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#341
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On 28 Apr, 01:06, Uncle Al wrote:
George Hammond wrote: [snip crap] http://www.apa.org/journals/features/psp7761121.pdf *Dunning-Kruger effect (2000 Ig Nobel Prize): *ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge * *1) Incompetent individuals tend to overestimate their own level of skill. * *2) Incompetent individuals fail to recognize genuine skill in others. * *3) Incompetent individuals fail to recognize the extremity of their inadequacy. No doubt. But I must say (as a pretty uninterested bystander) that this seems to fulfil George's definition of 'mindless heckling' to a tee. At all events it doesn't tell me anything useful; only that you don't like what George has to say. Surely, if a rational response can be made, why not put one together on a web page, perhaps as an FAQ, and just link to it each time it seems necessary. Not that I care either way; my interest is limited to patristics. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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#342
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On 2 May, 17:21, George Hammond wrote:
On Fri, 2 May 2008 06:45:55 -0700 (PDT),Roger Pearse wrote: [Hammond] * *And finally, Tatian's famous DIATESSARON (c 150 - 160) is a historically famous Gospel harmony. *In it, Tatian, combined Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John into a single narrative. *The historic prominence of this work from 155ad. alone, is testimony that the 4-Gospel Canon was well known and widely accepted by mid second century ad. [Roger Pearse] Perhaps. [Hammond] * *No perhaps about it! *The DIATESSARON was the standard Gospel text of the Syria Christian Church for 200 years. (You mean the *Syriac* church, I think). It was removed from all the churches by Rabbula, who substituted the separated gospels, and the Syriac text is now lost. The text is known to us from an unreliable Arabic translation, plus quotations in Ephraem Syrus' Commentary on the Diatessaron, itself only rediscovered in Syriac (an Armenian translation was previously known) in the last 50 years. The fact that the most eminent of all Syriac writers wrote a commentary on it tells us how important it was, and backs up the claim to pre-eminence in that language group. It's dating to 155ad is indisputable. * Much is obscure about the Diatessaron, because of the problem above. It isn't even certain whether Tatian composed it in Greek in Rome or in Syriac after his return to the East after the death of Justin Martyr. As such its date of composition, while certainly mid-to- late-2nd century, remains uncertain. See:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatessaron I'm afraid Wikipedia is an unreliable source of information on things to do with Christian origins, tho (mainly because of the atheists). All the best, Roger Pearse |
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#343
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On Fri, 2 May 2008 14:41:59 -0700 (PDT), Roger Pearse
wrote: On 28 Apr, 01:06, Uncle Al wrote: George Hammond wrote: [snip crap] [Uncle Al (Alan Schwartz) heckler] *Dunning-Kruger effect (2000 Ig Nobel Prize): *ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge * *1) Incompetent individuals tend to overestimate their own level of skill. * *2) Incompetent individuals fail to recognize genuine skill in others. * *3) Incompetent individuals fail to recognize the extremity of their inadequacy. [Roger Pearse] No doubt. But I must say (as a pretty uninterested bystander) that this seems to fulfil George's definition of 'mindless heckling' to a tee. At all events it doesn't tell me anything useful; only that you don't like what George has to say. Surely, if a rational response can be made, why not put one together on a web page, perhaps as an FAQ, and just link to it each time it seems necessary. [Hammond] Forgeddabouit.... "Uncle Al", real name Allan Schwartz, is a notorious anonymous and foul heckler from Los Angeles who was outed years ago by some irate but responsible citizen. You won't get anything positive, rational or cooperative from him. As for a seperate hecklement website, it's already been done, some illiterate german truck driver and part time musician named Bernhard Schornak (whose grandfather by the way was a heroic resistance fighter executed by the Nazi's) posted an elaborate "anti-SPOG" website in Germany (his grandfather must have rolled over in his grave !) but I recently searched for it and see that the site is down for one reason or another.... unless someone else can find it? Naturally, having no science education the entire site was bogus. In view of his grandfather's heroic stand against the Nazi's I could never fathom Bernhard's "anti scientific proof of God" attitude which seemed utterly reactionary to me..... maybe a different branch of the family or something? [Roger Pearse] Not that I care either way; my interest is limited to patristics. [Hammond] Now there is an interesting subject! Certainly the Church Fathers were some of the most brilliant, capable and heroic men ever to walk the face of the Earth. Particularly people like St. Augustine. Not only did they figure out that there was an (axiomatic) 4-gospel canonl, but they also figured out that there was a (dynamical) Trinity based on the cybernetic feed back loop. These discoveries were centuries, even millenia ahead of their time and have only recently been scientifically proven as part of the discovery of the world's first scientific proof of God (Hammond, 1994, 2003). All the best, Roger Pearse [Hammond] Heads up Roger, there is going to be a resurgence of interest in "armchair patristics" in the not too distant future... a real "CSI Miami" type of investigation into who was who and who said what during the Apostolic Age.... after the world finds out a scientific proof of God has been discovered. ===================================== SCIENTIFIC PROOF OF GOD WEBSITE http://geocities.com/scientific_proof_of_god mirror site: http://proof-of-god.freewebsitehosting.com GOD=G_uv (a folk song on mp3) http://interrobang.jwgh.org/songs/hammond.mp3 ===================================== |
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#344
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On Fri, 2 May 2008 14:53:04 -0700 (PDT), Roger Pearse
wrote: On 2 May, 17:21, George Hammond wrote: On Fri, 2 May 2008 06:45:55 -0700 (PDT),Roger Pearse wrote: [Hammond] * *And finally, Tatian's famous DIATESSARON (c 150 - 160) is a historically famous Gospel harmony. *In it, Tatian, combined Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John into a single narrative. *The historic prominence of this work from 155ad. alone, is testimony that the 4-Gospel Canon was well known and widely accepted by mid second century ad. [Roger Pearse] Perhaps. [Hammond] * *No perhaps about it! *The DIATESSARON was the standard Gospel text of the Syria Christian Church for 200 years. [Roger Pearse] (You mean the *Syriac* church, I think). It was removed from all the churches by Rabbula, who substituted the separated gospels, and the Syriac text is now lost. The text is known to us from an unreliable Arabic translation, plus quotations in Ephraem Syrus' Commentary on the Diatessaron, itself only rediscovered in Syriac (an Armenian translation was previously known) in the last 50 years. The fact that the most eminent of all Syriac writers wrote a commentary on it tells us how important it was, and backs up the claim to pre-eminence in that language group. [Hammond] It's dating to 155ad is indisputable. * [Roger Pearse] Much is obscure about the Diatessaron, because of the problem above. It isn't even certain whether Tatian composed it in Greek in Rome or in Syriac after his return to the East after the death of Justin Martyr. As such its date of composition, while certainly mid-to- late-2nd century, remains uncertain. [Hammond] See:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatessaron [[Roger Pearse] I'm afraid Wikipedia is an unreliable source of information on things to do with Christian origins, tho (mainly because of the atheists). All the best, Roger Pearse [Hammond] Since I have the delightful advantage of being in (disputed) possession of the world's only scientific proof of God (including the 4-Gospel Canon and the Trinity) it is with some fascination that I look back on the events of the Apostolic Age. Having said that, I find that the history of the 4-Gospel Canon seems rather mundane and far from mysterious, since it post dates the classical age of Greece during which Hippocrates announced that Man had 4-personalities... the 4-Humors. In scientific hindsight then it is not surprising that the 4-Gospel Canon emerged during the halcyon days of the relatively enlightened Roman empire. What I find far more astounding is that the "Trinity" appeared during the patristic age. The Trinity, the SPOG shows, is scientifically based on the Cybernetic feedback loop, is a sophisticated psychological concept, and incidentally is manifest (embodied) in the Three Branches of Government which is a universal structure in all 250 governments of the world today. The ancient Greek and Roman governments had only a very loosely defined "3 branches of government" although I think it was generally recognized even then....Executive (emperor), Legislative (senate), and Judiciary (courts of law)). What I have been unable to pin down is where and when did the concept of the Trinity emerge in Christian theology. True, Jesus says to baptize in the name of the "Father, Son and Holy Ghost", so the structure must have been known during his time, but I am still unclear as to where and when the movement towards a "Trinity of God" in Christian theology began in anteNicene Christianity. Do you have any views on this; who started it, how did the movement get started, and when was it finally canonized as official doctrine? This is of particular interest today in that the Moslems deny the Trinity and the Koran accuses Christians of "polytheism" and believing in "3 Gods", which of course is a distortion of the Trinity. At any rate, the discovery of the proof of the Trinity, is going to be another blow for the Moslems and the Koran and will doublessly be a Bible vs. Koran issue after the discovery of the SPOG is recognized. ===================================== SCIENTIFIC PROOF OF GOD WEBSITE http://geocities.com/scientific_proof_of_god mirror site: http://proof-of-god.freewebsitehosting.com GOD=G_uv (a folk song on mp3) http://interrobang.jwgh.org/songs/hammond.mp3 ===================================== |
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#345
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Roger Pearse wrote:
On 1 May, 16:35, none ""doug\"@(none)" wrote: Roger Pearse wrote: On 29 Apr, 08:19, none ""doug\"@(none)" wrote: George Hammond wrote: ("4-demigods") Matt, Mark, Luke and John. These last four are the books chosen by the council ofNicea to be in the New Testament. The Council of Nicaea did not determine the content of scripture. The 4 gospels are considered canonical by all the ante-Nicene fathers, right back as far as it goes. Luke and John were written in Turkey 100-200 years after Matthew and Mark so that is not quite correct. Um, if Matthew was written ca. 80 AD, then you are saying Luke and John were written between 180 AD and 280 AD? This is absurd. There are shed-loads of quotations from them both before those dates. There are commentaries on them from 200 AD! There's even a bit of a physical manuscript dated to ca. 125 AD. But I don't quite see what this wild stuff has to do with my comment. I heard this story about the bible and the council some years ago and got suspicious. It sounded wrong, based on what I knew ofTertullian and the ante-Nicene fathers. So I went out and hunted down all the primary sources on the council. You can consult them he http://www.tertullian.org/rpearse/nicaea.html I also looked in Metzger on the Canon of the NT, just to check I hadn't missed any. The council also voted as to whether women were humans. What a curious idea; impossible for any Christian council to do such a thing. Someone is pulling your leg, my friend. This is an interesting assumption. Why would you insult them to suggest this? ... Come, this won't do. You know very well why this claim about the Council is made -- it's an appeal to contemporary societal values and is intended as a smear. Either produce evidence for your claim or retract it, hey? You made a bald assertions that such a vote was impossible. You made that without support. The treatment of women in the primitive societies was generally not very good. There have been a number of stages in the improvement of their state. You took it as a smear. I did not offer it that way. I am not responsible for your interpretations. The point of the council was to try to unify the various christian sects No, I'm afraid it was not. Christianity was not split into sects at that date. Rather it was to decide whether the Second person of the Trinity was of the same substance (homoousios) as the First person, or of like substance; and to reach an agreed date on which to celebrate Easter. No, there were some severe differences. Evidence? And the sects still do not agree on the date for easter for example. Which 'sects' did not agree on this? Name them. At the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Easter is celebrated at different times by the different groups. Look in last weeks news and you will see the discussion of this. The reality is that Christians in the East and West, who were all in communion with each other, did not celebrate it at the same time, for historical reasons. That is one reason why they wanted to get together and work out an agreement. There was no quarrel between the bishops of Rome and Alexandria on this; they just didn't have an agreed way to do it. They also decided to not include other groups texts such as the gosphel of thomas. Someone had to go through and select among the texts from various groups and then edit them to make them somewhat more consistent. Well, I'm going to have to be blunt. Please now produce an ancient text which supports this claim or retract it. :-) The fact is that the gosphel of Thomas was not included. There are also others in the Nag Hamadi scrolls that were ignored. These all date from the time of the council of Nicea. Seriously, all this is bunk. I have given you a link to all the ancient texts that refer in any way to the council of Nicaea. None of them contain the above story. You have your own definition of bunk. ... and so it accepted the texts from various ones even though there are terrible discrepancies between them. This sounds like a confused memory of the fact that the last few books (2 and 3 John, 2 Peter, Hebrews, Revelation) were not geographically spread over the same areas, and harmonisation gradually happened after the church became legal when it was easier to hold councils. Matthew for instance, is the jewish book ... (snip) I notice the very dishonest snipping of support for the comments I made about differences in the books. This is the operation of a coward who does not want to lose a discussion. You cannot argue with what was posted so you snip it. You asked for discrepancies, I provided them. Your beliefs are blinding you to the truth. The church worked hard to keep people under its control and thus there was the death penalty in England for translating the bible into English. In fact, the King James version is heavily based on the translation of a person who was killed for translating it. None of the assertions snipped appear relevant to my comment, tho. All this probably has no direct relevance on your thread, but don't we all want to have the right raw *data*? I know that I do. I hope that helps. You are correct that it has no relevance and that George has no clue about the connection he is trying to draw with his word salad between science and religion. I have no opinion on George's theory (I can't take any interest in such things), but it sounds a bit odd. George's theory is total nonsense. He has strung together a series of unconnected sentences that show up with what he wanted to prove. He is a classic crank and the hits on his website are from people who cannot believe that someone could produce so much nonsense in one place. No one has ever believed him and never will. There is no science in it. He started out with a religious point of view he desperately wanted to push and failed badly. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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#346
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George Hammond wrote:
On Fri, 2 May 2008 12:06:11 -0700 (PDT), Roger Pearse wrote: On 1 May, 16:35, none ""doug\"@(none)" wrote: Roger Pearse wrote: On 29 Apr, 08:19, none ""doug\"@(none)" wrote: George Hammond wrote: ("4-demigods") Matt, Mark, Luke and John. These last four are the books chosen by the council ofNicea to be in the New Testament. The Council of Nicaea did not determine the content of scripture. The 4 gospels are considered canonical by all the ante-Nicene fathers, right back as far as it goes. Luke and John were written in Turkey 100-200 years after Matthew and Mark so that is not quite correct. Um, if Matthew was written ca. 80 AD, then you are saying Luke and John were written between 180 AD and 280 AD? This is absurd. There are shed-loads of quotations from them both before those dates. There are commentaries on them from 200 AD! There's even a bit of a physical manuscript dated to ca. 125 AD. But I don't quite see what this wild stuff has to do with my comment. I heard this story about the bible and the council some years ago and got suspicious. It sounded wrong, based on what I knew ofTertullian and the ante-Nicene fathers. So I went out and hunted down all the primary sources on the council. You can consult them he http://www.tertullian.org/rpearse/nicaea.html I also looked in Metzger on the Canon of the NT, just to check I hadn't missed any. The council also voted as to whether women were humans. What a curious idea; impossible for any Christian council to do such a thing. Someone is pulling your leg, my friend. This is an interesting assumption. Why would you insult them to suggest this? ... Come, this won't do. You know very well why this claim about the Council is made -- it's an appeal to contemporary societal values and is intended as a smear. Either produce evidence for your claim or retract it, hey? The point of the council was to try to unify the various christian sects No, I'm afraid it was not. Christianity was not split into sects at that date. Rather it was to decide whether the Second person of the Trinity was of the same substance (homoousios) as the First person, or of like substance; and to reach an agreed date on which to celebrate Easter. No, there were some severe differences. Evidence? And the sects still do not agree on the date for easter for example. Which 'sects' did not agree on this? Name them. The reality is that Christians in the East and West, who were all in communion with each other, did not celebrate it at the same time, for historical reasons. That is one reason why they wanted to get together and work out an agreement. There was no quarrel between the bishops of Rome and Alexandria on this; they just didn't have an agreed way to do it. They also decided to not include other groups texts such as the gosphel of thomas. Someone had to go through and select among the texts from various groups and then edit them to make them somewhat more consistent. Well, I'm going to have to be blunt. Please now produce an ancient text which supports this claim or retract it. :-) Seriously, all this is bunk. I have given you a link to all the ancient texts that refer in any way to the council of Nicaea. None of them contain the above story. ... and so it accepted the texts from various ones even though there are terrible discrepancies between them. This sounds like a confused memory of the fact that the last few books (2 and 3 John, 2 Peter, Hebrews, Revelation) were not geographically spread over the same areas, and harmonisation gradually happened after the church became legal when it was easier to hold councils. Matthew for instance, is the jewish book ... (snip) None of the assertions snipped appear relevant to my comment, tho. All this probably has no direct relevance on your thread, but don't we all want to have the right raw *data*? I know that I do. I hope that helps. You are correct that it has no relevance and that George has no clue about the connection he is trying to draw with his word salad between science and religion. I have no opinion on George's theory (I can't take any interest in such things), but it sounds a bit odd. All the best, Roger Pearse [Hammond] Caution Roger, Doug claims he's a "Physics PhD", however, the low intellectual, and decidedly non-scientific content of his posts indicates that he is an applied physics technician at best, and OBVIOUSLY is an aggravated and snooty anti-religious heckler. In other words, we point out your silly mistakes and you do not like that. Again, my long experience with this type of personality shows them to be utterly INCORRIGIBLE and resistant to any logical or factual argument. We point out your mistakes because we understand logic and factual arguments. You do not. You have no understanding of the scientific methods and, when asked, just post your cv which proves nothing. As indeed your "proof" does not. The fact that he is unable to read and comprehebnd the S.P.O.G. which has been peer published and copy posted at: http://geocities.com/scientific_proo...ammond5s1.html demonstrates theat he is NOT competent in graduate level physics.... in fact, lacking any verification of his credentials or even his real name, odds are that he is in fact a CRACKPOT and a COMPLETELY FAKE and an IMPOSTER. I have read it, laughed and marveled that you could actually put this kind of nonsense out where people might see it. It is hilarious but has no relation to a god, to science or to a proof. ===================================== SCIENTIFIC PROOF OF GOD WEBSITE http://geocities.com/scientific_proof_of_god mirror site: http://proof-of-god.freewebsitehosting.com GOD=G_uv (a folk song on mp3) http://interrobang.jwgh.org/songs/hammond.mp3 ===================================== |
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#347
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George Hammond wrote:
On Fri, 2 May 2008 10:30:34 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: On 2 mei, 18:21, George Hammond wrote: On Fri, 2 May 2008 06:45:55 -0700 (PDT), Roger Pearse wrote: [Hammond] And finally, Tatian's famous DIATESSARON (c 150 - 160) is a historically famous Gospel harmony. In it, Tatian, combined Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John into a single narrative. The historic prominence of this work from 155ad. alone, is testimony that the 4-Gospel Canon was well known and widely accepted by mid second century ad. [Roger Pearse] Perhaps. [Hammond] No perhaps about it! The DIATESSARON was the standard Gospel text of the Syria Christian Church for 200 years. It's dating to 155ad is indisputable. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatessaron where you will find: =========BLOCK QUOTE============== The Diatesseron is notable evidence for the authority already enjoyed by the four gospels by the mid-second century. Twenty years after Tatian's harmony, Irenaeus expressly proclaimed the authoritative character of the four gospels. The Diatesseron became the standard text of the gospels in the Syriac-speaking churches down to the fifth century, when it gave way to the four separate Gospels." ======END BLOCK QUOTE============== [Peter van Velzen, innocent bystander] Thanks for mentioning it. I did not know such a work existed! [Hammond] I ran across it 20 years ago, I thought Origen wrote it around 220, but it turns out Tatian a Syrian speaking Christian monk wrote it in 160. It's quite famous. Tatian was a pupil of Justin Martyr in Rome. The guy must have been amazingly bright to figure out that the 4-Gospel form was "canonical". Diatesseron means "through four" in Greek by the way. [Peter van Velzen, innocent bystander] By the way: this is not a war-zone. Just give peace a chance :-) [Hammond] There is a war going on in the Middle East between Moslem Jihadists and the U.S. military. The Jihadists claim the U.S. is the "great Satan". If so, it certainly is a propaganda blow to Islam that a Christian U.S. Physicst has discovered and published the world's first and only scientific proof of God (and allah), and is heroically defending it against all comers on Usenet. Why do you not go over there and show them your "proof"? That should scare them off. Peter van Velzen (born 1950) April 2008 Amstelveen The Netherlands ===================================== SCIENTIFIC PROOF OF GOD WEBSITE http://geocities.com/scientific_proof_of_god mirror site: http://proof-of-god.freewebsitehosting.com GOD=G_uv (a folk song on mp3) http://interrobang.jwgh.org/songs/hammond.mp3 ===================================== |
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#348
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Roger Pearse wrote:
On 28 Apr, 01:06, Uncle Al wrote: George Hammond wrote: [snip crap] http://www.apa.org/journals/features/psp7761121.pdf Dunning-Kruger effect (2000 Ig Nobel Prize): ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge 1) Incompetent individuals tend to overestimate their own level of skill. 2) Incompetent individuals fail to recognize genuine skill in others. 3) Incompetent individuals fail to recognize the extremity of their inadequacy. No doubt. But I must say (as a pretty uninterested bystander) that this seems to fulfil George's definition of 'mindless heckling' to a tee. At all events it doesn't tell me anything useful; only that you don't like what George has to say. Surely, if a rational response can be made, why not put one together on a web page, perhaps as an FAQ, and just link to it each time it seems necessary. Not that I care either way; my interest is limited to patristics. All the best, Roger Pearse George has had his mistakes pointed out for years. He does not want to learn from them. He wants to have discovered something and, if he acknowledges his mistakes, he admits he has done nothing. So he blusters, swears and uses lots of capital letters. His work is not even close enough to be wrong. |
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#349
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none wrote:
George Hammond wrote: [Hammond] There is a war going on in the Middle East between Moslem Jihadists and the U.S. military. The Jihadists claim the U.S. is the "great Satan". If so, it certainly is a propaganda blow to Islam that a Christian U.S. Physicst has discovered and published the world's first and only scientific proof of God (and allah), and is heroically defending it against all comers on Usenet. Why do you not go over there and show them your "proof"? That should scare them off. People normally don't taunt others they presume to be mentally ill. What's going on here? -- monkfish * alt.atheism is removed from the header because trying to prove the existence of God is prohibited by their undebatable policy. ** Atheists have blind faith in their ability to know of all actual or possible modes of existence. Such hubris cannot be good for science. |
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#350
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"George Hammond" wrote in message ... On Fri, 02 May 2008 09:11:22 GMT, "John Smith" wrote: [Hammond] There is little mystery to the history of the 4-Gospel Canon,............................. Tatian's famous DIATESSARON (c 150 - 160) is a historically famous Gospel harmony. In it, Tatian, combined Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John into a single narrative. The historic prominence of this work from 155ad. alone, is testimony that the 4-Gospel Canon was well known and widely accepted by mid second century ad. [Hammond] Incidentally, it is a pleasure to be in polite company for a change.... but surely you must realize that this discussion thread is taking place in a war zone. [John Smith, S.P.O.G. critic] When you post about the history of the bible - it is one thing. When you post utter bull **** - like your last paragraph/pile - you get another, more appropriate, response. [Hammond] I'm not here to post gratuitous troll, I'm here to take names and kick ass. Bwahahahaaaaaa.................. then why have you cried and run away at any challenge all of your life? |
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