Archive for May, 2009
Sunday, May 31st, 2009
Jews יהודים (Yehudim)

Albert Einstein • Maimonides • Golda Meir • Emma Lazarus
Total population
13,155,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
Israel 5,393,000[1]
United States 5,275,000 [1]
France 490,000 [1]
Canada 374,000 [1]
United Kingdom 295,000 [1]
Russia 225,000 [1]
Argentina 184,000 [1]
Germany 120,000 [1]
Australia 104,000 [1]
Brazil 96,000 [1]
Ukraine 77,000 [1]
South Africa 72,000 [1]
Hungary 49,000 [1]
Mexico 40,000 [1]
Belgium 31,200 [2]
Netherlands 30,000 [2]
Italy 28,600 [2]
Chile 20,700 [2]
Belarus 18,200 [2]
Uruguay 18,000 [2]
Switzerland 17,900 [2]
Turkey 17,800 [2]
Venezuela 15,400 [2]
Sweden 15,000 [2]
Spain 12,000 [2]
Iran 10,800 [2]
Romania 10,100 [2]
Latvia 9,800 [2]
Austria 9,000 [2]
Azerbaijan 6,800 [2]
Denmark 6,400 [2]
Panama 5,000
Jew – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sunday, May 31st, 2009
Kazar jews my ass the distinction is talmudic or non talmudic
Sunday, May 31st, 2009
Historical Indications That Crop Circles Are Not "New": Although most people think of the cropcircles as a modern phenomenon (and wonder if modern technology may be responsible), there is some evidence that the circles have been appearing off-and-on for hundreds of years. Here are a few of the best-documented accounts:
1. In July, 1880 the prestigious science journal Nature (Vol. 22, pp. 290-291) published a letter from British spectroscopist J. Rand Capron in which he described his discovery and subsequent examination of multiple circular areas of flattened wheat on a farm in southern England. He describes areas of crop "forming … circular spots [with] a few standing stalks as a centre, some prostrate stalks with their heads arranged pretty evently in a direction forming a circle round the centre, and outside these a circular wall of stalks which [have] not suffered." Capron suggested that these flattened circles were the result of "some cyclonic wind action" and enclosed a sketch of the "most perfect" of these circles which, unfortunately, Nature did not publish.
2.
In 1686 an even earlier British account of geometric areas of flattened plants is found in A Natural History of Staffordshire, written by Professor Robert Plot, LLD, the first "keeper" of Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum and a professor of chemistry at Oxford. Professor Plot describes not just circles, but flattened areas "obtaining three parts of a circle, others being Semicircular, some of them Quadrants." These various designs were found both in "arable grounds" and in "open pastures … And not only in a single, but sometimes in double and treble Circle[s], one within the other."

Drawings of two U.K. crop formations described in 1686 by Prof. Robert Plot. Plot examined multiple such formations and states that the soils "under all of them were much looser and dryer than ordinary, and the parts interspersed with a white hoar… much like that in mouldy bread, of a musty rancid smell, but to the tast[e] insipid." –A Natural History of Staffordshire (1686)
The drawings which illustrate Plot’s report (see above and below) are of rings, spirals and even squares within rings–all geometric forms which are appearing in the field today. And the professor’s measurements of the flattened pathways ("seldom narrower than a foot, or much broader than a yard"), as well as the overall diameters of the formations ("near Fifty yards, whereas … some of them [are] not above two yards [in] diameter") are also typical of a majority of the crop circles we find today.
This crop circle, from the same era, occurred in St. Gile’s fields at University College. The cloud and trumpet-like diagram (upper left) illustrates Plot’s hypothesis that crop circles "must needs be the effects of Lightning, exploded from the Clouds" … in this case, the clouds "breaking first in a quadrangular, and after in a wider circular forme." –A Natural History of Staffordshire (1686)
BLT Research — Other Facts
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