Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Oldest biped skeleton discovered - new evolution record, 1.2 millions added in one day
http://cooltech.iafrica.com/science/421933.htm ^ | Mon, 07 Mar 2005

Posted on 03/07/2005 3:19:42 PM PST by Truth666

A joint Ethiopian-US team of palaeontologists announced on Saturday they had discovered the world's oldest biped skeleton to be unearthed so far, dating it to between 3.8 and four million years old.

"This is the world's oldest biped," Bruce Latimer, director of the natural history museum in Cleveland, Ohio, told a news conference in the Ethiopian capital, adding that "it will revolutionise the way we see human evolution".

The bones were found three weeks ago in Ethiopia's Afar region, at a site some 60 kilometres from Hadar where Lucy, one of the first hominids, was discovered in 1974. Researchers at the site in northeast Ethiopia have in all unearthed 12 hominid fossils, of which parts of one skeleton were discovered.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: evolution; fauxiantroll; fauxiantrolls; youngearthdelusion; youngearthdelusions
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120 ... 581-593 next last
To: taxesareforever
By the way, my geneology does not show anything resembling an ape in it.

Then how do you explain this (from previous posts of mine):

Background: Retroviruses reproduce by entering a cell of a host (like, say, a human), then embedding their own viral DNA into the cell's own DNA, which has the effect of adding a "recipe" for manufacturing more viruses to the cell's "instruction book". The cell then follows those instructions because it has no reason (or way) to "mistrust" the DNA instructions it contains. So the virus has converted the cell into a virus factory, and the new viruses leave the cell, and go find more cells to infect, etc.

However, every once in a while a virus's invasion plans don't function exactly as they should, and the virus's DNA (or portions of it) gets embedded into the cell's DNA in a "broken" manner. It's stuck into there, becoming part of the cell's DNA, but it's unable to produce new viruses. So there it remains, causing no harm. If this happens in a regular body cell, it just remains there for life as a "fossil" of the past infection and goes to the grave with the individual it's stuck in. All of us almost certainly contain countless such relics of the past viral infections we've fought off.

However... By chance this sometimes happens to a special cell in the body, a gametocyte cell that's one of the ones responsible for making sperm in males and egg cells in females, and if so subsequent sperm/eggs produced by that cell will contain copies of the "fossil" virus, since now it's just a portion of the entire DNA package of the cell. And once in a blue moon such a sperm or egg is lucky enough to be one of the few which participate in fertilization and are used to produce a child -- who will now inherit copies of the "fossilized" viral DNA in every cell of his/her body, since all are copied from the DNA of the original modified sperm/egg.

So now the "fossilized" viral DNA sequence will be passed on to *their* children, and their children's children, and so on. Through a process called neutral genetic drift, given enough time (it happens faster in smaller populations than large) the "fossil" viral DNA will either be flushed out of the population eventually, *or* by luck of the draw end up in every member of the population X generations down the road. It all depends on a roll of the genetic dice.

Due to the hurdles, "fossil" retroviral DNA strings (known by the technical name of "endogenous retroviruses") don't end up ubiquitous in a species very often, but it provably *does* happen. In fact, the Human DNA project has identified literally *thousands* of such fossilized "relics" of long-ago ancestral infections in the human DNA.

And several features of these DNA relics can be used to demonstrate common descent, including their *location*. The reason is that retroviruses aren't picky about where their DNA gets inserted into the host DNA. Even in an infection in a *single* individual, each infected cell has the retroviral DNA inserted into different locations than any other cell. Because the host DNA is so enormous (billions of basepairs in humans, for example), the odds of any retroviral insertion event matching the insertion location of any other insertion event are astronomically low. The only plausible mechanism by which two individuals could have retroviral DNA inserted into exactly the same location in their respective DNAs is if they inherited copies of that DNA from the same source -- a common ancestor.

Thus, shared endogenous retroviruses between, say, ape and man is almost irrefutable evidence that they descended from a common ancestor. *Unless* you want to suggest that they were created separately, and then a virus they were both susceptible to infected both a man and an ape in EXACTLY the same location in their DNAs (the odds of such a match by luck are literally on the order of 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 to 1...), *and* that the infections both happened in their gametocyte cells (combined odds on the order of 1,000,000 to 1) *and* that the one particular affected gametocyte is the one which produces the egg or sperm which is destined to produce an offspring (*HUGE* odds against), and *then* the resulting modified genome of the offspring becomes "fixed" in each respective population (1 out of population_size^squared)...

Then repeat that for *each* shared endogenous retrovirus (there are many) you'd like to claim was acquired independently and *not* from a shared ancestor...

Finally, you'd have to explain why, for say species A, B, and C, the pattern of shared same-location retroviruses is always *nested*, never *overlapped*. For example, all three will share some retroviruses, then A and B will both share several more, but if so then B *never* shares one with C that A doesn't also have (or at least remnants of).

In your "shared infection due to genetic similarities" suggestion, even leaving aside the near statistical impossibility of the infections leaving genetic "scars" in *exactly* the same locations in independent infections, one would expect to find cases of three species X, Y, and Z, where the degree of similarity was such that Y was "between" X and Z on some similarity scale, causing the same disease to befall X and Y but not Z, and another disease to affect Y and Z but not X. And yet, we don't find this in genetic markers. The markers are found in nested sequence, which is precisely what we would expect to see in cases of inheritance from common ancestry.

Here, for example, is an ancestry tree showing the pattern of shared same-location endogenous retroviruses of type HERV-K among primates:

This is just a partial list for illustration purposes -- there are many more.

Each labeled arrow on the chart shows an ERV shared in common by all the branches to the right, and *not* the branches that are "left-and-down". This is the pattern that common descent would make. And common descent is the *only* plausible explanation for it. Furthermore, similar findings tie together larger mammal groups into successively larger "superfamilies" of creatures all descended from a common ancestor.

Any presumption of independent acquisition is literally astronomically unlikely. And "God chose to put broken relics of viral infections that never actually happened into our DNA and line them up only in patterns that would provide incredibly strong evidence of common descent which hadn't actually happened" just strains credulity (not to mention would raise troubling questions about God's motives for such a misleading act).

Once again, the evidence for common descent -- as opposed to any other conceivable alternative explanation -- is clear and overwhelming.

Wait, want more? Endogenous retroviruses are just *one* type of genetic "tag" that makes perfect sense evolutionary and *no* sense under any other scenario. In addition to ERV's, there are also similar arguments for the patterns across species of Protein functional redundancies, DNA coding redundancies, shared Processed pseudogenes, shared Transposons (including *several* independent varieties, such as SINEs and LINEs), shared redundant pseudogenes, etc. etc. Here, for example, is a small map of shared SINE events among various mammal groups:

Like ERV's, any scenario which suggests that these shared DNA features were acquired separately strains the laws of probability beyond the breaking point, but they make perfect sense from an evolutionary common-descent scenario. In the above data, it is clear that the only logical conclusion is that, for example, the cetaceans, hippos, and ruminants shared a common ancestor, in which SINE events B and C entered its DNA and then was passed on to its descendants, yet this occurred after the point in time where an earlier common ancestor had given rise both to that species, and to the lineage which later became pigs.

And this pattern (giving the *same* results) is repeated over and over and over again when various kinds of molecular evidence from DNA is examined in detail.

The molecular evidence for evolution and common descent is overwhelming. The only alternative is for creationists to deny the obvious and say, "well maybe God decided to set up all DNA in *only* ways that were consistent with an evolutionary result even though He'd have a lot more options open to him, even including parts which by every measure are useless and exactly mimic copy errors, ancient infections, stutters, and other garbage inherited from nonexistent shared ancestors"...

Or how about:
Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes ---chimps and gorillas have 24 pairs. How many pairs of chromosomes did the "common ancestor" have? Was it 23 or 24 pairs? How do you "evolve" missing or added chromosomes ---that would happen all at one time.

The common ancestor had 24 chromosomes.

If you look at the gene sequences, you'll find that Chromosome 2 in humans is pretty much just 2 shorter chimpanzee chromosomes pasted end-to-end, with perhaps a slight bit of lost overlap:

(H=Human, C=Chimpanzee, G=Gorilla, O=Orangutan)

Somewhere along the line, after humans split off from the other great apes, or during the split itself, there was an accidental fusion of two chromosomes, end-to-end. Where there used to be 24 chromosomes, now there were 23, but containing the same total genes, so other than a "repackaging", the DNA "instructions" remained the same.

If a chimpanzee gives birth to a creature with 23 chromosomes, that offspring isn't going to be a well-formed chimpanzee able to survive well.

It is if the same genes are present, which they would be in the case of a chromosome fusion.

Evolve would imply the genetic material changes little by little --not some big loss of two chromosomes at once but I don't see how they'd go away gene by gene.

Tacking two chromosomes together end-to-end is not a "big loss" of genes, and it really is a "little by little" change in the total genetic code. It's just been "regrouped" a bit. Instead of coming in 24 "packages", it's now contained in 23, but the contents are the same.

So how, you might ask, would the chromosomes from the first 23-chromosome "fused" individual match up with the 24 chromosomes from its mate when it tried to produce offspring? Very well, thanks for asking. The "top half" of the new extra-long Chromosome 2 would adhere to the original chromosome (call it "2p") from which it was formed, and likewise for the "bottom half" which would adhere to the other original shorter chromosome (call it "2q"). In the picture above, imagine the two chimp chromosomes sliding over to "match up" against the human chromosome. The chimp chromosomes would end up butting ends with each other, or slightly overlapping in a "kink", but chromosomes have overcome worse mismatches (just consider the XY pair in every human male -- the X and the Y chromosome are *very* different in shape, length, and structure, but they still pair up).

In fact, the "rubbing ends" of the matched-up chimp chromosomes, adhering to the double-long human-type chromosome, would be more likely to become fused together themselves.

For studies in which recent chromosome fusions have been discovered and found not to cause infertility, see:

Chromosomal heterozygosity and fertility in house mice (Mus musculus domesticus) from Northern Italy. Hauffe HC, Searle JB Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, United Kingdom. hauffe@novanet.it

An observed chromosome fusion: Hereditas 1998;129(2):177-80 A new centric fusion translocation in cattle: rob (13;19). Molteni L, De Giovanni-Macchi A, Succi G, Cremonesi F, Stacchezzini S, Di Meo GP, Iannuzzi L Institute of Animal Husbandry, Faculty of Agricultural Science, Milan, Italy.

J Reprod Fertil 1979 Nov;57(2):363-75 Cytogenetics and reproduction of sheep with multiple centric fusions (Robertsonian translocations). Bruere AN, Ellis PM

J Reprod Fertil Suppl 1975 Oct;(23):356-70 Cytogenetic studies of three equine hybrids. Chandley AC, Short RV, Allen WR.

In that last reference, the Przewalski horse, which has 33 chromosomes, and the domestic horse, with 32 chromosomes (due to a fusion), are able to mate and produce fertile offspring.

Meanwhile, the question may be asked, how do we know that the human Chromosome 2 is actually the result of a chromsome fusion at/since a common ancestor, and not simply a matter of "different design"?

Well, if two chromsomes accidentally merged, there should be molecular remnants of the original chromosomal structures (while a chromosome designed from scratch would have no need for such leftover "train-wreck" pieces).

Ends of chromosomes have characteristic DNA base-pair sequences called "telomeres". And there are indeed remnants of telomeres at the point of presumed fusion on human Chromosome 2 (i.e., where the two ancestral ape chromosomes merged end-to-end). If I may crib from a web page:

Telomeres in humans have been shown to consist of head to tail repeats of the bases 5'TTAGGG running toward the end of the chromosome. Furthermore, there is a characteristic pattern of the base pairs in what is called the pre-telomeric region, the region just before the telomere. When the vicinity of chromosome 2 where the fusion is expected to occur (based on comparison to chimp chromosomes 2p and 2q) is examined, we see first sequences that are characteristic of the pre-telomeric region, then a section of telomeric sequences, and then another section of pre-telomeric sequences. Furthermore, in the telomeric section, it is observed that there is a point where instead of being arranged head to tail, the telomeric repeats suddenly reverse direction - becoming (CCCTAA)3' instead of 5'(TTAGGG), and the second pre-telomeric section is also the reverse of the first telomeric section. This pattern is precisely as predicted by a telomere to telomere fusion of the chimpanzee (ancestor) 2p and 2q chromosomes, and in precisely the expected location. Note that the CCCTAA sequence is the reversed complement of TTAGGG (C pairs with G, and T pairs with A).
Another piece of evidence is that if human Chromosome 2 had formed by chromosome fusion in an ancestor instead of being designed "as is", it should have evidence of 2 centromeres (the "pinched waist" in the picture above -- chromosomes have centromeres to aid in cell division). A "designed" chromosome would need only 1 centromere. An accidentally "merged" chromosome would show evidence of the 2 centromeres from the two chromosomes it merged from (one from each). And indeed, as documented in (Avarello R, Pedicini A, Caiulo A, Zuffardi O, Fraccaro M, Evidence for an ancestral alphoid domain on the long arm of human chromosome 2. Hum Genet 1992 May;89(2):247-9), the functional centromere found on human Chromosome 2 lines up with the centromere of the chimp 2p chromosome, while there are non-functional remnants of the chimp 2q centromere at the expected location on the human chromosome.

As an aside, the next time some creationist claims that there is "no evidence" for common ancestry or evolution, keep in mind that the sort of detailed "detective story" discussed above is repeated literally COUNTLESS times in the ordinary pursuit of scientific research and examination of biological and other types of evidence. Common ancestry and evolution is confirmed in bit and little ways over and over and over again. It's not just something that a couple of whacky anti-religionists dream up out of thin air and promulgate for no reason, as the creationists would have you believe.


81 posted on 03/08/2005 3:00:08 AM PST by Ichneumon
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 67 | View Replies]

To: DannyTN
There's a whole list of creation scientists including several biologists at the ICR website.

Yes, you have posted some of thir names, and when I look up their published articles I find that they support evolution. I haven't found any of them publishing anything that contradicts evolution.

82 posted on 03/08/2005 5:29:26 AM PST by js1138
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 48 | View Replies]

To: Truth666

Oh, yeah, "Lucy" that other fraud.

Hip and knee bones hundreds of yards apart, at several meters difference in depth. Yet, it was these 2 bones that determined the conclusion of human ancestory.

Hey, doc!
How about a little DNA sample on those 2 bones?


83 posted on 03/08/2005 5:34:53 AM PST by G Larry (Aggressively promote conservative judges!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Ichneumon

You fanatical darwinites want to shut off debate and teach children your crazy myth is dogma. And anyone who questions is automatically a 'creationist'. Well, I do believe that this universe was created. And I don't believe it built up without Intelligent Design.
And, one more thing, I don't care whether you're happy about my doubts. So lump it!


84 posted on 03/08/2005 6:05:35 AM PST by metacognative (eschew obfuscation)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 64 | View Replies]

To: Ichneumon

Wow, thank you so much for that exposition, I learned a ton. Viral remnants imply we could eventually trace back the entire evolutionary history once enough enomes are mapped. I am blown away.


85 posted on 03/08/2005 6:59:51 AM PST by FastCoyote
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 81 | View Replies]

To: gcampbell
What other theory would you recommend?

Intelligent design a/k/a creationism. The great thing about creationism is that it is based entirely upon religious faith and criticism of evolution. Indeed, ask anyone who believes in creationism as a "science," what scientific proof they have to support their theory and the inevitable response is "the bible" and "Darwin was wrong because..."

86 posted on 03/08/2005 7:09:04 AM PST by Labyrinthos
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: mysterio

Good post.


87 posted on 03/08/2005 7:13:44 AM PST by Liberal Classic (No better friend, no worse enemy. Semper Fi.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: NC Native

there it is. Thank you sir.


88 posted on 03/08/2005 7:24:20 AM PST by SwankyC (1st Bn 11th Marines Semper Fi)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: Coyoteman
The answer to most of your questions is natural selection.

In fact, natural selection seems to be such an adaptable concept there is no question it won't answer.

89 posted on 03/08/2005 7:28:07 AM PST by Taliesan (The power of the State to do good is the power of the State to do evil.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 42 | View Replies]

To: Ichneumon

It is obvious that you have no room for other theories, all I want is truth. This is all I seek and I'm sorry I don't find it in Darwin's Theory of Evolution. I believe theories should be stated as theories, while you find this theory credible I don't and it is misleading to presume that all people do.


90 posted on 03/08/2005 7:34:39 AM PST by ThisLittleLightofMine
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: gcampbell

I would recommend that all theories be presented as theories....not fact. That is all that I ask.


91 posted on 03/08/2005 7:37:11 AM PST by ThisLittleLightofMine
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Taliesan
In fact, natural selection seems to be such an adaptable concept there is no question it won't answer...

You assume that natural selection just walked in without a challenge.

The historic fact is that most biologists that accepted evolution prior to 1940 did not accept natural selection. There are at least half a dozen contenders for the mechanism of evolution, including Lamarkianism and ID. Natural selection is currently at the forefront because it is the only mechanism with adequate supporting evidence.

92 posted on 03/08/2005 7:39:58 AM PST by js1138
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 89 | View Replies]

To: ThisLittleLightofMine

Then you are asking the wrong question. When someone says something like "evolution should be presented as a theory" they are saying essentially that evolution should be presented as hypothesis, or conjecture. However, this is far from the case. The problem is that people misunderstand what is meant by theory. Relativity, plate tectonics, and evolution are all scientific theories with well established bodies of supporting evidence, that have all enriched our lives in very real and measurable ways. There are countless doctors, molecular chemists and microbiologists who understand what evolution is and why the theory is sound that remain men of good faith. There is no contradiction or competition between science and religion, and I believe some people do both science and religion a disservice by trying to foster conflict where there is none.


93 posted on 03/08/2005 7:52:01 AM PST by Liberal Classic (No better friend, no worse enemy. Semper Fi.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 91 | View Replies]

To: js1138
Yes, you have posted some of thir names (ICR creationists), and when I look up their published articles I find that they support evolution. I haven't found any of them publishing anything that contradicts evolution.

Can you give examples of their work that supports evolution? If their published articles don't directly contradict evolution, that's not surprising. The militant evo's have effective censured anything that directly contradicts evolution.

To publish something that directly contradicts evolution and to say it directly contradicts evolution is to invite the kind of lynchmob attack from evolutionists that had the Biological Society of Washington distancing themselves from their editor and saying they had nothing to do with a paper.

94 posted on 03/08/2005 8:31:23 AM PST by DannyTN
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 82 | View Replies]

To: DannyTN

Do you have a link to the list of names?


95 posted on 03/08/2005 8:36:05 AM PST by js1138
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 94 | View Replies]

To: js1138
I have no quibble with natural selection being the current favorite mechanism for biological evolution, if that is what the scientists think. I'm not a scientist, nor do i play one on the internet. The part that puzzles me is the tendency for some scientists to speculate on how natural selection explains, say, a preference for blondes, or Methodism.

When natural selection can explain anything no matter what it might be, it is logically indistinct from creationism. It just has an omnipotent agent with no personality or name. I'm not sure how that makes Occam any happier.

96 posted on 03/08/2005 8:45:49 AM PST by Taliesan (The power of the State to do good is the power of the State to do evil.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 92 | View Replies]

To: js1138
Do you have a link to the list of names?

Here's a link to the ICR list and some interesting profiles from AIG as well. (some may overlap). But understand, there are a lot more creationist scientists who keep a low profile because they fear their loss of their jobs if their real interpretation of the evidence became known.

ICR's list of Creationists in the Biological fields"
Creationist molecular biologist and microbiologist: Dr Ian Macreadie
Dr Raymond G. Bohlin -Creationist Biologist
Creationist Biochemist and Molecular Biologist Dr John Marcus, B.A., Ph.D.
Creationist Molecular Biologist - Dr Pierre Gunnar JERLSTRÖM

You might also find this interesting...Secular Scientists who reject Darwin
Secular Scientists who reject Darwin

97 posted on 03/08/2005 8:52:50 AM PST by DannyTN
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 95 | View Replies]

To: DannyTN
To publish something that directly contradicts evolution and to say it directly contradicts evolution is to invite the kind of lynchmob attack from evolutionists that had the Biological Society of Washington distancing themselves from their editor and saying they had nothing to do with a paper.

I read about this. Perhaps instead of the ideological witchhunt you propose, could it be that the Biological Society of Washington is distancing itself from the editor of the Proceedings because the paper itself wasn't up to the standards of the journal, and by allowing it to be published the editor was not doing his job?

From the Panda's Thumb:

Meyer’s paper predictably follows the same pattern that has characterized “intelligent design” since its inception: deny the sufficiency of evolutionary processes to account for life’s history and diversity, then assert that an “intelligent designer” provides a better explanation. Although ID is discussed in the concluding section of the paper, there is no positive account of “intelligent design” presented, just as in all previous work on “intelligent design”.  Just as a detective doesn’t have a case against someone without motive, means, and opportunity, ID doesn’t stand a scientific chance without some kind of model of what happened, how, and why.  Only a reasonably detailed model could provide explanatory hypotheses that can be empirically tested.  “An unknown intelligent designer did something, somewhere, somehow, for no apparent reason” is not a model.

...

The Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (PBSW) is a respected, if somewhat obscure, biological journal specializing in papers of a systematic and taxonomic nature, such as the description of new species. A review of issues in evolutionary theory is decidedly not its typical fare, even disregarding the creationist nature of Meyer’s paper. The fact that the paper is both out of the journal’s typical sphere of publication, as well as dismal scientifically, raises the question of how it made it past peer review. The answer probably lies in the editor, Richard von Sternberg. Sternberg happens to be a creationist and ID fellow traveler who is on the editorial board of the Baraminology Study Group at Bryan College in Tennessee. (The BSG is a research group devoted to the determination of the created kinds of Genesis. We are NOT making this up!) Sternberg was also a signatory of the Discovery Institute’s “100 Scientists Who Doubt Darwinism” statement. [3] Given R. v. Sternberg’s creationist leanings, it seems plausible to surmise that the paper received some editorial shepherding through the peer review process. Given the abysmal quality of the science surrounding both information theory and the Cambrian explosion, it seems unlikely that it received review by experts in those fields. One wonders if the paper saw peer review at all.

98 posted on 03/08/2005 8:56:05 AM PST by Liberal Classic (No better friend, no worse enemy. Semper Fi.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 94 | View Replies]

To: Taliesan
The part that puzzles me is the tendency for some scientists to speculate on how natural selection explains, say, a preference for blondes, or Methodism.

If you read actual science you would understand that the popular press only reports findings and speculations that are sexy. There's money to be made in popular science writing, but most of us start to nod off when Stephen Gould starts talking about the history of marine snails.

Darwin wrote hundreds of pages on barnicles. I've yet to see anyone on FR challenge his findings. You are seeing only the National Enquirer branch of science.

99 posted on 03/08/2005 8:59:40 AM PST by js1138
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 96 | View Replies]

To: taxesareforever; Ichneumon
"By the way, my geneology does not show anything resembling an ape in it. " - Taxes are forever

"Sure it does." - Ichneumon

Actually I understand that 50% of your genes resemble a banana. But that is equally applicable to common design as common descent. It in no way proves common descent.

The evolutionist's claim of 98% identical to a chimp was false. As you don't even share that much with your parents.

The key question is, not what percent is identical, but rather, how many changes must occur to be transformed from one to another. The number is huge and is not likely to have happened by chance or by natural selection alone.

100 posted on 03/08/2005 9:01:49 AM PST by DannyTN
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 80 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120 ... 581-593 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson