Book reading s,TV series transcript s,comedy, personal, Red circle podcast, Book Review s,Interviews, its popcorn for the brain. Blog copyright Mark Antony Raines
Search This Blog
Sunday 27 March 2016
HOW TO GO TO THE TOILET IF A UNIVERSITY STUDENT?
If you are a student at the University of Sheffield you may see some of illustrated cards in the campus because read do not put toilet paper on floor put toilet paper in the toilet bowl and flush when there is a picture hurting him not to squat on the toilet seat and please leave the toilet as you wish to find it what the waste of resources.
INVISIBILITY CLOAK MAY HAPPEN?
These are Hi Tech camouflage sheets that mimics terrain to make shelters undetectable to the naked eye heat seeking devices. This is called vatal and tests were carried out by third Battalion the rifles Fort benning Georgia USA .Also the US military is developing camouflage to mimic squid and octopus as these creatures appearance blend in two different backgrounds.
Allison Wheeler-Heau an article
Take time out to think and act
Dear Ghostman,
As a senior executive, all too often you will be bogged down by the tyranny of the inbox, which requires your constant attention and incessant replies to colleagues, clients and stakeholders. Although sometimes apparently difficult to do time-wise, it is extremely important for senior leaders and directors to take the time to step away from the daily demands of business to review your current (and past) recipes and ways of doing things, in order to re-energise and refresh your plans and thoughts for the future of the business, and indeed your own personal future.
The Cambridge Advanced Leadership programme (ALP) here in Cambridge gives Managing Director and C-Suite-level people the unique opportunity to step away from your business, and to delve into 3 weeks of intense learning, exchange and debate with fellow peers, Cambridge Faculty and practitioners, in an atmosphere which is conducive to a questioning mind around current opportunities and challenges facing organisations in today’s environment.
You will leave as an Alumni of Cambridge Judge Business School Executive Education, and with renewed energy and ideas which you can use to transform and grow your company. Holistically, the ALP will help you think about your professional, and also importantly your personal life, with integrated group and personal coaching and a tailor-made well-being programme to help you kick-start new goals.
I have a programe overview available as a PDF. If you would like to receive it now, please let me know by following the link below.
If you would like to discuss the ALP with me, please email me on
a.wheeler-heau@jbs.cam.ac.uk
Thank you for your time.
Allison Wheeler-Héau
Director of Open Programmes
Director of the Cambridge Advanced Leadership Programme
Director of Open Programmes
Director of the Cambridge Advanced Leadership Programme
Saturday 26 March 2016
Atheism: A new faith
There is no church on Sunday. There are also no dietary requirements. Nor are there required days of the year set aside for worship of G-d, gods or a higher power.
As Bill Maher said, “Atheism is not a religion.”
In this sense, he is correct.
However, religion and faith are not mutually exclusive even in the most secular of definitions.
All people have faith that what they believe at this moment is correct, whether it come from biblical texts or science books. However, there is a major difference in how atheists and religious people reconcile information that is contradictory to what is currently believed.
With modern science or atheism, a new concept may be met with opposition, but once it becomes established, old texts and beliefs are scrapped and referenced for limited purposes.
For example, the lobotomy was considered sound science until 1967, when it became banned. It is important to remember that these were certified, educated doctors that made this mistake and not charlatans. Nobody is perfect, and medicine has brought great leaps and bounds to end suffering around the world. In this particular case, however, there was a mistake. The lobotomy is now regarded as the 20th century equivalent of leeching and bloodletting — which even practitioners of its day truly believed to be good medicine.
The general point of view is that these were mistakes of the medical past. While this is certainly a progressive viewpoint, it does perpetuate a certain overconfidence in what we believe to be true now. Nobody wants to admit that what diet, medication or surgery they are living by may in =read more =http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/mar/23/atheism-fact-religion/
What is paranoia?
Everybody experiences suspicious or irrational thoughts from time to time. These fears are described as paranoid when they are exaggerated and there is no evidence that they are true.
There are three key features of paranoid thoughts. If you have paranoia, you may:
- fear that something bad will happen
- think that other people or external causes are responsible
- have beliefs that are exaggerated or unfounded.
Generally speaking, if you are experiencing paranoia, you will feel a sense of threat and fear.
There are different types of threat or harm that you may feel paranoid about. You may feel you are at risk of:
- psychological or emotional harm – thinking somebody is bullying you, spreading rumours about you, talking about you behind your back
- physical harm – believing somebody trying to physically hurt or injure you, or even trying to kill you
- financial harm – thinking another person is stealing from you, or is damaging your property or tricking you into giving away your money.
It could be one person you feel threatened by, or it may be a group of people, an =read more =http://www.mind.org.uk/information-support/types-of-mental-health-problems/paranoia/#.VvaQyuKLTIU
Sunday 20 March 2016
NEW FEATURE =WEEKLY RANT issue 1
Right I think this is going to be a new thing I'm going to try out I don't know how to get it work when I don't know going to be I don't you know that you had a weekly rent about life the universe and everything where do I start wow what about the £30 that the government want to take away for disabled people apparently even the other members don't want it I think it seems that they're taking away from the poor and giving it to the rich it's your fault basically the Tory party always does I have to give credit to IAN Duncan Smith standing up to 4 his principles even like the guy now for my next subject this is basically um how doctors treat people now the other day told my wife enid these views told us by the way you stink NHS resources and that she is overweight it's a basic error 404 do something overweight don't know what day's work was up with life um normally snobbish idiot now by any other Great Britain life is the fact that when you go on Google Chrome what other browsers are available I seem to be getting a lot of pop-ups now to spite having a blocker I think this is because of new rules and regulations but not too sure but it's a real pain in the a*** what is oil can I say oh yes there is one thing that I was going to say it I think I care this is it this is my other phone really really f***** me off is that what you no longer in a group or part of something people for places no longer want to know you milk in my mind this is discrimination yes I know I'm not black all day all anything everything that might please do this but I have some spits it through when I go places with my walking stick people tend to see the stick first and the person second which is very nice ot his is me signing off for this weekly rant oh no sorry I'm quite finished now the other thing which can be old is help machines that you dictate to don't understand your English early start putting things that you never put in I will leave it samples it this I have spoken to to put on to my blogger and my Facebook so see you later France well might be one of you anyway so goodnight good sleep good karma see you next week
Michael Jackson's Journey from Motown to Off the Wall
In the early 1970s, a soulful voice could be heard wafting from radios and speakers around the world as Michael Jackson sang a heartfelt tune about 'Ben'. To the casual listener, it sounded like the best bromance in the world; a heartbroken lad singing about his brother or best friend, but that tune was the standout track to Willard, a long forgotten movie about a rat.
Talk about off the wall.
Well, plenty of folks in Spike Lee's new feature documentary will do just that, waxing lyrical about the album which sold 30 million copies worldwide, and cemented the former child star's position as a formidable solo talent.
But not before Lee eases us down the road and assesses Jacko's early days at Motown.
There's archive footage of Michael recalling how when the family's TV broke down one day, they started singing. Before long they were winning competitions and appearing on The Ed Sullivan Show.
The Jackson 5's first four songs went to number one on the American charts, and they found the freedom to go to a movie or get a burger was suddenly gone.
"He used to sing songs with a lot of feeling," recalls Michael's mother, Katherine Jackson in the film. "And he would sing 'em with a lot of feeling and a lot of moving, like he had been here before. He had lived before."=read more =http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/TV-Tonight-8203-Michael-Jackson-s-Journey-Motown/story-28918024-detail/story.html
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)