Posted on 03/31/2008 8:36:23 AM PDT by Cinnamon Girl
Glad to see it. And I appreciate the “reminders” you’ve posted. We all need to see this. Perhaps it will help some search their conscience and realize that McCain’s “support” of the military depends on which way the wind blows.
What moderates are left in the race?
Wow, I was going to give in and support McCain (with nose held) but now I think I don’t like him OR Cinnamon Girl. She’s not very pleasant, is she.
Gee, hope all McCain supporters are not like her.
Actually, I’ve always liked Cinnamon Girl—I don’t appreciate her recent brownshirt behavior (YOU VILL VOTE FOR MCCAIN OR ELSE), but usually, I like her posts here. Since the attacks on McCain non-fans started, though...not so much.
I don’t know her. (but i like her username)
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That's my position as well. I would like nothing better than to have Fred as our nominee, but he didn't receive enough votes, and then chose to drop out. As much as I detest McCain, I see the alternative as being worse. Possibly much, much worse.
With much regret, I plan to vote for McCain.
Stalinist... statist. Not a real MAJOR difference, as the end result’s the same... and McLame is about as big a statist as they come. And it did READ well!
As for the rest of your snide comment, ESAD.
Thanks for the info. You DO keep up on things, even the unpleasant ones. After Kissinger stabbed my brothers in the back, I avoided even looking at his name. Writing off about 2400 men was so over the top, I would personally see him tried as a war criminal. Then, were it up to me, he’d be introduced to a nice, long SLOW hot bath in a tub of boiling oil. McLame would be right next to him for stopping the enquiries into live sightings which MIGHT have brought some guys home alive. McLame is not qualified to be a test rat at a bubonic plague factory.
McCain can kiss my pimply red butt.
So can rageaholic vanity posters who tell me to SHUT my TRAP.
It’s a political board. This is an election year. Maybe your problem is ... you. You’re not here at gunmpoint, right?
Forget John McCain. Remember the Hittites!
If I may paraphrase a line from F.F. Bruce, every time the Bible is suspected of historical inaccuracy in terms of ancient sites, civilizations, and biblical characters, and accuracy has been vindicated by some inscriptional evidence, it may be legitimate to say that archaeology has confirmed the Bible.
"As a matter of fact, however, it may be clearly stated categorically that no archeological discovery has ever controverted a single biblical reference. Scores of archeological findings have been made which confirm in clear outline or exact detail historical statements in the Bible."
Nelson Glueck, Rivers in the Desert, (New York: Farrar, Strous and Cudahy, 1959), 136.
The excessive skepticism shown toward the Bible by important historical schools of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, certain phases of which still appear periodically, has been progressively discredited. Discovery after discovery has established the accuracy of innumerable details and has brought increased recognition to the value of the Bible as a source of history . . . As critical study of the Bible is more and more influenced by the rich new material from the ancient Near East we shall see a steady rise in respect for the historical significance of now neglected or despised passages and details in the Old and New Testament."
William Albright, The Archaeology of Palestine (Middlesex: Pelican Books, 1960) 127128.
The more they did up, the better. Here's an intersting example
Appendix - The Ebla Tablets
In 1964, Dr. Paolo Matthiae, professor of Near East archaeology at the University of Rome began to excavate Tell Mardikh in north-western Syria. It soon became clear that they were excavating the ruins of the ancient city of Ebla. In 1975, as the dig progressed down to Early Bronze Age levels, a remarkable find was made in the form of nearly 20,000 clay tablets which constituted the royal archives of the city. These tablets date back to the middle of the 3rd millenium BC, almost 4,500 years ago. They are written in Sumerian wedge-shaped cuneiform script which is the world's oldest known written language. Deciphering these tablets, Professor Pettinato, also of the University of Rome, found the language used to be what he called Old Canaanite' even though the script was cuneiform Sumerian. This very ancient language is closer in vocabulary and grammar to biblical Hebrew than any other Canaanite dialect', including Ugaritic; this therefore gives evidence as to the age of the Hebrew language.This mass of information from Ebla will take years to digest but already it is very exciting. The city was a large one of 260,000 inhabitants; it traded widely over the known world at that time. A flourishing civilisation existed with many skilled craftsmen in metals, textiles, ceramics, and woodwork. It existed 1,000 years before David and Solomon and was destroyed by the Akkadians in around 1600 BC.
To date, only about one third of the Ebla tablets have been translated. Already, however, Eber has been named as one of its kings. Eber was the great-great-great-great-grandfather of Abraham (Genesis 10:21). Could this Eber, King of Ebla, be the same Eber of the Bible? Other names found, later to be used by biblical men, include Abraham, Esau, Saul, Michael, David, Israel and Ishmael. The supreme god of Ebla was called Yah', a shortened version of Yahweh'; so, some residual knowledge of the one true God was left at this time before Abraham. Another god was called El', short for Elohim', used later by the Hebrews as the generic name for God.
Tablet 1860 names the five cities of Genesis 14:2 in the same order, i.e. Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboiim and Zoar. Up until the discovery of the Ebla tablets, the existence of these biblical cities was questioned; yet, here they are mentioned as trade partners of Ebla. This record predates the great catastrophy involving Lot when Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed.
Also included in the archive are very early Canaanite creation and flood stories which very closely resemble that of the Bible. This is not surprising as these people would have descended from the generation after the flood and so would have had a common history of these events!
These tablets provide much evidence of early life in Syro-Palestine and give a rich background to the lives of Abraham and the Patriarchs. It will be truly amazing once the excavations are completed and the tablets fully deciphered.
http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/rohl-1.htm
Cordially,
I disagree. What's dying a slow death is a very particular brand of conservativism. Let me be clear: I don't get to define conservatism, nor do you, nor does Jim. It is a consensus, with some principles agreed upon. Yet, even those principles change. It is the nature of politics.
Trust once lost is almost impossible to regain and that is the problem with McCain. Reminds me of a quote from Jackie Brown:
Ordell Robbie: "You can't trust Melanie but you can trust Melanie to be Melanie."
Change "Melanie" to "McCain" and that's the dilemma we conservatives have to vote for or not.
Boy, the bumper stickers just keep coming.
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