TurquoiseB wrote:

>...that just after a "world event" that shakes 
>things up a little bit, and shows that the world
>is a far less safe and predictable place than
>people normally think it is, that there is a
>spate of flaming on "spiritual" Internet chat
>groups.  People bashing other people, and espec-
>ially people bashing other people's beliefs and
>practices that are different from one's own?
>
>It's as if a little touch of chaos makes people
>run for their safe, comfortable theories of How
>The World Works, and at the same time "prove"
>that such theories are better than other people's
>theories of How The World Works.
>
>It's just so predictable.  I'm sure glad that FFL 
>is beyond such silliness...
>
>Unc
>
>  
>
Here the response should have been like a line drawn on water.  That's 
what it was for me.  Shrug, just another one of those.   Even with 9/11 
I just thought "well, it finally happened here" and went for my daily 
walk in one of the local parks.  It is more interesting to witness the 
"hysteria" than become caught up in it.

I note that there were those posted the "image" posts where they decry 
the violence and say things that "responsible people" are supposed to 
say.  Boring.  I preferred to suggest that it was Karl Rove's doing just 
for the fun of it.  And there is nothing to say that he didn't have 
something to do with.  It's a little strange when Bush could be made to 
look like a big boob at G8 that Al-Quaeda would chose that time to 
deflect attention.  Instead G8 was taken completely out of the 
headlines, a Neocon's dream.

That also brings to notion folks (like Al Franken did to a caller this 
morning) who claim they don't believe in conspiracy theories.  They have 
absolutely no proof that these things aren't part of conspiracy.   
Former Ambassador Joe Wilson when interviewed by local KGO talk radio 
host Bernie Ward a few months back was asked by Bernie about 
conspiracies and Wilson responded that indeed such things have happened 
in the past.

- Bhairitu
 


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