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January 3, 2004

Good News Saturdays 2004

by Joe Katzman at January 3, 2004 11:59 PM

As many of you know, Saturday is the Jewish Sabbath. In that spirit, our Saturday posts to this blog have always been "good news". We share wisdom from groups like the Sufis, Hasidim and Zen Masters, highlight the acts of good and decent people, laugh at humourous events, and point to amazing discoveries that could benefit humanity.

The day chosen isn't important - the idea is. Personally, I think bloggers and readers could all use more breaks like this from the (often negative) news of the week. Good News Saturdays began back in 2002, and my Muslim, Jewish, Christian, and non-religious colleagues have all graciously agreed to respect and work within this Winds of Change.NET tradition. So, welcome to Winds of Change.NET... and Shabbat Shalom.


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"Good News Saturdays 2004"
Tracked: April 12, 2004 1:06 AM
Pretenchaux Sunday from Amateur Night
Excerpt: Yo bros! It's been a wild and reflective Easter weekend. I almost cried watching 'Happy Gilmore', during the part where Happy talks to his grandmother and has the dream sequence with The Carpenters' "We've Only Just Begun" playing, cos that
Tracked: May 30, 2004 6:40 AM
Love Stories from Wizbang
Excerpt: Covering the news of the day is exhausting business, which is why Joe Katzman at Winds of Change has kept Saturdays (the Jewish Sabbath) as good news Saturdays. They've added a new wrinkle to good news Saturdays - love stories....
Tracked: July 24, 2004 4:01 PM
Good News Saturdays 2004 from gutrumbles.blog-city.com
Excerpt: Winds of Change (one of my personal favorite blogs) devotes every Saturday highlighting the best of humourous events discoveries that may benefit humanity and so on. I would like to see more blogs (uh, including my own) follow this route. Some of t

Comments
#1 from Joe Katzman at 2:37 am on Jan 04, 2004

If you have some good news to share, be it your own or something exceptional published elsewhere, this is the place to do it.

This post will be "time shifted" forward each week, making the storehouse of good news comments into part of our blog's Saturday spirit as well.

#2 from Samuel Tai at 4:56 am on Jan 04, 2004

Mars rover Spirit successfully landed on Mars. I see many happy faces at JPL on NASA TV.

#3 from daniel at 6:12 am on Jan 05, 2004

Thank God for HIS Sabbath that he gave to his created beings the very first day after they were created. And we can enjoy this blessed rest in him every week
(-)

#4 from Venomous Kate at 6:54 am on Jan 11, 2004

Shabbat Shalom, Joe. Just wanted to drop by and say "Hi!" Hope you and the team are having an excellent New Year.

#5 from jason at 10:08 am on Jan 11, 2004

cheers!

#6 from Owain Glendwr at 1:04 pm on Jan 24, 2004

Shabbat Shalom Joe and all.

Don't know if you've seen this already but it's good news anyway so it's worth a second look:

Guardian article: Israeli - Palestinian Antarctic Expedition

#7 from SBD at 7:37 am on Jan 25, 2004

Link:*Pepsi ads wink at music downloading*

I thought this new pepsi superbowl ad was a bit humerous.

Annie Leith, a 14-year-old from Staten Island, appears with other downloaders in the ad, which features music by Green Day. The band cut a special version of the 1966 Bobby Fuller Four hit I Fought the Law for the ad, by BBDO, New York. In the ad, Leith holds a Pepsi and proclaims: "We are still going to download music for free off the Internet." Then the announcer says how: "Announcing the Pepsi iTunes Giveaway."

SBD

#8 from Joe Katzman at 4:14 pm on Jan 25, 2004

Owain, thanks for the link, it is indeed a fine story. See our January 17 coverage for additional material.

#9 from DoaB at 11:10 am on Feb 01, 2004

One day at dusk, Zhuang Zi dreamed he had turned into a butterfly. Flapping his wings, he felt like a butterfly and was tremendously delighted. At that moment, he forgot entirely that he was Zhuang Zi. After a while, he came to realize that the gleeful butterfly was actually himself. So was it Zhuang Zi who had changed into a butterfly in the dream or the other way around?

Zhuang Zi can be the butterfly and the butterfly can be him.

#10 from Hasidic Gentile at 8:31 pm on Feb 21, 2004

Shabbat Shalom!

#11 from Hasidic Gentile at 8:33 pm on Feb 21, 2004

Shavuah Tov, (have a good week)

#12 from Gordon the Magnificent at 5:22 am on Feb 28, 2004

What if you're an athiest and curios? Are you still invited?

#13 from Joe Katzman at 6:11 am on Feb 28, 2004

Gordon: Yes, of course.

#14 from Hasidic Gentile at 11:05 pm on Feb 28, 2004

Reply to Gordon: Even if your an aethiest G-d loves you anyways! §:-))

#15 from Jack at 1:42 pm on Mar 06, 2004

Or perhaps you say Gut Shabbos. In any case, good news Saturdays are a wonderful idea.

In the hunt for good news, how about the precipitous decline in American casualties in Iraq? Only one American soldier has died in combat since February 19, a stretch of more than two weeks, and only 20 have been wounded in that period. As I have written before, the press has utterly failed to cover this.

Of course we have also during that time seen the bad news (previously reported, so perhaps not a violation of the Saturday good news rule) of the devestating attacks on the Shiites. The question of, course, is what does this divergence mean?

#16 from Ricky Vandal at 11:10 pm on Mar 06, 2004

I'm in love with a girl, but what can you say when a girl doesn't want to know and she's too far away and she makes my life a dream.

#17 from Joe Katzman at 12:47 am on Mar 10, 2004

I say, wake from the dream.

Dreams never match the vividness and richness of reality (vid. the excellent movie "Waking Life")... but first one must find the courage to embrace the uncertainty, surprises, and sheer imperturbable force of the world as it is. Only then can the real adventure begin, and it's usually more interesting than the stuff we dream.

#18 from Ricky Vandal at 10:14 pm on Mar 12, 2004

You must be right. Thanks Joe, Shabbat Shalom.

#19 from EightOh9 at 4:24 am on Mar 13, 2004

Gone cold wind, gone gray sky, gone icicle
Come sunshine, come green leaf, come bicycle.
We'll go to the seaboard
To set up my keyboard
And play a sad song once or twicicle.

Oseh shalom bimromov hu ya'aseh shalom alenu...

Shabat Shalom.

#20 from Tom Roberts at 8:02 pm on Mar 20, 2004

MDA (the last incarnation of BMDO, SDI, etc) switched to Technical Readiness Levels in managing their projects, rather than just using wishful thinking. Which leaves the question on what they were doing before and why to tomorrow, but as I'm in the tech readiness biz at DoD, that's good news for me....
Might be good news for the rest of us too, eventually.

#21 from Joe Katzman at 9:30 pm on Mar 20, 2004

In English, Tom is saying that serious missile defense isn't ready yet, but it just took an important step forward and these projects might help save a lot of people one day.

#22 from amabel at 12:30 am on Mar 21, 2004

i have two items; we are making amazing progress in iraq in one year. those whose criticize the coalition's progress are blind. for a society whose art, language, literature, music, education, governance, and religion all come out of one cradle to grave manual, the iraqis are making spectacular progress in accepting new ideas and compromises (well, most iraqis). i am filled with hope.

also, i learned today that josh wheedon's Firefly series will be made into a film.

i read dr.krauthammer on friday and sufi wisdom on saturday.

gratititude.

#23 from Samuel Tai at 10:47 pm on Mar 27, 2004

Geek points here. NASA's X-43A went Mach 5+ on its second test flight.

#24 from John Farren at 3:21 pm on Apr 03, 2004

Some fascinating and wonderful science news this week:
*Methane detected on Mars.* Geothermal activity, remnants of a cometary impact, or a sign of life!

Proposal for a *search* for Earth-like planets.

Rat genome *decoded* ; third mammalian code so far.(Hey, kids, collect the whole set!)

Possible *vaccine against SARS* developed.

Other good news: Spring is here, sun is shining, daffodils in flower, apple buds breaking, and I'm going for a walk.
"The force that through the green fuse drives the flower..."
A happy Sabbath to all.

#25 from Samuel Tai at 6:12 am on Apr 10, 2004

The X-Prize is within reach. Scaled Composites just obtained a sub-orbital flight license from the Feds good through the end of the year AND performed a Mach 2 test flight with a 40 second firing of their rocket engine.

#26 from Tom Roberts at 9:03 pm on Apr 10, 2004

Sam Tai- This is BIG NEW which of course is hardly covered in the press outside of industry pubs.

#27 from Lilith at 10:38 pm on Apr 10, 2004

CARE Comes to the Rescue with Tremor-Proof Homes in India* Read More*

[JK: Lili, Good News Saturdays are generally a day of hiatus from politics, and political discussions are especially unwelcome in this thread unless it's something positive that's making you happy. Thanks for contributing this - and I've deleted the political addendum.]

#28 from Nathan at 4:35 am on Apr 17, 2004

In Uzbekistan, like in much of the Former Soviet Union, the Jewish community has been hit hard by emigration. It's bittersweet to see synagogues undergoing beautiful restorations with money sent home from sons and daughters who have left for Israel and the US (I have a photo of me talking to the Rabbi in Bukhara's main synagogue on my blog. Only two of his seven children remained in Bukhara).

Well, it's nice to hear some news from Passover in Uzbekistan. For those interested, here's a little more on Bukharan Jews.

#29 from Steve at 5:20 am on Apr 17, 2004

A young acquaintance of mine (age 6) scored his first goal of the season in a soccer game today. A twin, neither brother could tell me the final score, nor which team had won the game.

There was still a twinkle in their eyes, broad smiles, and excitement several hours after the game ended. (Each has now scored a goal. Their mother told me they have one game remaining in their six game season.)

The boys had a shared happiness which may be unique in some way when siblings are twins. However that may be their shared joy struck me as something very special.

Their mother also didn't know which team won.

#30 from Tim Sweete at 5:38 am on Apr 18, 2004

A friend and I spent the morning clearing bags and bags of litter away from an otherwise beautiful, wooded lanscape with a brook.

I kept going back all day just to marvel at the difference! Very satisfying,

#31 from twisterella at 2:17 am on Apr 24, 2004

[AL: Sorry, twistarella, this isn't the thread for this. As frustrating as it is for me sometimes to not post political views and news on Saturdays, I've come to appreciate it and encourage others to use it as a day to step aside from our usual partisan positions and appreciate life.]

#32 from Lilith at 3:47 am on Apr 24, 2004

Big Medical Research Prize Goes to 2 Pioneers in Genetics Work

By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

Published: April 24, 2004

ALBANY, April 23 — Two California researchers who in the 1970's pioneered ways to splice and recombine genes, paving the way for the modern biotechnology industry, have received the Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research, the nation's largest award in the field.

The winners of the $500,000 prize, Dr. Stanley N. Cohen and Dr. Herbert W. Boyer, made some of the most important medical advances of the last century with their work to isolate and clone genes in living cells, along with their later discovery that those genes could be reproduced in other species, the judges said Friday in announcing the selection. . . http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/24/science/24PRIZ.html

---

Hmmm—Cohen, Cohen . . . ;-)

#33 from Andrew Lazarus at 4:39 pm on Apr 24, 2004

[AL: Sorry, Andrew, this isn't the thread for this. As frustrating as it is for me sometimes to not post political views and news on Saturdays, I've come to appreciate it and encourage others to use it as a day to step aside from our usual partisan positions and appreciate life.]

#34 from Andrew Lazarus at 7:11 pm on Apr 24, 2004

[AL: Sorry, Andrew, this isn't the thread for this. As frustrating as it is for me sometimes to not post political views and news on Saturdays, I've come to appreciate it and encourage others to use it as a day to step aside from our usual partisan positions and appreciate life.]

#35 from JACK KOLSEN at 2:20 am on Apr 25, 2004

[AL: Sorry, Jack, this isn't the thread for this. As frustrating as it is for me sometimes to not post political views and news on Saturdays, I've come to appreciate it and encourage others to use it as a day to step aside from our usual partisan positions and appreciate life.]

#36 from David Blue at 8:18 am on Apr 25, 2004

Sunday, 25 April, 2005

ANZAC Day was perfect this year: the weather, the crowds, the veterans waving and calling out to their friends in the crowd, everything. I clapped till my hands were too sore to do so any longer, then I waved my flag. Cardinal Pell, a case-hardened conservative (and I'm not saying that like it's a bad thing) gave a warm and very inclusive mini-sermon in honor of the patriotic dead. Everybody had the right attitude, everybody said and did the right thing.

#37 from Steve at 3:00 am on May 01, 2004

I had interesting photos in my email inbox today. It seems that three of my young grandsons captured a baby cottontail rabbit early in the week. After their parents used the opportunity to teach them to be gentle towards the small creature it was released.

This upset the boys of course as they are far too young to understand the reason for not keeping a baby rabbit, even though they learned something of the need for gentleness.

As compensation their parents allowed them to "adopt" two baby kittens a neighbor had, all but on their way to a local shelter. They are small creatures but old and strong enough to survive the inadvertant roughness of young boys. The photos are delightful.

It is always a good day for me when I see yet another example of how my daughter and her husband are teaching the basic things that children need to learn.

Children have to be taught how to hate. It pleases me when I see them taught gentleness and responsibility instead. I hope that when they become young men there is no need for warriors in our world. But if there is the lessons learned by them from the baby rabbit and two kittens will still be of value.

#38 from cbk at 3:59 am on May 01, 2004

Spring!

The perfume of jasmine floats through the back yard.

Pecan, birch, maple, oak are all stretching themselves after their nap, casting shadow dances on the lawn.

Squirrels Gone Wild airs every morning.

Cardinals flitter through the camellias, ALL the camellias, lest they reveal their secret. Back and forth, here and there, where's the nest? We know not where.

Bold red Amaryllis bursts like ruby stars through the front yard.

Crinum Lilies have shot three feet toward the sky only to become top heavy and exhausted from blooming, gracefully lying down, as if from a joyous dervish dance.

The Satsuma tree just dropped her diminuative blossoms to reveal the tee-tiny green promise of juicy autumn fruit.

And the Magnolia...Oh, that stately, beautiful, greengoddess of a tree...she slowly opens her huge flowers, one by one, and lets the lemony sweet fragrance ooze down on us from pink flushed velvet petal bowls like open hands offering, graciously, generously.

Such lovely reward after a long dreary winter!

Spring!

#39 from Lili at 7:36 am on May 01, 2004

Moderate Muslims March in Phoenix

http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=13209

Only 30 to 100 out of a community of 50,000—but, hey, a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. . .

#40 from A Recovering Liberal at 4:48 pm on May 08, 2004

cbk,

that was lovely. Thank you (c:

#41 from SBD at 2:55 am on May 09, 2004

Bush pauses to comfort teen
'This girl lost her mom in the World Trade Center on 9-11'
By Kristina Goetz
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Link to article

In a moment largely unnoticed by the throngs of people in Lebanon waiting for autographs from the president of the United States, George W. Bush stopped to hold a teenager's head close to his heart.

Lynn Faulkner, his daughter, Ashley, and their neighbor, Linda Prince, eagerly waited to shake the president's hand Tuesday at the Golden Lamb Inn. He worked the line at a steady campaign pace, smiling, nodding and signing autographs until Prince spoke:

"This girl lost her mom in the World Trade Center on 9-11."

Bush stopped and turned back.

"He changed from being the leader of the free world to being a father, a husband and a man," Faulkner said. "He looked right at her and said, 'How are you doing?' He reached out with his hand and pulled her into his chest."

Faulkner snapped one frame with his camera.

"I could hear her say, 'I'm OK,' " he said. "That's more emotion than she has shown in 21/2 years. Then he said, 'I can see you have a father who loves you very much.' "

"And I said, 'I do, Mr. President, but I miss her mother every day.' It was a special moment."

Special for Lynn Faulkner because the Golden Lamb was the place he and his wife, Wendy Faulkner, celebrated their anniversary every year until she died in the south tower of the World Trade Center, where she had traveled for business.

The day was also special for Ashley, a 15-year-old Mason High School student, because the visit was reminiscent of a trip she took four years ago with her mother and Prince. They spent all afternoon in the rain waiting to see Bush on the campaign trail. Ashley remembers holding her mother's hand, eating Triscuits she packed and bringing along a book in case she got bored.

But this time was different. She understood what the president was saying, and she got close enough to see him face to face.

"The way he was holding me, with my head against his chest, it felt like he was trying to protect me," Ashley said. "I thought, 'Here is the most powerful guy in the world, and he wants to make sure I'm safe.' I definitely had a couple of tears in my eyes, which is pretty unusual for me."

The photo has been circulating across the country, Faulkner said. Relatives have passed it on to friends, bosses and acquaintances. As they tell the story, they also share in Wendy Faulkner's legacy, which her family continues through the Wendy Faulkner Memorial Children's Foundation.

"I'm a pretty cynical and jaded guy at this point in my life," Faulkner said of the moment with the president. "But this was the real deal. I was really impressed. It was genuine and from the heart."

#42 from Monty at 9:50 pm on May 20, 2004

Er?

But Joe, it's only Thursday evening, May 20 BST at time of writing this.

Or is this a radical form of time travel?

Never mind. Thanks for giving me the day off work tomorrow.

Cheers

#43 from Joe Katzman at 12:02 am on May 21, 2004

No time machine. I'm flying out to see the girfriend outside of Santa Cruz, where bandwidth and connections are sparse. So I tried to set this post up for fast publishing... need to flip the bit back to "Draft" now.

#44 from Brian Scott - RadioBS at 3:40 am on May 23, 2004

Shabbat Shalom!

They've made a rose blue.

Brian

#45 from Lili at 3:21 pm on May 29, 2004

Good News!

As violent and uncivilized as this world remains, we are making some progress in recognizing that other creatures have a right to be here and to be treated humanely— just as much as mankind.

As a life-long animal lover I have always destested circuses, making wild animals do tricks for food is abhorrent and cruel. That is not to say animals (like children) should not be taught to behave if they are domesticated. The Lipizzaner stallions or well trained dogs are a sight to see. However, the wild should remain wild and not be trained to "perform" for the vanity of man.

I am pleased to see that the "trend" continues of the stopping the vanity cropping of canine ears and the docking of tails. Now, if we would just do something about puppy mills, bull and cock fighting as well as factory farming. That of course, would require the meat loving Austrian Teutons and the rest of us Western porkers to eat differently. Which would not be a moment too soon, given Western obesity and self inflicted disease rates due to gluttony.

Time to walk with the dog. :-D

------

Tough animal rights laws enacted in Austria

Regulations protect a range of creatures from hens to dogs

VIENNA, Austria - Hens will be free to run around barnyards, lions and tigers will vanish from circus acts, and Dobermans will sport what nature intended — floppy ears and longer tails — under a tough animal rights law adopted Thursday in Austria.

The anticruelty law, one of Europe’s harshest, will ban pet owners from cropping their dogs’ ears or tails, force farmers to uncage their chickens, and ensure that puppies and kittens no longer swelter in pet shop windows.

Violators face steep fines
Violators will be subject to fines of $2,420, and in cases of extreme cruelty could be fined up to $18,160 and have their animals seized by the authorities. . . "
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5077350/

#46 from Samuel Tai at 3:37 pm on May 29, 2004

This is good news for math geeks. Professor R. F. Arenstorf from Vanderbilt University has submitted a paper for review claiming to have proved the Goldbach conjecture.

I've read the paper, and although the math is beyond me, the gist of the proof seems sound. If the proof holds up under review, this would be on a par with the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem.

#47 from Samuel Tai at 4:41 pm on May 29, 2004

My mistake, not the Goldbach conjecture, which states that every even number greater than 2 is the sum of only two primes. This is a weaker but necessary condition that there are an infinite number of twin primes.

#48 from Samuel Tai at 3:39 am on Jun 06, 2004

Great news. Dick Rutan will try for a full sub-orbital test flight on 21 Jun. After that, he'll undoubtedly submit the formal paperwork to attempt the X-Prize carrying 2 passengers on 2 separate flights within 3 weeks.

#49 from Angry Chinese Blogger at 8:26 am on Jun 06, 2004

I had always though that the Sabath began at sunset on Friday, but then again theology isn't my greatest strength.

Good news, hmmm.

The risk of drought in Jiangxi province has been aleviated by late spring storms.

#50 from SBD at 2:32 am on Jun 21, 2004

[JK: SBD, stuff about finding Iraqi WMD may be good news of a sort, but it really isn't what I intended for Good News Saturday comments. Here's the rule: unless you've found some personal action by one of your political enemies that is worthy of your praise, I don't want to hear it today.]

#51 from All Things Political at 2:46 pm on Jun 27, 2004

HEAR! HEAR! We need a lot more Good News days. Yes, the bad stuff needs to be reported and discussed, but we need more of the good stuff. People need to know that in the midst of the chaos the media loves to magnify, incredible strides have been made in rebuilding Iraq and preparing for a representative government.

For links to news, views, politics, and government, bookmark All Things Political.

#52 from Jane Austen at 6:17 pm on Jul 04, 2004
#53 from Samuel Tai at 4:16 am on Jul 10, 2004

Here's some good news which we can all enjoy. An airline in Florida has received FAA approval to offer "vomit comet" rides to the public. You too can float weightless.

#54 from Robin Burk at 2:31 pm on Jul 10, 2004

Have to respond to Lili's comments. I too am an animal lover.

I'm grateful to see that my spaniels with their cropped tails and with dewclaws removed can run or work all day in heavy brush without injuring themselves. I personally know of several dogs who broke tails that never really healed afterwards or ripped dewclaws off. I'm glad my own dogs, and the handful I've bred over the years, won't be faced with the continual pain and bleeding others with uncropped tails have endured.

On a lighter note, our young Whippet puppy caught her first rabbit yesterday. We've had a huge bunny population this year and many of them persist in coming into our fenced property ... don't know why, maybe our grass is tastier than the neighbor's. Goldie, like most Whippets, is born to run and to course game. She's sweet tempered, a lap cuddler and a joy to watch as she catches toys, tosses them in the air and chases them at full gallop. It took my breath away to watch her course that rabbit yesterday (on her own initiative, not mine) - the athletic grace and laser-sharp intent was awesome. Her mom's a dual champion (show and coursing) and has caught jackrabbits in open field coursing ... more challenging than our eastern cottontails ... and the breeding shows in this pup.

I take the same delight in watching the songbirds raise their chicks in the crab apple tree next to our patio, and in the hawks that soar on the thermals next to the Shaumgunk mountains nearby. And in the delicate lupine we saw in the White Mtns of NH a few weeks ago, and the water rushing through a rocky gorge nearby. May you all be refreshed by Nature this weekend!

#55 from hiro bachani at 11:58 am on Jul 12, 2004

I sometimes wonder as to why we, humans , have become so segregated. If you look from outer-space our earth is one beautiful globe- green, blue and azure- a heavenly combination of colours and hues. We, humans have created countries, communities and castes and barriers between whites and blacks, catholics and jews and muslims - why? If we were to visit - www.tsl.org and learn that the ascended masters- jesus christ, st germaine, sanatkumara, etc were all so universal in their outlook that we feel somewhat depressed by the state of the world. The UNO is the most ineffective world body. Five countries have been given veto powers. Why? just because they had nuclear weapons. India - with its one billion people is like an impotent juggernaut that is treated like dirt on the world stage just because the hindus are a docile lot and many of the indians live under the poverty-line. These glaring inequities seem strange in this world. Americans have tremendous wealth and lord jesus Christ to bless them in many ways, but why are they basically unhappy. They have taken the risk of invading iraq and being considered as unlawful oppressors. I think america and the world can achieve much by joining together in a peaceful rethinking of their inner urges. A spiritual soul-searching exercise should be undertaken by the americans based on the holy teachings of jesus christ. My guru- jogi sain babaji- a hindu mystic had a muslim pir- hazrat sainji nasir mohammed saheb fakir sufi al qadiri, r.a.- (www.sufijalalani.com) who taught us that the world community can prosper and create miracles of more happiness, more money, more wealth, greater wellness if they only take the name of god constantly. This name of god initiation is a powerful yogic method to attain ultimate salvation. The name of god could be either jesus christ,rama, krsna, siva , allah, buddha, elohim etc. The purpose of this initiation is to have peace of mind and prosperity for all the peoples of the world - so that we can be taken ultimately for eternal heavenly life in krsnaloka, sivaloka,goloka vrindavana, manidwipa,jannat, etc. regards- hiro bachani- om namoh shivai !!!

#56 from hiro bachani at 12:03 pm on Jul 12, 2004

I sometimes wonder as to why we, humans , have become so segregated. If you look from outer-space our earth is one beautiful globe- green, blue and azure- a heavenly combination of colours and hues. We, humans have created countries, communities and castes and barriers between whites and blacks, catholics and jews and muslims - why? If we were to visit - www.tsl.org and learn that the ascended masters- jesus christ, st germaine, sanatkumara, etc were all so universal in their outlook that we feel somewhat depressed by the state of the world. The UNO is the most ineffective world body. Five countries have been given veto powers. Why? just because they had nuclear weapons. India - with its one billion people is like an impotent juggernaut that is treated like dirt on the world stage just because the hindus are a docile lot and many of the indians live under the poverty-line. These glaring inequities seem strange in this world. Americans have tremendous wealth and lord jesus Christ to bless them in many ways, but why are they basically unhappy. They have taken the risk of invading iraq and being considered as unlawful oppressors. I think america and the world can achieve much by joining together in a peaceful rethinking of their inner urges. A spiritual soul-searching exercise should be undertaken by the americans based on the holy teachings of jesus christ. My guru- jogi sain babaji- a hindu mystic had a muslim pir- hazrat sainji nasir mohammed saheb fakir sufi al qadiri, r.a.- (www.sufijalalani.com) who taught us that the world community can prosper and create miracles of more happiness, more money, more wealth, greater wellness if they only take the name of god constantly. This name of god initiation is a powerful yogic method to attain ultimate salvation. The name of god could be either jesus christ,rama, krsna, siva , allah, buddha, elohim etc. The purpose of this initiation is to have peace of mind and prosperity for all the peoples of the world - so that we can be taken ultimately for eternal heavenly life in krsnaloka, sivaloka,goloka vrindavana, manidwipa,jannat, etc. regards- hiro bachani- om namoh shivai !!!

#57 from IXLNXS at 6:23 am on Jul 17, 2004

You could be dead.

Taken in context any news is good news.

#58 from hiro bachani at 12:02 pm on Jul 17, 2004

We on the sufi path are really blessed. Our guru- jogi sain babaji- a hindu mystic - gave us the name initiation- that is we were asked to breathe in and out the name of god- constantly. The name could be rama, krsna, jesus christ, siva, buddha, elohim, allah etc whichever best resonates eith our heart and soul. This yogic breathe control with the name of god helps us to experience tremendous miracles of manifesting whatever we wish to have. The name of god has to be given by the guru personally. After fulfilling our worldly responsibilities peacefully we might be taken to krsnaloka, sivaloka, etc for eternal heavenly pleasures. Details on www.sufijalalani.com. Regards- hiro, sharad, rohit, rajni, harchandrai bachani

#59 from SBD at 11:34 pm on Jul 17, 2004

This should put a smile on your face. I haven't laughed this much in a long time.

This Land from JibJab.com
Link to Animation

SBD

#60 from Joe Katzman at 9:32 pm on Jul 18, 2004

SBD,

Normally, I delete political posts to this comments section. I'll make an exception for this - in fact, it just became its own Sunday post, with credit

The reason I'm letting it stand is because (a) it's very funny; and (b) it satirizes both sides, and does so in a way that gives us all food for thought while making us laugh.

Thanks for posting this.

#61 from JC at 8:02 am on Jul 24, 2004

Life's little victories -

I took a beautiful woman out to my favorite Indian restaurant. Living in SF, I can walk there, and did so with her. We had Matter Paneer, and Kofta, and drank Mango Lassi. The owner had just come back from Punjab, in India, having married his son. Congratulations were given all around. And, of course, the food was marvelous.

On the walk back up to the house (in Russian Hill above the Broadway tunnel) we walked to one of those steep streets, that seem to go straight down, and we spent time, watching the fog roll in, and the glistening of the waters, and the bright lights of Fisherman's Wharf.

We stood, quiet, for 10 minutes, with my arms wrapped around her waist, gazing out. Quiet, mysterious, open, serene, chilly, yet comfortable.

My good news Saturday.

#62 from The Liberal Avenger at 1:51 pm on Jul 24, 2004
#63 from Catsy at 4:17 pm on Jul 24, 2004

Last night, our little boy came back. He'd been staying with his biological father in Florida for the last several months due to a sudden housing crisis my fiancee and I had. We finally got our own apartment again, saved up the money to fly him out here, and he arrived around 10pm.

He's gotten so /big/. And a part of our lives that had been missing is no longer.

#64 from Tim at 6:37 am on Jul 26, 2004

I've read the paper, and although the math is beyond me, the gist of the proof seems sound. If the proof holds up under review, this would be on a par with the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem.

#65 from Peter at 8:59 am on Jul 30, 2004

Only then can the real adventure begin, and it's usually more interesting than the stuff we dream.

#66 from SBD at 11:19 am on Jul 31, 2004

Hi Joe,

I know it's good news Saturday, but does that really mean I can't post the story of the capture of Al-Zarqawi?

How could there be any better news than this?

Report: Al-Zarqawi captured near Syria
WorldNetDaily

SBD

#67 from Peter at 11:25 am on Aug 02, 2004

Crinum Lilies have shot three feet's toward the sky only to become top heavy and exhausted from blooming, gracefully lying down, as if from a joyous dervish dance.

#68 from clare at 12:37 pm on Aug 14, 2004

Iraq & Afghanistan at the Olympic Games in Athens, Greece...with womenfolk too! A lady from Afghanistan carried the flag during the parade of nations. AND did every see the smile on that beautifully huge lady weightlifter from Egypt?

#69 from Samuel Tai at 5:31 pm on Aug 14, 2004

For the Star Trek geeks out there, this is good news. 3M has figured out how to make transparent alumina glass in bulk.

#70 from Andrew J. Lazarus at 5:55 pm on Aug 14, 2004

The claimed proof of Goldbach's Conjecture linked above has been retracted (see original link). (I suppose this is good news for the ex-colleagues of mine who are working on it…)

#71 from Michael Murphy at 8:23 pm on Aug 14, 2004

Over and over the air comes into our lungs and is expelled. I am listening to J.S. Bach.

#72 from Samuel Tai at 2:05 am on Aug 16, 2004

The Iraqi soccer team is kicking major tushy in the Olympics. They beat Portugal 4-2, overcoming an initial own goal. Today they beat Costa Rica 2-0. They are 1 of the only 2 unbeaten teams in the first round. Go Iraq!

#73 from Jean Bart at 4:54 am on Aug 16, 2004

L'or Manaudou!!!!

L'or Manaudou!!!!

L'or Manaudou!!!!

L'or Manaudou!!!!

Gold for France!!!!

Also, congratulations to Hugues Duboscq for his swimming and all Olympians!!!

#74 from SBD at 7:31 am on Aug 21, 2004

Moore/Bush 04

Fahrenheit 2004

Similar to This Land

SBD

#75 from T. J. Madison at 9:11 am on Aug 21, 2004

It looks like Shaukat Aziz is likely to be promoted from finance minister to prime minister of Pakistan.

Why is this good news, you ask?

Because Aziz is a member of the international banking cartel. Now much of the banking cartel are scum, for a laundry list of reasons best told elswhere. But one thing members of the cartel aren't likely to tolerate is the use of nuclear weapons near major financial centers. Hence any extra influence Aziz gets decreases the odds that NYC, Dehli, Tel Aviv, etc. go up in a fireball as a result of the Pak arsenal.

And if that isn't good news I don't know what is.

#76 from LiberalBlogger at 5:12 am on Aug 22, 2004

To quote a respected MIT professor:

[extract from funny computer-generated leftist rants program redacted - let's stick to the theme of the day, shall we]

#77 from SBD at 12:35 pm on Aug 22, 2004

by LiberalBlogger on August 22, 2004 05:12 AM
To quote a respected MIT professor:

Sounds like your quoted professor was part of this group!!

`Devil' of a lawsuit: MIT lab worker claims colleagues persecuted him for being Christian
By J.M. Lawrence

[ JK: No, it was computer generated. I'm leaving this URL up so I can forward it to hatewatch, but after that I'm taking it down. These kinds of discussions have a place here 6 other days of the week, but not Saturdays.]

#78 from Joe Katzman at 7:38 pm on Aug 23, 2004

SBD,

Actually, LiberalBlogger is using a humourous "Leftist Cant Generator" program at Spinline.NET: http://www.spinline.net/cy/lefterator.pl - I vivdly recall an "MBA Phrase Generator" that was similarly convincing.

But that isn't a Good News Friday subject, and picking it up with the MIT example only contaminates the thread further. So, I'm going to have to redact both posts.

RE: political satires generally, the best thing to do is EMAIL me a link, here windsofchange.net (joe...). Let's leave this thread free of them.

#79 from T. J. Madison at 12:18 am on Aug 29, 2004

Thursday was William Wilberforce's 245th birthday. Who was Mr. Wilberforce, you may ask? Well, here's his inscription in Westminster Abbey (emphasis added):

For nearly half a century a member of the House of Commons, and, for six parliaments during that period, one of the two representatives for Yorkshire. In an age and country fertile in great and good men, he was among the foremost of those who fixed the character of their times. Because to high and various talents to warm benevolence, and to universal candor, he added the abiding eloquence of a Christian life.

Eminent as he was in every department of public labor, and a leader in every work of charity,
whether to relieve the temporal or the spiritual wants of his fellow men, his name will ever be specially identified with those exertions which, by the blessing of God, REMOVED FROM ENGLAND THE GUILT OF THE AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE, and prepared the way for the ABOLITION OF SLAVERY IN EVERY COLONY OF THE EMPIRE.

In the prosecution of these objects, he relied, not in vain, on God; but in the progress, he was called to endure great obloquy and great opposition. He outlived, however, all enmity, and, in the evening of his days, withdrew from public life and public observation to the bosom of his family.

Yet he died not unnoticed or forgotten by his country: the peers and Commons of England,
With the Lord Chancellor, and the Speaker, at their head, carried him to his fitting place among the mighty dead around here to repose, till, through the merits of Jesus Christ his only Redeemer and Savior, (whom, in his life and in his writings he had desired to glorify,) he shall rise in the resurrection of the just.

Let us remember this day the efforts of this noble paladin of the elder days.

#80 from Gary Gunnels at 2:26 am on Sep 04, 2004

T.J. Madison,

Not to rain on your parade, but Wilberforce is fairly notorious for sweeping abolitionism under the rug when Pitt the Younger asked to do so. Pitt's rationale was that the abolitionist movement was a threat to domestic security during the Napoleonic wars and that Wilberforce needed to silence what portion of the movement that he could. Pitt silenced the rest via repressive domestic security laws. Wilberforce also put his stamp of approval on Britain's disasterous attempt to invade and re-enslave the population of St. Domingue (Haiti). Finally, its also clear that Wilberforce's notion of abolitionism was not directed so much towards individual freedom, but the sort of paternalism that is oh so commonly found in "reformist" circles.

No, for my money, I am far more impressed by the generation of abolitionist figures that followed Wilberforce's than with Wilberforce.

#81 from T. J. Madison at 2:13 pm on Sep 04, 2004

Sure Wilberforce wasn't as cool as Lysander Spooner, but it's not Spooner's birthday yet. And for a 18th century politician and Christian fundamentalist, one could do a hell of a lot worse.

#82 from Steve at 4:38 pm on Sep 04, 2004

A bit late but thought you might not have heard the background to the story of the British athlete that won 2 gold medals after a career blighted by injuries at the wrong time. A true inspriration and signal that never giving up IS the right thing to do.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/olympics_2004/athletics/3605014.stm

#83 from Alice at 7:04 pm on Sep 18, 2004

OK, here's some good news. My dad went into the hospital this week and we were all thinking he was going to die, but he didn't. They fixed him up! He's making a grocery list for me right now and I was thinking I'd be spending today planning his funeral. Yahoo!

#84 from Andrew J. Lazarus at 9:30 pm on Sep 24, 2004

Gamar Hatima Tova.

It is earlier here, but soon I too will not be posting until Sunday.

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