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Title: Mcgowanjm Wire 2012
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: Feb 26, 2012
Author: Various
Post Date: 2012-02-26 09:15:13 by A K A Stone
Keywords: None
Views: 1293196
Comments: 2390

Mcgowinjm Wire Service.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


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Comments (1-1779) not displayed.
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#1780. To: A K A Stone (#1774)

Hence trees and vegetation under the ice in Antartica.

So very true.

Don't know how you think that helps your case.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-25   9:44:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1781. To: A K A Stone (#1774)

Hence tools found in mountains in Europe when snow melted.

Yes. The frozen man.

There's a reason Civilizations only number 25.

And only since the beginning of the Holocene.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-25   9:45:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1782. To: A K A Stone (#1774)

Peak oil is propaganda. Fracking has increased the supply supplanting your wishful delusions.

Hell will not freeze over.

"– When money represents energy the various currencies will sort themselves out (or the reverse will happen as with the euro) and the winner will fall out of circulation (hoarded). The other currencies will simply vanish or will buy goods OTHER THAN fuel. Energy availability will plummet, to meet the small amount of ‘good currency’ in circulation available at any given time for fuel purchase.

Think about how much cash is in circulation right now (not e-money) and you get the idea how much fuel will be available. Access to circulating money will be the way fuel is rationed (if not directly by way of fuel cards) the same way access to credit rations fuel now. Needless to say there will be no credit at all."

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-25   9:46:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1783. To: A K A Stone (#1774)

Fracking has increased the supply supplanting your wishful delusions.

Fracked wells produce 90% of their 'reserve' the first year.

Fracking is a Real Estate flip/bubble.

and Benzene/methane cloud producer.

And at neg EROEI, a non starter which will leave behind destroyed aquifers....;}

Good luck on maintaining Amerika with $3.60 the gal gasoline.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-25   9:49:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1784. To: All (#1783)

"This is the straitjacket that central banks and treasuries face and there is almost nothing they can do about it. If they ‘adjust’ (depreciate) their currencies they won’t be able to swap them for fuel. The producers will absolutely dominate: instead of accepting false-promises of ‘growth’ in trade for their valuable resources they will demand resources in return. Having a crude tradeable currency means having one that is as hard to find as a one-armed violin player. "

http://www.economic-undertow.com/

The DXY goes to 90

and/or

the USSA loses it's Empire by Xmas.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-25   9:50:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1785. To: A K A Stone (#0)

#574. To: All (#573)

" Son Nghiem of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., was analyzing radar data from the Indian Space Research Organisation's (ISRO) Oceansat-2 satellite last week when he noticed that most of Greenland appeared to have undergone surface melting on July 12. Nghiem said, "This was so extraordinary that at first I questioned the result: was this real or was it due to a data error?"

But then no one else I talked to cared to discuss it, so I just called it 'data error' ND WENT ON WITH MY BUZY WORK....;}

mcgowanjm posted on 2012-07-25 9:55:18 ET

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-25   9:56:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1786. To: All (#1785)

The problem is that there is almost no attempt at

cross science platforms.

No realization of Positive Feedback Loops.

"The usual response is to insist that the US can trade agricultural goods for fuel. The difficulty with that thesis is that agriculture is itself a petroleum dependency. With insufficient funds agriculture will be less productive, there will be less surpluses to trade. Diminished fuel inputs would constrain output further effecting the fuel trade in a vicious cycle. Soon enough there would be insufficient agricultural goods to trade and less fuel available for agriculture itself."

Like the above.

The MOMENT the USSA can't provide grain, it's Empire implodes.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-25   10:05:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1787. To: mcgowanjm (#1777)

try since the last Ice Age.....

www.answersingenesis.org/.../fit/flood-caused-ice-age

In order to understand the mysteries of the woolly mammoth, we need to first understand the Ice Age. This is because the woolly mammoth is a denizen of the Ice Age (see appendix 4). I will first delve into a biblical theory for the development of one Ice Age. We will then be prepared to answer the questions surrounding the woolly mammoth.

Scientists have collected mounds of evidence proving that ice once covered most of Canada and parts of the northern and central United States. Evidence is also found in northern Europe, northwest Asia, many of the large mountain ranges of Eurasia, and high mountainous areas of the Southern Hemisphere and tropics. But the truth is, scientists still do not know the cause of the Ice Age as succinctly stated by David Alt1: “Although theories abound, no one really knows what causes ice ages.” Uniformitarianism has not been able to explain the Ice Age, or events related to the Ice Age. Ice sheets are not developing and melting today so we have no way to actually observe how they developed in the past. The woolly mammoths are extinct, so we cannot witness whether they could survive in Siberia. Large lakes are not filling the deserts of the earth. Animal and plant distributions were different during the Ice Age, unlike any pattern observed today. And, we have not observed the kind of mass extinctions that occurred at the end of the Ice Age.

It is doubtful that evolutionists will find a present process that can explain the origin of the Ice Age or the mass extinctions of large mammals. It is very likely the difficulty in knowing the cause of the Ice Age does not lie in the data that has been gathered for over two centuries but in the assumptions. It is my conviction, and that of many others, that the assumption of uniformitarianism needs to be rejected. I believe it is this assumption and the antagonism of mainstream scientists toward catastrophism that has blinded their minds toward a solution of the Ice Age, as well as for the woolly mammoths. Guthrie,2 speaking in regard to the common disharmonious associations and subsequent extinctions associated with the Ice Age, discovered early in his career:

Looking at the extinction problem through the eyes of a young paleontologist in the early 1960s, I encountered my first important lesson — that the present can be used to understand the past only with sensitive discretion. In fact, much of the past may have no modern analogue.

Larry Marshall3 sums up a book on Ice Age extinctions by saying:

Many chapter authors argue that the old axiom — the present is the key to the past — no longer stands. Guthrie (chap. 13) speaks of the standards tied to normalcy of present as being erroneous when looking at the Pleistocene. The present can no longer be regarded as the norm.

They conclude that uniformitarianism cannot be applied to the recent past — the time of the Ice Age and the woolly mammoth. It is this doctrine of uniformitarianism that has retarded understanding of these many mysteries. Catastrophism offers a more logical and less flawed solution to the dual mysteries.

I believe that we need to revisit the rejected biblical world view, one that takes the straightforward account in Genesis 1–11 as early earth history. This account and many other traditions describe a global Flood. The global Flood, believed by most scientists in the 1700s and early 1800s, was really never proved wrong. Scientists in the mid to late 1800s simply decided they wanted to assume uniformitarianism instead. One of the results of a global Flood would be the perturbation of the climate before it reached the equilibrium we observe today (figure 7.1). It is within this transitional climate that the mysteries of the Ice Age and woolly mammoth find a reasonable solution. Figure 7.1

Figure 7.1. Time frame for the Ice Age in relationship to the Flood. (Illustration by Daniel Lewis of AiG.) The first requirement — cooler summers

From the description of the Genesis flood in the Bible, we have been able to glean enough information to form an idea about what the world was like during and immediately after the catastrophe. Genesis chapters 7 and 8 record:

"In the six hundredth year of Noah’s life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the second month, on that day all the fountains of the great deep burst open, and the floodgates of the sky were opened. And the rain fell upon the earth for forty days and forty nights. . . . And the waters prevailed and increased greatly upon the earth . . . so that all the high mountains everywhere under the heavens were covered. . . . And the water prevailed upon the earth one hundred and fifty days. . . . and the water receded steadily from the earth. . . . And in the second month, on the twenty-seventh day of the month, the earth was dry" (NASB).

Scripture indicates that much of the water for the Flood came from the “fountains of the great deep.” The deep or great deep refers to the ocean.4 The bursting open of the fountains of the great deep implies the ocean rose up and covered the land or that oceanic or subterranean sources of water burst forth onto the land.5

Monumental geological and hydrological activity occurred early in the Flood. Gigantic earthquakes could have caused large cracks or rifts in the earth’s crust, explosively releasing subterranean water and triggering volcanic activity. By inference, the mountains before the Flood were fairly low, and even if the mountains were above 10,000 feet (3,000 m) the strong currents of a worldwide Flood would have eroded the mountains that did exist. Since the fountains of the great deep are mentioned before the rains, it is likely that they caused most of the rainfall. Rainfall was the second contributor to the Flood waters. Figure 7.2

Figure 7.2. This graph shows the relative rise in sea level in 150 days followed by a gradual fall in 221 days. The reason the curve is not smooth is because several variables would cause the sea level to oscillate up and down during the general rise and fall. The dashed line represents an alternative interpretation in which the Flood peaks in 40 days.

According to the biblical record, the Flood waters increased and covered the earth by the 150th day, the fastest rise likely occurring in the first 40 days followed by a slow rise or “prevailing” for the next 110 days (figure 7.2). (Some creationists believe that the Flood peaked in 40 days, which is the alternative dashed line in figure 7.2.) The Flood waters then receded from the future continents for the next 221 days when the ocean basins subsided and the mountains rose as recorded in Psalm 104:6–9 (NASB).6

Interbedded within the sedimentary rocks is evidence of incredible volcanic activity that has no parallel today. Vast, unusually thick layers of volcanic flows and ash interlayer sedimentary rocks and fit the worldwide Flood paradigm very well. It appears that at the end of the Flood the world was covered by huge volumes of volcanic ash and gas that had spewed into the atmosphere.7 The abundant ash and gas trapped in the stratosphere would act as an “anti-greenhouse” (see figure 6.1). Instead of warming the earth, it would reflect sunlight back into space and cool it. At the same time, infrared radiation would continue to escape the earth.

Scientists recognize that volcanic dust and gas can substantially cool the earth. Most people in the United States remember the eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington State in May of 1980. I watched as a dark “dry fog” spread from Oregon into central Montana where I lived. The darkness lasted for two days. Although I saw it as a major event, this eruption was actually small compared to many during the past two hundred years. The largest include Agung on the island of Bali in 1963; Krakatoa, Indonesia, in 1883; Tambora, Indonesia, in 1815; and Laki, Iceland, in 1783. Large modern eruptions usually cool a region or hemisphere a degree or two Fahrenheit (about 1°C). The cooling normally lasts one to three years as the ash and gases slowly fall out of the stratosphere.

Tambora was the largest eruption and is credited with causing the “year without a summer” in 1816. An unprecedented series of cold spells chilled the northeastern United States and adjoining Canadian provinces. Heavy snow fell in June, and frost caused crop failures in July and August. Even Europe felt the chill that summer.

David Keys8 makes a case that a massive volcanic eruption in Indonesia caused the darkness, cooling, crop failures, and social upheaval that was recorded in AD 535.

The extensive volcanism that would result from a worldwide Flood would have a much greater impact on the climate than in historical times. Volcanic ash and gases from the Flood would probably take at least three years to fall out. Three years would be enough time to start an Ice Age. The eruptions would need to continue for many years after the Flood to sustain it.9 Geologists recognize that there was extensive volcanic activity during the Ice Age. Ice Age researcher Charlesworth10 writes:

. . . signs of Pleistocene [Ice Age] vulcanicity and earth-movements are visible in all parts of the world.

In the western United States alone there were more than 68 different ash falls, mostly coinciding with the Ice Age. Some of the volcanic eruptions were very extensive. Figure 7.3

Figure 7.3. Waning volcanism after the Flood.

In the South Pacific, an exceptionally large ash layer from an eruption in New Zealand was discovered. It spread a thick layer of ash over four million square miles (10 million sq. km) and would have darkened the entire earth for several months. This eruption would have caused a tremendous cooling of the continents.

The Ice Age eruptions were much larger than what we have experienced during the past 200 years. So evidence indicates that after the Flood, volcanic eruptions would have been able to replenish the stratospheric dust and gases and sustain the cooling. Since the eruptions were more or less random as the earth gradually settled down after the global Flood, volcanism would show peaks and lulls within a pattern of gradual decline (figure 7.3).

The effect of severe volcanic eruptions has been compared to the aftermath of a nuclear war. Computer models of a nuclear war show dust and soot causing a “nuclear winter.” During a “nuclear winter,” continental summer temperatures can drop below freezing in a matter of days. Toon11 and others speculate with regard to nuclear winter:

Sub-freezing temperatures for six months over the entire globe could possibly lead to extensive snowfield buildup over large areas of the continents. Such snowfields would greatly increase the albedo [reflectivity] of the earth and could sustain themselves indefinitely.

The large eruption in New Zealand is an analogy for the worst nuclear winter models that block out nearly all sunlight all over the world for several months. So, nuclear winter models provide insight into how continental areas can cool enough from atmospheric dust and gases for an ice age to develop.

If volcanic activity is such a good cooling mechanism, why haven’t uniformitarian scientists incorporated it into their Ice Age models? They realize that volcanic ash and gases cool the planet but can’t invoke volcanism because they believe each ice age lasted 100,000 years. There has not been enough volcanism to be significant over such a period of time. Paul Damon12 writes:

. . . volcanic explosions would need to be an order of magnitude [ten times] more numerous than during the past 160 years to result in continental glaciation equivalent to the Wisconsin glacial episode.

The Wisconsin glacial episode is the last glaciation, according to the uniformitarian multiple glaciation system. One researcher, however, has attempted to incorporate volcanism to start an ice age. Bray13 postulates that a short period of enhanced volcanism may initiate the needed summer snow cover. Bray14 states:

I suggest here that such a [snow] survival could have resulted from one or several closely spaced massive volcanic ash eruptions.

Then he relies on a snow cover to take over and continue the summer cooling for an ice age. Unfortunately, there could not be enough volcanism to sustain such an “ice age” for more than a few years without constant eruptions. The snow would quickly melt when the sunshine increased.

The creationist’s time scale is telescoped, putting all these tremendous volcanic eruptions into a relatively short period after the Flood. It is the short time frame that makes the difference. The atmospheric consequences of frequent eruptions would allow an ice age to develop and be sustained. The second requirement — heavy snow

Extensive summer cooling of the land is the first requirement needed for an ice age to develop. High snowfall is the second. Cooling alone cannot generate more precipitation, since cold air holds less moisture, not more. This is the major reason why uniformitarian Ice Age theories fail.

In the Ice Age model after the Flood, the abundant moisture needed for an ice age would be produced by evaporation from a warm ocean at mid and high latitudes. Why would the oceans be warm? First, it is likely the pre-Flood ocean was warmer than now. Secondly, if the water from the “fountains of the great deep” came from within earth’s crust, much hot water would be added to the pre-Flood ocean. The earth’s crust warms about 10°F per 1,000 feet (2°C per 100 m) depth. If the water for the fountains came from 3,000 feet (900 m), it would be quite warm. If it came from 10,000 or more feet (3,000 m), the water would have been hot. Third, intense tectonic activity during the Flood and lava flows would add more heat. Earthquakes and rapid ocean currents during the Flood would mix this warm water with the pre-Flood ocean. As a result, the ocean immediately following the Flood would have been warm from pole to pole and from top to bottom. Because of this, the Arctic and Antarctic Oceans would have had no sea ice and, as strange as it may seem in today’s climate, may have been warm enough for a pleasant swim.

The importance of warm surface water temperatures is that the warmer the water the greater the evaporation (figure 7.4). For example, if all other variables remain constant, water evaporates three times faster at an ocean temperature of 86°F (30°C) than at 50°F (10°C), and seven times faster than at 32°F (0°C). So a universally warm ocean would generate a high amount of evaporation. Figure 7.4

Figure 7.4. Steam fog from a pond caused by colder atmospheric temperatures and warm water.

Would all this heat from a warm ocean keep the high and mid latitudes too warm for the Ice Age? In some areas it would — until the ocean cooled enough by evaporation and contact with colder air. The warm ocean at mid and high latitudes is a key to unraveling the mysteries of the woolly mammoths that will be developed in chapter 14. Although the oceans would be warm, the continents would be cool due to the volcanic ash and dust in the stratosphere. The heat released by the warm ocean and its mixing with the air over the land would result in milder winter temperatures compared to today. The main effect of the volcanic ash and gases would be to cause the land to cool during the summer.

In summary, the Flood and its aftershocks provide the volcanic dust and gases that bring the summer cooling indispensable for the Ice Age. Water from the “"fountains of the great deep"” and mixing during the Flood provides a warm ocean. In the mid and high latitudes the warm ocean would cause copious evaporation and produce massive amounts of snow. The two ingredients required for an Ice Age, cool temperatures and tons of snow, were dramatically fulfilled immediately after the Genesis flood. This unique climate would persist for hundreds of years after the Flood as the intensity of the two mechanisms slowly decreased.

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-25   10:48:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1788. To: mcgowanjm (#1777)

www.amazon.com/Ice-Age-Ca...nesis-Flood/dp/093276620X

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-25   10:49:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1789. To: mcgowanjm (#1778)

So who are you voting for anyway.

Who did you vote for in 2008, 2004, 2000, 1996, 1992, 1988, 1984?

Makes no difference.

But I'll be voting the same as Poor Women, Blacks, Gays, Hispanics.

The Elections have been rigged since 1968.

Yes it does. Answer the question. You're not credible unless you answer.

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-25   10:50:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1790. To: mcgowanjm (#1780)

So very true.

Don't know how you think that helps your case.

Did you know trees don't grow when the ground is covered in ice?

What does that mean? Come on use your head. So what does that mean?

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-25   10:52:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1791. To: mcgowanjm (#1783)

It is under 3 bucks in Kentucky and in the South. At least it was a month or so ago.

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-25   10:53:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1792. To: mcgowanjm (#1786)

Hi Jim^;)

Fred Mertz  posted on  2012-07-25   11:06:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1793. To: mcgowanjm (#1786)

We have plenty of fuel to produce our food. To think otherwise is well stupid.

Food trumps fuel. I know this from playing M.U.L.E..

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-25   11:22:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1794. To: A K A Stone (#1791)

Went back up to $3.30-3.35 a gal in Texas. Was down to $3.03, never made it below in my area.

As iron sharpens iron, So a man sharpens the countenance of his friend. -Proverbs 27:17 (NKJV)

redleghunter  posted on  2012-07-25   14:01:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1795. To: redleghunter (#1794)

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-25   19:41:34 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1796. To: A K A Stone (#0)

To save the collective asses of the Top 400-50 000.....that is it.

Everything you're hearing now. Of what's being done.

The previous iteration of crooks (see Sandy Weill, Jack Abromowitz;) are out giving advice on how to fix the scam.

mother of fxuking god....;}

War is being planned, cause after the 1/2 life of this multi year fiasco is over, that's all they got.....;}

http://billhicksisdead.blogspot.com/

That story was bad enough, but now comes word that while the Miami-Dade County commissioners were showering taxpayer money on scumbag billionaire Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria, a dire crisis was building up elsewhere in the county.

From the Miami Herald: Miami-Dade County’s three main water treatment plants and nearly 14,000 miles of pipelines are so outdated it would take more than $1.1 billion just to replace the “most deteriorated, vulnerable sections” of the system, a newly released internal study shows. The county’s main water treatment in Hialeah, and two sewage plants, on Virginia Key and in South Miami-Dade, are 56, 45 and 87 years old, respectively.

It wasn't ever going to end any other way. You knew that. You knew. When Jeffrey Loria and David Samson are involved, it can't end any other way, because they know no different. Loria is the owner of the Marlins, Samson the president, and they're turning the Miami Marlins into a chop shop.

Anibal Sanchez and Omar Infante were traded first this week, to the Tigers. Then Hanley Ramirez, who until this year Loria regarded as the franchise, to the Dodgers. Next could be Josh Johnson, their homegrown ace. That would be $32.75 million shed within a week, bringing the Marlins from their $100 million dream back to the bottom quarter of payrolls in baseball.

And Miami is stuck with $2.4 billion in stadium debt service for that.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   8:25:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1797. To: A K A Stone (#1793)

We have plenty of fuel to produce our food. To think otherwise is well stupid.

I've pretty much got you pegged as

a Texas City citizen. OR Colorado OR FLorida.

You're clueless about agriculture and how it works....

or doesn't.

Example:

IT takes the energy equivalent of 7 nukes to get Iowa fields ready to plant.

O and you don't use diesel.

And you've no idea how much fuel the USSA uses per week.

And the Difference between now and 2007.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   8:28:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1798. To: Fred Mertz (#1792)

Howdy, Fred.....8D

60% chance of rain this PM....

Just a 10 degree cool down would be nice....;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   8:29:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1799. To: A K A Stone (#1791)

It is under 3 bucks in Kentucky and in the South. At least it was a month or so ago.

I'll need to see that.

And I update fuel prices daily.

Catch up.

Ex:

The latest 10 cent rise in fuel the last week is Not holding.

Again, I'll be needing that sub $3 price....;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   8:31:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1800. To: A K A Stone (#1790)

Did you know trees don't grow when the ground is covered in ice?

What does that mean? Come on use your head. So what does that mean?

You think the world was created 6 000 years ago.

And in that time trees were growing in Antarctica.

While Adam and Eve were riding dinosaurs.

That's my take on you and your meaning.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   8:33:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1801. To: A K A Stone (#1789)

Yes it does. Answer the question. You're not credible unless you answer.

AAAAAaaaaannnnddd.....fcuk you....;}

How many questions of mine have you let slip slide away.

Fcuk.

How many have you answered is the better phrasing.

I answered your question.

Poor Muslim Black Gay Woman.

I vote the same....the VERY same....as her.....every time.....;}

And I have no credibility otherwise....pleeeease..... because I don't come when you calll......;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   8:37:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1802. To: A K A Stone (#1788) (Edited)

the '....nesis-Flood' is the give away.

Genesis-in the beginning, God created Adam and Eve and gave each of them a dinosaur.

Later when Noah had loaded the ark, he noticed that the T Rex and the exotic varieties of sheep/antelope/goats weren't getting along.

Which is how those various species went extinct....8D....

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   8:48:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1803. To: mcgowanjm (#1801)

I answer a lot of your questions.

You are obviously ashamed of your votes. What a wuss.

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-26   8:55:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1804. To: A K A Stone (#0)

And here's a better credibilty question (s) for you, stone:

Why did we invade IRaq?

Why has not one bankster been arrested?

For events leading up to this:

Why was $25 Trillion in debt to the USSA debt serf created and given to those same banksters over a 8:1 at least 'Against' ratio?

And see, stone, I expect you to answer none of the above.

Ipso Facto Ergo Propter.....;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   9:05:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1805. To: A K A Stone (#1803)

I answer a lot of your questions.

You are obviously ashamed of your votes. What a wuss.

'a lot' the key there, stone.....;}

And you obviously have no clue as to who I am....;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   9:06:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1806. To: All (#1805)

Now where was I?....o yeah...the Top 400 have lost all credibility and have only violence to offer.

True Fascists all.....;}

"Here's a quote from Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (more on that below as well):

The Troika originally said that Greece' economy would contract by 2.6% in 2010 under the austerity regime, before recovering with growth of 1.1% in 2011, and 2.1% in 2012.

Time for new emergency meetings once more?! Round 826?! In light of the Spiegel quote, Samaras' suggestion this morning that Greece may return to growth by 2014 is the boldest lie of the day, and friend Antonios faces some stiff competition for that prize any day of the week."

theautomaticearth.com/Fin...oject-europe-is-over.html

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   9:08:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1807. To: All (#1806)

The decision to go to war with Syria was made by President George W. Bush at a Camp David meeting on September 15, 2001, just after the spectacular attacks in New York and Washington. Simultaneously attacks were planned in Libya to demonstrate the ability to act in two theaters at once. This decision was corroborated by the testimony of General Wesley Clark, former NATO supreme commander, who was opposed to it.

-Thierry Meyssan

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   9:09:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1808. To: mcgowanjm (#1805)

I have answered your last question until you answser.

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-26   9:16:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1809. To: A K A Stone (#1808)

I have answered your last question until you answser.

And THAT will be different how. And o so convenient for you. Like the USSA POTUS matters now....;}

LMFAO....don't answer....AAMOF...don't do anything.

It'll help the planet....;}

"Longtime readers may recall a comment of mine late last year to the effect that ordinary investors would surely find some way to pile into the shale gas bubble before the next year was out. Thanks to an anonymous reader and the August 2012 edition of SmartMoney Magazine, which arrived from said reader in yesterday’s mail, that comment can now be moved over into the "confirmed" category.

Thus it’s as certain as anything can be that at some point in the fairly near future, probably though not certainly within a year or two, the shale gas bubble is going to pop, major names in the industry are going to go the way of Countrywide Mortgage and Washington Mutual, and gas drilling is going to slump until rising gas prices and declining budgets for exploration and drilling come back into a relationship that makes sense. Mind you, it’s equally certain that the closer we get to the bubble’s end, the more extravagant will be the claims made for the permanence and game-changing nature of the so-called “shale gas revolution,” and the more abusive will be the responses of those whose jobs depend on the bubble to any suggestion that a bubble is in fact what’s going on."

8D

thearchdruidreport.blogsp...he-upside-of-default.html

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   9:27:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1810. To: mcgowanjm (#1809)

You're not a serious poster. I am considering closing this thread and you. I am interested in people promoting liberty not tyranny.

This is not tyranny's flame.

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-26   9:32:30 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1811. To: A K A Stone, sneakypete, meguro, war, skip intro, mininggold (#1810)

You're not a serious poster. I am considering closing this thread and you. I am interested in people promoting liberty not tyranny.

...says the little tyrant.

Fred Mertz  posted on  2012-07-26   9:50:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1812. To: A K A Stone (#0)

Sudden Greenland ice sheet melt baffles scientists (+video)

So they can go on over to that corner....yeah, that one over there :twisted: ....

where the Totally discredited economists are standing.....LMFAO

I myself have been calling for an Ice Free Arctic by 2013....since 2007.

Tick fucking tock.... :twisted: :roll: :shock: :? 8-)

At what fcuking time will the numbers be revised to the

Climate has Passed it's Tipping Point.

The Greenland Melt adds to the accelerating trend which shows Zero signs of reversing.

The Anthropocene until the 'Book of Eli scenario or Ice Age.....by 2030 at the latest.

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   10:02:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1813. To: A K A Stone, sneakypete, meguro, war, skip intro, mininggold, Fred Mertz, All (#1811)

This is not tyranny's flame.

A K A Stone posted on 2012-07-26 9:32:30 ET Reply Trace Private Reply #1811. To: A K A Stone, sneakypete, meguro, war, skip intro, mininggold (#1810)

You're not a serious poster. I am considering closing this thread and you. I am interested in people promoting liberty not tyranny.

...says the little tyrant.

Fred Mertz posted on 2012-07-26 9:50:56 ET

#1810. To: mcgowanjm (#1809)

You're not a serious poster. I am considering closing this thread and you. I am interested in people promoting liberty not tyranny.

BUWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA...You left out Fred, you schmuck....8D

So My 'Padded Cell' not working out for you, eh, A K?

I'll just go back to Status Quo Ante, which then leaves you with your

Goldi Option.....which of course you can exercise at any time....

Just like Goldi did.....

speaking of whom....how's her LP site doin' these days?

BUWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA...8D

Go ahead, Stone....shoot......;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   10:05:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1814. To: All (#1813) (Edited)

I am interested in people promoting liberty not tyranny.

BUWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA....intake of breath......BUWAHAHAHAHA...8D

So how many poor....black.....gay.....muslim.....women.....

you got here now, stone?

Liberty does not include them but Tyranny does?

Then I'm guilty on all counts....

But I don't think 'tyranny' means what you think it means, Stone.....;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   10:09:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1815. To: mcgowanjm (#1813)

speaking of whom....how's her LP site doin' these days?

That site sucks the big one. Ask yukko and crew.

Fred Mertz  posted on  2012-07-26   10:10:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1816. To: A K A Stone (#0)

A problem for you, stone, is that I've been using you as a marker for the Top 400.

You and them think pretty much the same things....;}

And you both think, when you give it any thought,

that the Bottom 99% are being weak.

Instead of the reality....which is that we've been charitable.

Always a step back....after your violence....then holding again.

"What's Greek for "bite me"?

And who's going to force them out of the eurozone to begin with? There are no rules or regulations anywhere regarding the procedure for leaving. You can't leave, and you can't be forced out. If the IMF and/or the rest of the troika wants to stop payments, Greece will probably default on its debt, but it will still be in the eurozone. Sort of whether it likes it or not. Interesting matter for international and constitutional lawyers, for sure, but they don't tend to work very fast (for good reasons).

The bailouts and austerity schemes don't work (that is: not for the people; bankers are elated). The Greeks get miserable without having anything to show for it, the Germans and Dutch pay and pay and pay and never see anything improve. End of exercise. Once everyone sees the blinding light, that is. So please let it sink in: we're in the process of passing a watershed moment, slowed down as we are by the mental sloths among us.

From your latest threat, it seems your Masters are ready for war now.....

Very distasteful that....but this IS Planet Hell....after all....;}

The USSA/UK/Israel have 12 hours after they attack....I'd wish you luck.... but I'm looking for different results......;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   10:26:34 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1817. To: Fred Mertz (#1815)

And thank you, Fred.

Sincerely,

Jim

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   10:28:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1818. To: All (#1817)

the August 2012 issue of SmartMoney is "The Return of Fossil Fuels," and that it rehashes the latest clichés about vast new gas and oil reserves without raising any of the the inconvenient questions that a competent practitioner of the lost art of journalism, should one be wakened from enchanted sleep by the touch of a 1940s radio microphone, would ask as a matter of course. The article trumpets the fact that America is importing less oil than last year,

for example, without mentioning that this is because Americans are using less oil—unemployed people who’ve exhausted their 99 weeks of benefits don’t take many Sunday drives—and it babbles about natural gas for two largely fact-free pages without mentioning that claims about vast supplies far into the future

rely on assumptions about the production decline rate from fracked shale gas wells that make professionals in the gas drilling industry snort beer out their noses. "

;}

mcgowanjm  posted on  2012-07-26   10:45:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1819. To: mcgowanjm (#1818)

So why are you embarrassed of your voting pattern?

My son ate Fish from the Gulf and didn't die. He said it tasted real good.

A K A Stone  posted on  2012-07-26   11:04:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#1820. To: mcgowanjm (#1816)

A problem for you, stone, is that ...

A problem for you is that you add zero value to a site.

Endless, mindless babbling.

.
Whatcha lookin' at, butthead
Say hi to your mom for me.

Biff Tannen  posted on  2012-07-26   11:20:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  



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