Former screen name Steve0113. I can't use it anymore.
Here's why.
Id vote for a mormon before I would a muzzie. And those are our choices.
32 posted on Thursday, June 21, 2012 12:24:53 PM by crosshairs
Moreover, if the US Constitution is currently a
"living" document, does that also mean that it can die?
42 Posted on 03/14/2001 08:40:09 PST by Mr. Bungle
"We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.
(John Adams)
The heart of the wise inclines to the right,
but the heart of the fool to the left.
(Ecclesiastes 10:2)
Carbon dioxide is a basic component of our atmosphere. Uncombined Oxygen is a biologically induced abbereation. After Mount Pinatubo dumped huge quantites of CO2 into the atmosphere (dwarfing what man does on an annual basis), measuring devices could track the cloud as it moved around the earth and dispersed into the atmosphere. The next year, as cited in the January 1993 issue of Scientific American, scientists were bewildered as to why the CO2 levels were BELOW normal. It's very simple...dynamic equalibrium. More CO2, more plant growth. More Plant growth, more conversion to O2, and less CO2, followed by a small die-off in plants, followed by a rise in CO2, followed by a smaller increase in plant life, and so on and so forth.
If the environmental scientists are correct, the Kyoto accords DO seem to have caused a change in the atmosphere...by reducing the quantity of reflective particles in the atmosphere, thereby decreasing the proportion of light reflected back into space.
107 Posted on 03/14/2001 18:14:51 PST by lepton
Emergency backup site: http://clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/freerepublicwhitebr /#148;#148;font color=