Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit quote puzzle: Some people wanted champagne and caviar when they should have had beer and hot dogs.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Some people wanted champagne William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 8-14-21
Almost every Saturday Night around 11:30 p.m. (9 a.m. Indian time the following day), we find ourselves going to Epiphany’s Church Service, in English (Cuttack,India), via Zoom. One of the most inspiring pastors is Rev. Moumita Biswas of the Church of Scotland.
This weekly schedule is not due to any great religious fervor, but rather relationships formed by my wife while she was in India previously, that were recently re-established.
This was many years and one husband ago.
Part of the story of Andy Mills in India is his role as in India as a Lay Missionary.
The Andy Mills we know is from his work in Witness for Peace. Witness for Peace was founded in 1983 and campaigns for “peace, justice, and sustainable economies in Latin America”.
Andrew Mills connects both these topics and more; He has been a Chairperson of Witness for Peace (1994-2012). Previously, he went to India , in a dual role as a consulting groundwater hydrologist/programmer and a lay Missionary under the UCBWM (United Church Board for World Ministries). This was from 1956-61, and 1967-71.
This book introduced me to a part of Andy that I never knew, the Missionary. He felt he was in India to help with both bodies and souls.
He talks honestly of the dichotomies between his views as a Christian Westerner, and both the Christian Indians and Hindu Indians. Along the way, there are also the differing views within the Christian Missionary Community.
One vital point he makes is the notion that he should live simply, in the same way that the Indians live. This adjustment was not easy for him as an American.
He also explained that the different groupings had much to learn from each other when they chose to listen.
Recently, when I looked up the current status of CNI, the Church of Northern India, I discovered that some of the same concerns that he wrote about were still in the process of being resolved.
The book is divided into sections covering his dual activities in India, and three epilogues, honoring both British and Indian Christians he worked with.
YouTube Censors Dr Stock — Pauline Braccio sent us the YouTube link to Dr. Dan Stock’s talk to the Mt. Vernon Community School Corporation in Indiana in which he took the board to task for its Covid policies requiring mandatory vaccination and mask wearing.
Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit quote puzzle: To learn who rules over you, find out whom you are not allowed to criticize.
Voltaire (Probably not)
Learn who rules over William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 8-13-21
Andrew Tate Red Pill Is A Knock Out — Champion kickboxer Andrew Tate gave what may be the greatest red pill ever describing the differences between flying commercial and private in the Covid era.
On the commercial flight he was harassed by a stewardess for not having his mask over his nose and he politely complied. He then had to fill out a pile of papers upon landing and take a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test.
On the private flight?
No masks. No PCR tests. No home office paperwork. The pilots weren’t wearing masks. When I landed at Biggin Hill Airport and the people who met me in a BMW no one’s wearing a mask. Nobody had any mask on and nobody asked me for any sh*t. You know why? Because I was rich. Corona doesn’t exists for the rich people. . . It’s all a (gollygee) scam. All of it’s a scam.
He continued:
And this is how the whole world has always worked . . . And people at the . . . don’t seem to get it. They don’t seem to wake up. And they don’t seem to wake up because the people in charge try very hard to keep them asleep. If you had a whole bunch of people who were your slaves why would you tell them the truth about the world? . . . When was the last time you went to school and learned how money works? Or banks work? Or taxes? Or any of the things they use to control you? . . . They don’t want you to know anything.
Showing reservoirs, including iconic Lake Mead at Hoover Dam, shrunk to a fraction of their intended size, national news media is reporting that the American Southwest is in the worst 20-year drought in 1,200 years.
There are roughly 200 reservoirs along the length of the Colorado River – the primary water source for at least 45 million people in the Colorado River Basin and beyond – that were thought to ensure a 50-year water supply in drought. Yet, by the early 2000s, that 50-year supply was sucked dry!
At Lake Mead, the water level recently fell below the trigger point for the first-ever federal water emergency. That will mean mandatory water cutoffs, delivering a body blow to the Southwest’s economy and drying up farmland needed to feed the nation’s exploding population. But even that might not stop a collapse of the Colorado River system, a vast network of diversion projects and reservoirs stretching from Wyoming to the Mexican border. Meaning, reservoirs might run dry and diversions might no longer take water into cities of millions!
Today’s Phoenix, Arizona, was so named when settlers in the 19th century realized that they were building on the ruins of some long-ago civilization – that of the Hohokam – and named their new settlement after the mythical bird that arises from the ashes of another.
The Four Corner states – Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Utah – today are dotted with the ruins of the mysterious cliff dwellings and towns of the ancestral Puebloans – the Hohokam, the Anasazi and the Mimbres – who were forced into what we call the Great Abandonment, during the prolonged drought of the late 1200s though the mid-1300s. Hundreds of thousands of people fled what had been relative paradises in Colorado’s Montezuma Valley and on the once-verdant Mesa Verde, in the Gila Mountains of New Mexico and on the high uplands of Arizona, relocating to areas, mostly along the Rio Grande, with somewhat dependable water.
Lake Mead, the second largest reservoir in North America, is now 35 percent “full,” but since the bottom 20 percent is useless sludge, that means nearly empty, just as the Scripps Institute of Oceanography warned would happen in the 2020s. In California, some reservoirs can no longer generate hydropower, and Lake Powell, just upstream from Lake Mead and the largest reservoir in North America, also flirts with being empty. Yet, Big Media never ask if Biden grasps:
That this might not be drought, but merely a return to far-drier norms than 1960 to 1995, the wettest time in the Southwest in 2000 years.
That there is not “always ‘new’ water” to be found or some miraculous technofix to save us – although, admittedly, more people mean more sewage effluent to process for drinking. Yum!
That the current drought might pale in comparison with what climate change might bring.
In 1922, the Colorado River Basin states of Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada and California met near Santa Fe to legally divide, or allocate, the Colorado River. But the resulting Colorado River Compactbegan with an “Oops!” of staggering proportions, as 16-million acre feet were divvied up, even though the river usually carries only 13 m.a.f. (An acre foot is the amount of water it takes to cover an acre of ground with a foot of water.)
That didn’t matter in a Southwest that at the time supported under 5 million people. But, if immigration continues at the astronomical rates of recent decades, or even increases, the Southwest could see its population double, even as flows on the Colorado will likely average a paltry 7 m.a.f. a year, maybe even as low as 5 m.a.f.
So, twice the people, half the water.
Will that bring our own Great Abandonment, an exodus of 45 million people trying to flee anywhere other than a drought-and-climate-change seared Southwest?
Are you even aware, Mr. Biden, of that possibility?
A contributing writer to Progressives for Immigration Reform, Kathleene Parker, of Los Alamos, New Mexico, is a fifth-generation resident of the American Southwest. A retired journalist who long covered a national laboratory in New Mexico, she now writes nationally on water, population and the need to re-regulate major media.
Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit quote puzzle: Natural abilities are like natural plants, that need pruning by study; and studies themselves do give forth directions too much at large, except they be bounded in by experience.
Francis Bacon
Natural abilities are like William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 8-11-21
RSBN carrying Cyber Symposium — Mike Lindell’s Cyber Symposium which he says will reveal proof positive that Biden lost the election can be watched at RSBN.
Our preference for pain control is aspirin but as one wise person puts it If you have chronic pain, try to find the cure rather than manage the symptoms
Regardless it may be wise to chill on the Advil and leave Aleve in the sleeve.