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Politics : Stop the War! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tom Clarke who wrote (17764)5/24/2003 6:58:32 PM
From: 49thMIMOMander  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21614
 
Yes, not everyone is weening based on Discovery, History, Court and Shopping Channel, not even
a regular magic sauce of gerrymandering of Newt and Rupert.

Maybe a result of that flick of a light Jefferson tried to bring back home, dark DNA and all.
(how is that Tokenville book doing these days, better than old Tarzan and his most favoured
foreign ape)

Btw, how, too, is Bush II doing as another one of those "educational presidents", just the regular
snif-snif and bloodletting at the kleenex altar of 2-party frustrations and school districts, property taxes??

Got it?? if not, do not fear to ask for every word you got lost on.



To: Tom Clarke who wrote (17764)5/26/2003 3:43:03 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21614
 
Re: Too bad the euroweenies are so damn superstitious about science...

It ain't about "superstition"... it's agro-luddism:

The Luddites

Perhaps the most famous uprising against technology was the Luddite movement of England. According to Rybczynski (1983), the Luddites, named after King Ludd, or Ned Ludd, organized against technological advances in the textile industry in the Regency area of England from 1811-1816. History shows rejection of not just technology, but rejection of technology which was seen as threatening to their way of life and livelihood. As a precursor to modern day labor unions, one author called it, "collective bargaining by riot" (p. 41). It ended when the English Parliament dispatched 12,000 soldiers and the leaders of the movement were either executed or deported to Australia (p. 41). A similar but separate uprising in 1830 led to the destruction of threshing machines by farm workers in the English countryside.

regent.edu