via ▶ Strangest Things In The Universe Documentary 2014 – YouTube.
Open your eyes to see some of the strangest things in the universe. This is fun and interesting and perhaps even enlightening. Now sit up and watch this!
via ▶ Strangest Things In The Universe Documentary 2014 – YouTube.
Open your eyes to see some of the strangest things in the universe. This is fun and interesting and perhaps even enlightening. Now sit up and watch this!
via ▶ Master Of The Universe Stephen Hawking Episode 1… MUST WATCH – YouTube.
Now it’s time to watch, listen and wake up.
via Monarch Butterflies Considered for Endangered Species Status – Yahoo News.
Hello, Humans!
It’s time to really give a kiss goodbye to one of my most beautiful creations …
Or are you going to do something about it? Read the article then SHARE it!
Because Share = Action = Change
Well! This human has a brain that seems to FULLY work! This is an anomaly, folks! Rarely happens. Now go back and read this article at least three more times and clue up! Love is in the air and beautiful Butterfly Mind over here just read my mind! I am very proud of you! Now go post this on http://www.earthspeaksout.com and share the love because “I” know I NEED it!
Swinging Bridge at Babcock State Park, West Virginia
“Hey Mom, are trees living things or living beings?”
Our nine year old son looked into the forest then up at me as we hiked side by side along a gurgling brook. His dad and sister walked a few steps ahead of us. Upstream was the Glade Creek Grist Mill in West Virginia, a rustic wooden building with a pitched roof. Today its wet planks were framed by yellowing autumn trees.
“I guess that depends on what you mean by living being,” I said. “I think of a being as — ” I tried to think of words that would be familiar to him. I failed. “As a sentient being — something that has a soul.” The path was littered in gold, red, and toast brown leaves, and I kicked at a drift with my leather hiking shoe.
“Personally, I think of trees…
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via Orca baby not traveling with mother, scientists believe | Local News | The Seattle Times.
What’s this baby thinking? Well, he’s trying to figure out where all the pollution in his ocean came from and he’s decided to put a stop to it. And he can do it with your help! You can do it!
Check this out … If every human volunteered to help clean up my ocean for only one day a year there would be millions of people cleaning my ocean every day and guess what? Maybe pollution wouldn’t be so bad. Of course you’re going to have to put a stop to the Republicans out there who seem to extract great pleasure over making me sick to my stomach.
What? Now you didn’t think I had a stomach? Of course I do. I have to eat your shit all day! Where did you think i put it?
When you piss off a monk – it’s time to take a look at your customer service, people! First you abuse your children passengers and now you’re being mean to monks?
Hey Untie your United front on bad service already and human up!
United is rapidly becoming the rudest and worst airline in the sky! How offensive can they get?
GRAHAM HANCOCK is the author of the major international bestsellers The Sign and The Seal, Fingerprints of the Gods, and Heaven’s Mirror. His books have sold more than five million copies worldwide and have been translated into 27 languages. His public lectures, radio and TV appearances, including two major TV series for Channel 4 in the UK and The Learning Channel in the US – Quest For The Lost Civilisation and Flooded Kingdoms of the Ice Age – have put his ideas before audiences of tens of millions. He has become recognised as an unconventional thinker who raises controversial questions about humanity’s past.
Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, Hancock’s early years were spent in India, where his father worked as a surgeon. Later he went to school and university in the northern English city of Durham and graduated from Durham University in 1973 with First Class Honours in Sociology. He went on to pursue a career in quality journalism, writing for many of Britain’s leading newspapers including The Times, The Sunday Times, The Independent, and The Guardian. He was co-editor of New Internationalist magazine from 1976-1979 and East Africa correspondent of The Economist from 1981-1983.
In the early 1980’s Hancock’s writing began to move consistently in the direction of books. His first book (Journey Through Pakistan, with photographers Mohamed Amin and Duncan Willetts) was published in 1981.
It was followed by Under Ethiopian Skies (1983), co-authored with Richard Pankhurst and photographed by Duncan Willets , Ethiopia: The Challenge of Hunger (1984), and AIDS: The Deadly Epidemic (1986) co-authored with Enver Carim. In 1987 Hancock began work on his widely acclaimed critique of foreign aid, Lords of Poverty, which was published in 1989. African Ark (with photographers Angela Fisher and Carol Beckwith) was published in 1990.
Now here is the wiki on this little root – and again – let’s get a conversation started about this!
Ayahuasca
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaThis article is about the psychoactive brew. For the vine, see Banisteriopsis caapi. For other uses, see Ayahuasca (disambiguation).
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2014) Ayahuasca (usually pronounced /ˌaɪjəˈwæskə/ or /ˌaɪjəˈwɑːskə/), also commonly called yagé (/jɑːˈheɪ/), is a psychedelic brew made out of Banisteriopsis caapi vine alone or in combination with various plants. It is either mixed with the leaves of dimethyltryptamine (DMT)containing species of shrubs from the genus Psychotria or with the leaves of the Justicia pectoralis plant which does not contain DMT. The brew, first described academically in the early 1950s by Harvard ethnobotanist Richard Evans Schultes, who found it employed for divinatory and healing purposes by the native people of Amazonian Peru, is known by a number of different names (see below).[1]
It has been reported that some effects can be felt from consuming the caapi vine alone, but that DMT-containing plants (such as Psychotria) remain inactive when drunk as a brew without a source of monoamine oxidase inhibitor(MAOI) such as B. caapi. How indigenous peoples discovered the hallucinogenic properties of the plants used in the ayahuasca brew remains unclear. Many indigenous Amazonian people say they received the instructions directly from plants and plant spirits.
via ▶ Graham Hancock – The War on Consciousness BANNED TED TALK – YouTube.
A planet that doesn’t burn, a future that doesn’t suck
Raising Awareness of the Captive Orca Industry
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Solutions, Insults & Comic Relief, Baby!
Dispatches from the edge
Full moon, at our house, Jan 30, 2010
Thoughts on kayaking, science, and life
An academic's opinions on feminism, politics, literature, philosophy, teaching, academia, and a lot more.
A Bookworm's Journey
Walking Photours of Southern California & whatever else interests me...
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“Was interessiert mich mein Geschwätz von gestern?”
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