--- In [email protected], new.morning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> "Rigorous statistical analysis confirms that that the 21% rise of 
the
> Dow and the S&P 500 and the 27% rise of the NASDAQ over the past 
nine
> months were caused by the coherent influence created by the 
Invincible
> America Assembly."
> —Dr. John Hagelin, Executive Director,
> International Center for Invincible Defense"
> http://mail.google.com/mail/?auth=DQAAAHgAAACyvm-
zhryzr4de_xvruPtwz4qZfk1vKe9JH2fCsLyXN_3FZtUTYnYOXE2Uro7MgHDvLTLPXTuo
CyE-_8n1PyCtSYb_fOEhEURP9oEYvsW5H7-
4OihqA6SG3vfEtMmYxO6ZVDWnMQhq4PYDMvC4-017Z4l9BPFBubFFjNLJzDuqHw
> 
> 
> Clearly MUM has redefined "rigorous". Or is it a vedic word that
> sounds similiar to the english word "rigorous?
>>


Wow, judging research before you have even read it. That is what the 
Church did to Gallileo. Next step for your type is you'll be dunking 
people in rivers to see if they have magical powers or not.
 
 OffWorld



>    1. Conforming completely to established rule: exact, strict,
> uncompromising. See usual/unusual.
>    2. Requiring great or extreme bodily, mental, or spiritual
> strength: arduous, backbreaking, burdensome, demanding, difficult,
> effortful, exacting, exigent, formidable, hard, heavy, laborious,
> onerous, oppressive, rough, severe, taxing, tough, trying, weighty.
> See heavy/light.
>    3. Not deviating from correctness, accuracy, or completeness:
> close, exact, faithful, full, strict. See careful/careless.
>    4. Having no errors: accurate, correct, errorless, exact, 
precise,
> right. See correct/incorrect, true/false.
>    5. Conforming to fact: accurate, correct, exact, faithful, 
precise,
> right, true, veracious, veridical. See correct/incorrect,
> honest/dishonest, real/imaginary, true/false.
>


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