people with Jewish origin, it's a lot less precise given humans tend to mix, but people in Europe can often recognize people from nearby countries by certain physical visual traits as well. Eg. you can recognize Dutch because they are tall with an "elongated" head, Germans have straight nose, square jaws and look "rounder".
People in the West have trouble distinguishing Chinese from Korean, people in Asia however can recognize different parts of either country which is the most famous example of how people can pick up traits without ever being taught what any of it means by their parents.
Same goes for black people, once you are around them long enough, you can find people from Creole (eg. Jamaican) backgrounds, actual Africans and American blacks are VERY different, and I'm sure if someone lives in Africa, they can recognize tribal features as well. Even amongst American blacks, you can often recognize black people historically living in the Northerner parts of America (lighter, more features of Native Americans) vs Southern black families.
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I do not understand the universal issue anymore
by psyco into explain the universal issue we are often referring to a teacher and his/her students.. let us imagine that a teacher (god) has an hour (everlasting) class to show his students (humans and angels) how to fix a broken clock (to reign).. one student (adam) says he is able to fix it better independently, without the teacher's help (universal issue).. the teacher let him demonstrate that in front of all the others, but instead of an hour lesson he gives him only 5 minutes (death after a limited period of time) and he blocks one of the student's hands behind his back (imperfection).. if i were one of the other students watching i could think: but those were not the initial conditions the student was in when he said he could, and what would have happened leaving him more time and both hands free?.
am i crazy?.
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Anony Mous
The universal issue isn’t unique to JWs, even Jews have a version of it and it is clearly exposed in the Book of Job.
The characters of Job and Sheitan in the Book of Job is right, God is a petty ruler and will allow people to die just to prove a point, the modern interpretation according to Rabbinic commentary of Job ends with: you don’t understand and you aren’t powerful, therefore you are wrong, whether that is just or unjust on behalf of G-d.
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Nisan 14 or not?
by LostintheFog1999 inif jesus memorial meal is meant to follow on from the jewish passover celebration, would someone explain to me why the jehovah's witness community are holding their "lord's evening meal" on tuesday 4th april; when the jewish community are not holding their 2023 passover until the 5th april 2023?
doesn't this mean that the jehovahs have got their date wrong?.
https://www.londonworld.com/read-this/passover-2023-what-is-passover-dates-and-greetings-4091833.
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Anony Mous
@Fisherman: perhaps it is true that you could get Jews on Shabbat to kill someone, then again, Jesus as described never really existed. The allegory in scripture though would’ve mentioned such deviance, especially from the Jewish viewpoint, it would’ve been a deal of contention amongst the Pauline adherents at the very least that their deity died during a period where Jews or Jesus’ disciples weren’t allowed to do such things as get out of their houses and travel great distances? Or the Sanhedrin and Romans violating Passover rules on account of 3 low level criminals and a rabblerouser.
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Another new missing part of the Bible found
by ExBethelitenowPIMA inhttps://www.thesun.co.uk/news/22011278/new-bible-chapter-hidden-verses-discovered-erased-scribe/.
i wonder what the remaining members of the gb will make of this?.
i excited to read all of this once it’s released and compare with the rest of mathew.
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Anony Mous
The thing is that archeologists regularly find new parts of Christian writings, it often doesn’t stroke with the current ‘accepted’ translations or canon so theologians will ignore it. The Cave of Horror was discovered in 1960 and is an active dig site since 2017 and continues to dig up Old Testament translations from ~100BC-100CE that haven’t survived the millennia,
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Password using another language, or mixed languages?
by FatFreek 2005 ini just tried something in windows 10 and it worked (i think).. i went to the google online free translator, entered a couple english words, then translated them into russian.. the two words i entered are russian english.
the translator returned русский английский.
i then used those words together as a password for a libre office word junk document, saved the document.
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Anony Mous
The best passwords these days are passphrases with mixed case and non-alphanumeric characters.
I personally use 24-32 character passphrases, with combination of character sets. A passphrase is easy to remember, it’s a sentence you modify into a password.
However, document passwords often are pointless and are not secure at all, the implementation of document passwords makes it very easy to crack the password regardless of length, you are better off encrypting the document with something like PGP.
Here is the reason for passphrases, note that even 34,000 years is not considered secure enough, this halves every 18 months and you can just “rent” thousands of computers on Amazon or the Dark Web. You need something that take millions of years to crack.
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Christmas Decorations at the Kingdom hall
by Simon ini can't remember if i've told this story before .... but back in the day, in irlam congregation (northwest england, uk, cheshire #1 circuit i think) we used to rent a kingdom hall for many years before we eventually built our own.. preston hall.
ah, the memories .... it was primarily used as a community hall for old folks, but we had it friday night and sunday morning.. there was a loft and fold-out ladder and we used to store the chairs up their.
every meeting, there would be an assembly line of all the "lads" to pass the chairs down and set them up, then collect them up and pass them back up at the end of the meeting.
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Anony Mous
I remember having to go to one of those little community centers for the memorial. I don't know if anyone remembers, but in the 80s-90s it was the directive that the memorial should be held as soon as possible after sun down, so if you had a congregation that shared a hall, you had 2, 3 congregations renting community spaces right around the easter and other spring equinox celebrations.
Eventually the directive came down that we would be required to look for places that were commercial so we could negotiate the place without special decorations and you couldn't rent facilities from churches anymore, and then later came the directive that if you had multiple congregations in the same building, you'd just have to do one after the other, which was hilarious with traffic when 4 congregations need to go in and out of a building with street parking between 7 and 10pm - no time to talk, elders rushed people in and rushed the other congregation out, cops showed up because it was loud and a nuisance.
Looking back, it's surprising how many people woke up over time, just because they got jostled to think when these weird rules and regulation changes happened, about what is ostensibly the most important day to 'true believer' JWs - if they can't even get the rules around that right.