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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Michael Jackson and Justin Beiber Coincidences

Michael Jackson: Death Hoax or Not?: Michael Jackson and Justin Beiber Coincidences:


If you are a Justin Beiber fan than you know the singer has gone on record as saying that he admired and hoped to have as long a career as Michael Jackson. So it has been quite interesting to watch this young entertainer's career since Michael Jackson's supposed death, and the coincidences that he seems to have latched onto.

So let's start by talking about the coincidences I have noticed.


1.) Justin Beiber titled his 2012' album last year as "BELIEVE", and we all know that the word Believe has seemed to follow Michael Jackson around since his supposed death. Now I know this isn't as much a coincidence since Michael Jackson's guitarist from the "This is It" concert Orianthi also titled her album shortly after Michael's supposed death, "Believe".

2.) But, there is a song on Justin Beiber's "Believe" album called" "Maria", which starts out very similar to one of the songs on Michael's posthumous album, "Michael" called: "Breaking News". (This song starts out with news announcements and so does Justin Beiber's song ("Maria"). Then Beiber sings a song about a girl named Maria who's says he fathered her child, and if you've been following Michael Jackson's career then you know that he wrote the song, "Billie Jean", because a girl named Billie Jean accused him of the same thing.
Usher and Justin Beiber

Is this just a coincidence, or is Justin Beiber trying to tell Michael Jackson fans and Believers something? I have no idea. I just think it's pretty strange.

Now I realize once again that other musical artist have copied Michael Jackson, such as; Usher, Chris Brown, Madonna, and many others that I'm sure you could tell me about. So whether Justin Beiber is doing this on purpose or just hoping that his career manages to last up to four decades like Michael's did I can't say. There is one other thing I did find interesting. When you listen to the song, "Maria", you almost feel like he hired the Jackson brothers to be the background singers to give it that Jackson 5 sound. Now whether that was his intent I can't really say. All I can say is that it is pretty eerie, so much so that even others have made comments on Beiber's video for "Maria" out on Youtube.com about how Michael Jackson sounding it is.

(CLICK HERE to listen to the song, "Breaking News" by Michael Jackson)


(CLICK HERE to listen to the song, "Maria" by Justin Beiber)

Banning Furbies


In 1998, the NSA (National Security Agency) banned Furbies from their national headquarters. It was feared that Furbies would overhear top secret information, which would then be shared with others when the toys began to talk.
 
Furbys are interactive robotic pets with various modes of interaction to which they respond, Furbys are loud and have no off switch (You have been warned!!!) but will go to sleep if you leave them alone for a bit... They also looked downright creepy with those bulging mechanical eyes, and as much as I loved mine, I would often place it outside my room before I went to sleep.

shhhht


If he's down the stage!
who`s on stage waiting to be replaced?

He has never been questioned under oath about Jackson's death and did not testify at his trial.

Origin of the French flag


In brief we can accept that the colours are basically those of Paris as used on the day of the storming of the Bastille, mixed with the Royal white. It is thought that the Marquis de Lafayette was responsible for inventing the red, white and blue cockade which soon became compulsory for Revolutionaries in 1789. We don't have to believe that the combination arose because the King placed a red-blue cockade in his hat next to a Royal white one, but combinations of Revolutionary and Royal emblems were common at that time.

The flag was created in 1790 but with the colours the reverse of what they are today, i.e. with red at the hoist, and revised in 1794 to the modern form. The 1790 flag existed only as part of the jack and ensign of the navy.

The flag went out of use with Napoléon I's defeat at Waterloo, but was brought back in 1830 (again by Lafayette) and has remained in use ever since. Although significances have been attached to the colours these are all spurious and invented after the fact. The red and blue of Paris were the livery colours of the coat of arms and natural ones for use by the militia

Conrad Murray Ordered to Sit for Deposition
The colors of the French flag "combine" different symbols, invented after the fact:
- Blue is the color of Saint Martin, a rich Gallo-Roman officer who ripped his blue cloak with his sword to give one half of it to a poor who was begging him in the snow. This is the symbol of care, of the duty that the rich had to help the poor.
- White is the color of the Virgin Mary, to whom the Kingdom of France was consecrated by Louis XIII in the 17th century; it is also the color of Joan of Arc, under whose banner the English were finally driven out of the Kingdom (15th century). It became logically the color of Royalty. The King's vessels carried plain white flags at sea.
- Red is the color of Saint Denis, the saint patron of Paris. The original oriflamme (war banner) of the Kings was the red oriflamme of Saint Denis

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Bringing Abraham Lincoln to life


When I first read years ago that famed director Steven Spielberg was undertaking a project to make a movie about Abraham Lincoln, our greatest President Of The United States, I was excited as well as apprehensive. To be sure, Mr. Spielberg has directed some of the most beloved films ever made, including "Jaws," "Saving Private Ryan," and "Schindler's List." He's also given us "Hook" and "Indiana Jones and The Crystal Skull," proof that even a famous director comes up with clunkers. Then I happened to read that Mr. Spielberg had purchased the filming rights to author Doris Kearns Goodwin's best-selling "Team of Rivals: The Political Genius Of Abraham Lincoln." It's a good book, but it's also the "Lincoln-Book-Which-Will-Not-Die" and, in my opinion, undeserving of the excessive hype surrounding it since it was published in 2005. There are other Lincoln books which are significantly better, such as "Lincoln" by the late historian David Herbert Donald.

Then Mr. Spielberg's interest in "Lincoln" seemed to fall by the wayside as he brought us the aforementioned 4th Indiana Jones movie, "The Adventures of Tintin" and "War Horse." In fact, Spielberg's original choice to portray Lincoln, esteemed actor Liam Neeson, dropped out of the project claiming that he was too "old" to effectively play him.

But then the project gathered momentum as it was announced that our greatest living actor, Daniel Day-Lewis, had been cast as Mr. Lincoln. Sally Field as Mary Lincoln and Tommy Lee Jones as Representative Thaddeus Stevens also joined the cast. Between these three actors, they have earned five Academy Awards ® for their craft. Rounding out this exceptional cast is David Strathairn as Secretary of State William H. Seward, Hal Holbrook as Lincoln adviser Preston Blair, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Lincoln's son Robert.

Mr. Spielberg was wise not to try to create a traditional biopic of Abraham Lincoln. To do justice to such an extraordinary life as Lincoln's would be nearly impossible in a film of only 2-3 hours in length. Instead, he chose to focus on Lincoln's fight for passage of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which forever banned institutionalized slavery in the United States. It was a wise decision. It permitted tight focus on one of the most dramatic months in U.S. history, when Congress was trying to decide if the slaves would be truly "forever free."

The acting. Oh my, the acting. This is one of the finest overall acting performances by a movie cast in decades. It almost goes without saying that Daniel Day-Lewis' portrayal of Abraham Lincoln can immediately be declared the greatest depiction of Lincoln in cinematic history. Mr. Day-Lewis "Lincoln" is the closest we will ever come to the real Lincoln. We can't possibly know how Abraham Lincoln sounded, but all accounts tell us his voice was pitched high and thin. To prepare his "voice" for Lincoln, Day-Lewis listened to old recordings of farmers from the regions of Kentucky and Indiana where Lincoln lived. The resulting voice/accent which Day-Lewis uses might be startling to many audience members, but it is as accurate as it can possibly be.

Daniel Day-Lewis took an entire year to prepare for this part. He is notoriously choosy about the roles he takes, and this is only his fifth movie of the past fifteen years. Day-Lewis who is of course British, traveled to Lincoln's town of Springfield, IL to tour the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, the Lincoln home, and spent hours talking with Lincoln scholars in his attempt to get to "know" the President. He studied books about Lincoln's gait, how he held his head and had stooped shoulders. The result is a truly astonishing portrayal of Mr. Lincoln. So exceptional that I felt as if I was in the presence of greatness, not just seeing "Lincoln" as he most likely was, but seeing what is probably the greatest performance of this year. In fact, it might be judged in the future as one of the most skillful performances ever seen on film. If Mr. Day-Lewis does not win his third Academy Award ® as Best Actor for this brilliant and stunning performance, it will be a travesty.

Ms. Sally Field is outstanding in her role as the haunted Mary Lincoln. She is in her own right one of the best actors of her generation, having also won two Best Acting Oscars ® for roles in "Norma Rae" and "Places In The Heart." Quite simply, this is Ms. Field's best role and work in decades. Her portrayal of Mary Lincoln is the right mix of grief, frustration, and anger at having lost two children already, including Mary and Abraham's seemingly favorite, Willie, who died of typhus in 1862. The scene where "Mary" berates "Lincoln" for not showing (in her opinion) enough grief for their son is spectacular. Ms. Field more than holds her own against Mr. Day-Lewis. Don't be surprised if she is nominated for Best Supporting Actress.

Tommy Lee Jones as Representative Thaddeus Stevens, who wanted to have complete equality, not only freedom, for slaves, is also outstanding. Stevens was himself curmudgeonly as Mr. Jones seems to be in most of his roles, but Jones' performance is a wonderful portrayal of a man who deeply cared about ALL people, especially the ones who were held in slavery. In fact, a scene toward the end of the movie is highly moving in which Jones conveys the emotions of a man who has just won a long and bitter struggle. I would expect Mr. Jones will achieve his own Oscar ® nomination for his performance.

David Strathairn, always so good, is an excellent Secretary of State "William Henry Seward." He depicts Seward as a somewhat "stuffy" man of refined tastes, who is such a loyal aide to Abraham Lincoln that he feels free to argue and at times yell at the President. It is also an accurate to life portrayal.

Spielberg chose the outstanding play and screenwriter Tony Kushner to bring the story to life. The script is a marvel, with effective dialog and a wonderful historical accuracy. Spielberg's cinematographer Janusz Kaminski has brought a perfect look and feel to the film. The colors and lighting are soft which add to the overall effect of the solemn nature of the film. And Spielberg's directing might be his finest work since "Schindler's List". It is a subdued, authentic, and restrained direction which is thankfully lacking (mostly) the sentimentality that sometimes appears in his films.

Some parents have asked me in person and via email if this film is age appropriate for children who are 11 or 12 years old. The film is rated PG-13 for language, a quick scene of brutal hand-to-hand combat, and the gore of dead bodies and amputated limbs. "Lincoln" himself uses a scatological term in a joke he tells, but the historic Lincoln didn't shy away from language and off-color stories. The language is not gratuitous nor excessive, and honestly it's probably nothing that children that age haven't already heard on the school bus or playground. If your child (or children) loves Abraham Lincoln, as so many seem to do, don't hesitate to take them to see this movie.

The performances by the actors and director, the screenplay, and the cinematography all combine to make "Lincoln" a film of extraordinary achievement. I believe it will withstand the test of time and will be deemed one of Spielberg's greatest films, if not his career masterpiece. It is a tour de force of drama, emotion, some humor, and enthralling acting. At the end of the showing, most of the audience applauded and more than a few were in tears.

If I had to rate this film in only one word, that word would be: "Perfection". Thank you, Steven Spielberg, cast and crew, for bringing Abraham Lincoln to life

More Than Just a Bagel

 

A History Lesson

Bill Christopher Most people think of bagels as being a delicious member of the bread family. They are content to simply enjoy the multitudinous types and flavors available and that's OK. But how many know about the bagel's important role in history?
A little research on the topic would be a revelation and enhance the serious bagelistas' appreciation of this tasty staple.
For example, few people know that U.S. President George Washington substituted a silver dollar to throw across the Potomac instead of a pumpernickel and rye bagel.
"Martha would kill me!" he exclaimed before giving the coin a mighty toss.
About 75 years later, President Lincoln munched on a blueberry bagel while penning the immortal Gettysburg Address. A close examination shows a small cream cheese stain in the lower right-hand corner of the original document.
Artist Vincent Van Gogh, the man who left us with so many beautiful paintings, reportedly used a plain bagel to paint many of the hypnotic background swirls in his work. It is also rumored (but not verified) that Van Gogh had run out of his cherished sun-dried tomato bagels the morning of the day he took his own life.
Coincidence?
Another little-known fact is that, in the last years of his life, Thomas Edison experimented with an invention that he hoped would be able to detect if bagels had souls. Edison considered eating cinnamon sugar and chocolate chip bagels a spiritual experience and wanted to prove it scientifically.
Archeologists who discovered the Dead Sea scrolls in the late 1940s also uncovered small, round objects with noticeable holes in the middle that appeared to have beren calcified bagels eaten by the ancient Hebrews. Were bagels part of some sort of early worship ritual not spoken of in scripture? Did believers enjoy an ancient version of today's beloved bagel, perhaps with their favorite beverage, before heading to the Temple?
No one knows for sure but it makes for some interesting navel-gazing.
In the world of sports, baseball slugger Babe Ruth was known for his prodigious appetite for food and drink. Several old-time New York Yankees claimed that Ruth would often consume a dozen bagels before games. They say he loved any kind and would top-off his feast with a big cigar.
In the 1960s, the Beatles recorded a song called "Strawberry Fields Forever." The enigmatic lyrics have fascinated and puzzled fans ever since. But if one listens closely to the fade-out, you can hear John Lennon say the words "Cranberry Nuts," an obvious reference to that variety of bagel.
Few folks realize that the famous 1979 riots in Levittown, PA were not caused by the gas crisis. Rather, the truckers were upset with a new Federal law that forbade eating while behind the wheel of large trucks. This ban extended to bagels and it was too much for the hard-working truckers to take.
"Hell no! We want our chewy dough!" they chanted.
Bagels made those long trips tolerable and things didn't quiet down until the government promised to rescind the mandate, effective immediately.
These are just a few examples of the bagel's role in past events. As great as bagels are, how much would more would people appreciate this treat if they knew its' contribution to the world we live in.
A bagel isn't just a bread product, made of yeasted dough, shaped like a ring and then baked.

It's a part of history!

Echoes of Dealey Plaza: The JFK Assassination

,

 
Bill Christopher This year marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. I can't add much to the decades-long debate of what happened in Dallas on November 22, 1963. Study of the assassination has become a cottage industry in this country and I also went through a period of time, studying books, reading articles and examining descriptions of the available evidence in an attempt to make sense of the murder of the President.

I've backed-off in recent months because I've come to the conclusion that we'll probably never know who was behind the assassination. I think even a cursory look at the evidence and eyewitness testimony shows that Kennedy wasn't killed by a lone assassin with a cheap Italian rifle. After establishing the likelihood of conspiracy, the multitudinous trails lead in so many directions that I wonder if we'll ever get to the truth of who ordered the execution of JFK. I have my suspicions and they trouble me at the potential depth of the darkness that has co-opted our country in the past 75-100 years.
I hope others continue to study the evidence and call for answers. In my quest for the truth about that day in Dallas, I was asked many times, "Why?" and "Who cares?" My answer was, and remains, because we need to find out who committed this heinous act and bring them to justice. Otherwise, the culprits will have gotten away with one of the most-brazen crimes in history.

Even if those responsible have passed on, their names need to be recorded in the annuals of infamy.
Hopefully, we haven't sunk so low as to think it doesn't matter.
It does.
November 22, 1963 marked a turning point in America's history. Not only did we lose a young and vibrant President, those bullets blasted something out of our nation's collective soul.
We've been reeling ever since.
The guilty need to answer for the Kennedy family's crushing pain and sorrow and for the psychic damage inflicted on the American collective.

I hope and pray that someone,
some day,
somehow finds those answers.

Why, Why, Tell 'Em That Is Human Nature Why, Why,


You first must realize that behavior results from impulse. Behavior can't be decision based because it would be acting. So, impulses drive behavior. What programs our impulses? Our life experience. Hatred is perfectly explicable when you understand that it is an impulsive action, programmed by neurosensory filtered inputs, It is called operant conditioning. This a great method for predicting future behavior. So, hatred is an emotional response to a stimulus that is reinforced


I think you misunderstand what it is to be truly objective. You can set aside these ideals as much as you can, but in reality you are still completely biased. The language you speak, the clothes you wear, the food you eat, the adverts you are barraged with, the establishments that influence your culture, the climate you live in etc all influence your mind and ideals and therefore your way of thinking


please watch the whole thing!
 
We don't choose our upbringing, and any choices we make later in life are a domino effect of what has shaped our personality so far. And then you get the "free will of the gaps", where any unexplained behavior is said to have just happened randomly, until we can eventually explain the causality when we have a better scientific understanding of it.

I suppose it is the nature of who we are to not be able to see our own blindness...

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Conspiracy of Lies?

conspirasy_zps067f02eb

On June 25, 2009, the final chapter in one of the most controversial histories of present times ended: Michael Jackson died from an overdose of the anesthetic Propofol, as his autopsy would later reveal. 4 years after the shocking but, for many fans who’ve always believed in his innocence, perhaps not that unexpected, event, we have begun to clear the name of the King of Pop, as the untold truth comes out to light.
In 1993, when his personal life had already become tabloid fodder and not a day went by without at least one Jackson story, Michael Jackson was accused of molesting a child. 13-year-old Jordan Chandler and his father, Dr. Evan Chandler, went public with the story, prompting authorities to launch an investigation into the claims.




In December that same year, Neverland Ranch is raided by police: documents and other items are removed from the premises, and Michael is submitted to a 23-minute strip search that leaves him feeling so humiliated he will never recover from it.
In May 2002, Michael decides to do something he’d never done before: very shy and fiercely protective of his personal life (not that anyone can blame him, though), he agrees to allow BBC journalist Martin Bashir and his cameras into his life for the chance to tell the world his story, unbiased, unedited and brutally honest. For the remainder of his life, Michael Jackson was branded a child molester even though he’d been through hell and back to prove that he was the exact opposite of that. For the media and the public opinion, the mere fact that he’d been found not guilty was proof of just how good he was – at hiding his true nature, that of a monster.
That Michael Jackson had been found not guilty was, most ironically of all, proof that he was, because that was the most profitable story to sell. Even more, it was proof that he could get away with it.

With this, we ended Michael Jackson’s career, broke his spirit and tainted his image for eternity. And, yes, we killed him

Are you a FRIEND ??

tweet_zpse9e203b6




He just wanted to know if you´re doing good or bad press!!!

Yeah Pearl,well awfully sorry to break it to you,but you are as bad as .....BAD PRESS
Both stirring the MJ pot, both making money from his 'death'/production and both have no right to call yourselves Michael Jackson fans or freinds.
Self decided spokeswomen who need to get lives and stop talking about Michaels.

and I will tell you another thing,Pearl Jr does NOT speak for me as a believer.How dare she talk in the 'we' sense like 'we' all stand behind what she says.

Just another nobody who is taking advantage of Michael's current position,making a few $$ from his name and gaining a following from his fans based on nothing but assumptions and opinions put into something as if it were fact and the gospel.

She is on that fuck you list next to Oprah,Charles Thomson,Diane Dimond,LMP and co
Y'all know.

fly high with the moth

Moths are nocturnal, and much of their symbolism deals with:
  • Intuition
  • Psychic perception
  • Heightened awareness
  • Knowledge of the Otherworld
  • Second sight
  • Influence
  • Prophesy
  • Clarity
Those of us who fly high with the moth must be mindful to not be too carried away by her influence. Moon creatures such as moths ask us to have a firm foundation before lunar journeying

when we observe the moth to fly into artificial light or flames, the moth demonstrates its faith and determination

A master of disguise, the moth can blend in to the point of invisibility

Album Comparisons??



Justin Bieber's Album 'Believe' Compared to Michael Jackson's Music: Should It Be?

Justin Bieber's album "Believe" has people talking, including naysayers that think he isn't Michael Jackson now, and he might not be up to par with him later either

The New York Times has reported that "Mr. Bieber doesn't have Mr. Timberlake's backbone" and "Mr. Bieber doesn't quite have the gravity that Mr. Jackson did" but writer Jon Caramanica says the young pop star appears to be trying to measure up anyway. And he cites Bieber's "Maria," as one example, essentially mirroring Jackson's "Billie Jean" song to deal with the issue of scheming girls.

And that's where the Times' writer is right, as it is highly likely that many male pop singers have had to deal with females making accusations of impropriety against them. And it's only logical that they would give voice to it in a song, as that is their method of expression, right?

Justin Bieber, however, doesn't appear to be trying to sing or act like Michael Jackson in any other way. He isn't reclusive, and he appears far from shy. The two pop idols are worthy of their own space in the limelight of society. And that includes letting the music of both stand on its own, without being measured against the others.

Justin Bieber is no Michael Jackson, and Jackson was no Bieber. And fans of both men can celebrate that fact, as they likely appreciate the music of both. And it does nothing for either singer or their fans to compare the two.

To help him fulfill those aspirations, he enlisted several edgy hitmakers, including Posner, Diplo and Zedd - along with pop stalwarts like Max Martin - and settled into the recording studio for four tracks with the man who produced Jackson's last No. 1 hit, "Rock My World," Rodney Jerkins.

The first thing Jerkins did was show his new wunderkind never-released footage of Jackson in action in the studio. "I wanted him to see Michael's passion in the studio - we all know he had that passion onstage in front of 60,000 people, but he also had it alone in the booth. I've been fortunate enough to work with a few greats that had that passion, so I know what it is when I see it. And Justin has what it takes, absolutely."

"No one in the history of the world has ever grown up with the pressure that he has, being a solo artist that young, that famous, in a world with technology that exposes us 24-7," Braun says, noting that unlike Jackson, who had his brothers behind him, or Justin Timberlake, who could rely on the support of his fellow 'N Syncers, Bieber went it alone - in an unprecedented era of Twitter, Facebook and camera phones. "He was literally going through puberty in front of the entire world, with everyone expecting something from him and a lot people waiting for him to screw up. He's a fighter. I'm proud of him - how's he's stayed true to himself and taken control of the entire situation.

Just as Michael has fought to stand his ground...So is Bieber!!!




Monday, February 18, 2013

never the mind

NIRVANA
Kurt cobain death

1) his body had such a dosage of heroin that he wouldn't have been able to pull the trigger:
firstly yes he had a HUGE amount of heroin in his blood, but that alone would have killed him never mind shooting his head off.
he was a rich junkie he rarely ever had money problems for drugs, Kiedis from RHCP (the singer) recieved the highest dose of eh Morphine in that state, i think it was during an operation, they had to give him 3 injections of it due to his addictions basically making him impervious to the first two.
& also Heroin doesn't kick in to its proper ''high'' for about 10-15 odd seconds, there was enough time for him to blindly fumble with his shotgun

2) Courtney love was involved in it:
why did she higher the investigator to help look for Cobain then?
multiple witnesses who were close to the couple can give evidecne that they were consistently being called for the X amount of days Cobain was missing (what was it 6 days?), she was hysterical & even worse after his death.

3) Cobains family had a history of sucide & Cobain would constantly talk about it.
one of his famous sayings was ''i'm going to become famous as a musician & shoot myself'' (roughly) his friends were really freaked out by it
Cobain had tried to kill himself in Rome weeks beforehand his actual death,
he similarly wanted to kill himself as a teen but didn't want to die a virgin
Courtney helped him go to rehab (which he later broke out of)
NONE of Nirvana or close friends doubt that Cobain killed himself (they of all people would know)
Cobain was witnessed buy other junkies shooting pure undiluted black heroin into his bloodstream & telling them not to call an ambulance (heroin has to be mixed with water i think first & heated)

hello, how low?
With the lights out it's less dangerous      Take your time
Here we are now                                      Hurry up
Entertain us                                               The Choice is your
I feel stupid and contagious                       Dont' be late
Here we are now                                        Take a rest
Entertain us                                                 As a friend
A mulatto                                                    As an old memoria
An albino
A mosquito
My Libido
Yeah                                                               
                                                                 



Ohh yeah yeah
The situations turns around enough to figure out That someone else has let you downso many times I don't know whyBut I know we can make it as long as you say it
Nowhere to hide I don't know whyBut I know we can make it

Show me look what we found turn it around every day I can hear what you say Now I know why know we can make it
And tell me that I take your breath away Maybe if you take one more than I would know for sure There's nothing left to say


NEVERMIND