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On 12/18/13, 11:17 PM, Tim wrote:
On Wednesday, December 18, 2013 8:32:51 PM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 12/18/13, 9:02 PM, Tim wrote: On Wednesday, December 18, 2013 6:41:55 PM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote: Gramsci. Many of us "liberal arts types" studied modern European history. As well as "Cultural "Hegemony" and "Gradualism" Well, of course. After all, America has devolved because of cultural hegemony. Well,I don't know about that, but I'm sure it hasn't evolved much You might find the Eight Levels of Charity interesting enough to make you regret the remarks you made about them. The sort of anonymous giving You're projecting again Harry. I didn't make any negetgive remarks about them. Why should I seeing i'd never heard of "him" or "them." Maimonides described predates your fear of administrative excesses. I have no 'fear' of it. I'm just against it. Especially when some so-called 'charities' absorb up to some 70% of their budgets in 'administrative costs?" Yeah, that's real efficiency, eh? It's not difficult to find worthwhile charities that put most of what they get into programs and services. put yourself into it and you know where 100% of it goes Here's a reference with a simplified explanation: http://www.chabad.org/library/articl...of-Charity.htm You won't burn in hell, will you, for reading something on a Hasidic site? Oh, no more than you would for eating at a Greek Orthodox food fair. I also dance at the Greek fair we attend. ok http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLTBiJsi_Ac And drink a little Greek wine. Do you dance and drink at your church festivals? no. am I supposed to? Well, what do the more regular people do at your church festivals? Do they dance and drink a little? Festivals typically are *light* occasions, where folks come together to sing, dance, tell stories, drink a little wine, eat, and have fun. That's the charm of the Greek Orthodox festival, and most of the Roman Catholic and Jewish festivals/weddings/bar mitzvahs, et cetera, I've attended. Your guy Jesus did some of that...he didn't, after all, change water into grape juice at the marriage at Cana, did he? And there are many who believe the last supper was in fact one of the seders Jews hold in conjunction with Passover, and assuredly, if it were such a ceremony, the liquid in the chalice was wine, not water. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
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