Al Qaeda does US dirty work in Libya – Webster Tarpley

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☼▲ Control Thrashh Age ▲☼

A slow thrashy song spontaneously created during this recording. ☼ ——————————————————————————————————- Culture is not your friend, it’s an impediment to understanding what’s going on. That’s why to my mind the word cult and the word culture have a direct relationship to each other. Culture is a cult and if you feel revulsion at the thought of somebody offering to the great carrot, just notice that your own culture is an extremely repressive cult that leads to all kinds of humiliation and degradation, and automatic and unquestioned and unthinking behaviour. I mean the American family is what keeps American psychotherapy alive and well. This is a cauldron for the production of neurosis. Part of what psychedelics do, is they decondition you from cultural values. This is what makes it such a political hot potato, since all culture is a kind of congame, the most dangerous candy you can hand out is candy that makes people start questioning the rules of the game. ~Terence Mckenna♥☼

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Michael is alive, and on June 25, 2009, he was set free. MJ will NOT return in July, but will he ever come back? If so, how? BUT THE REAL QUESTION IS— HAS HE EVER LEFT? Will you accept it? LOVE

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special thanks to all those who traded seeds for hemp bracelets during the bartering experiment: www.youtube.com if you have something you would like to trrade for a hemp bracelet let me know. enis lets the lady eat. www.alanwatts.com While many in the 60’s played the stock market and paid their mortgages, Alan Watts lived aboard a colorful houseboat, writing, speaking, and inspiring a generation to re-assess their values. For more than forty years, Alan Watts earned a reputation as a foremost interpreter of Eastern philosophies for the West. Beginning at age sixteen, when he wrote essay for the journal of the Buddhist Lodge in London, he developed an audience of millions who were enriched through his books, tape recordings, radio, television, and public lectures. In all, Watts wrote more than twenty-five books and recorded hundreds of lectures and seminars, all building toward a personal philosophy that he shared in complete candor and joy with his readers and listeners throughout the world. His overall works have presented a model of individuality and self-expression that can be matched by few philosophers. His life and work reflects an astonishing adventure: he was an editor, Anglican priest, graduate dean, broadcaster, author, lecturer, and entertainer. He had fascinations for archery, calligraphy, cooking, chanting, and dancing, and still was completely comfortable hiking alone in the wilderness. He held a Master’s Degree in Theology from Sudbury-Western Theological