Question:
<<He [Florida Gov. Jeb Bush] also waged war on the nude beaches this past summer but that was before the attack.>> No, that was a ’safety’ issue. I.e. Making sure that Floridians and other vacationers didn’t lose their whanger to shark attacks.
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Viva la crazy animals!
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> yes because americans are crazy animals > This would be mored based on survival instincts.
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Racists Religions 1.Church is "two bodies, one Black, one white- separate and divided. 2.Sudras (Untouchables Hindus) Hindu Church is "two bodies, one Brahmin Hindu , one Untouchable Hindu separate and divided. The holocaust was sponsored by "Christians". American slavery was "justified" by "Christians". Please visit: Sudras (Untouchables Hindus) Holocaust Museum http://www.dalitstan.org/holocaust/ Fight White Power Fight Brahmin Hindu Power Fight Imperialism Fight Racism
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> If you can’t manage a root in a 747-400 economy toilet, your girlfriend is > too fat.
See Nat’l Lampoon’s Vegas Vacation.
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How about sex during the attacks ? What if the FAs had undressed down to just their underwear and posed in very sexually suggesting ways ? Wouldn’t that have distracted the terrorists long enough for passengers/pilots to smash them in the head and be done with the incident ? Heck, I think airplanes, instead of focusing on arms in the cockpit, should concentrate on having huge centerfolds deployed at the press of a button. They could have a life size picture of a big obese old naked male with huge belly, complete with bulges etc etc. Deploy it as the terrorist enters the cockpit, and the terrorist would be busy puking long enough for the pilots to smash his head and be done with the incident. Another option is to make clones of Jerry Ryan all dessed up as a Borg and put those in planes instead of those armed marshalls. She could just push the terrorist to the bulkhead while saying "Resistance is futile" and then proceed to kiss the terrorist long enough for the pilots to land the plane.
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> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary > LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) –Sexual activity is up….. > Times of high anxiety, she said, produce strong emotions which cause people to > fall in love more intensely, decide more often to get married, and to have more > sex. This last activity also serves as a temporary escape.
I remember that the same thing happened in Israel during the Gulf War. As Saddam Hussein was launching Scud missiles against Tel Aviv, lots more Israelis had sex. For myself, I’ve never lived thru a war. But I have always found thunderstorms and blizzards and other stormy conditions really turn me on. :-) — Steven D. Litvintchouk 9-11. Answer the call!
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>> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary >It’s nature. You see death, nature sends the signal "make more babies." >"Death, Panhandle, is the finest aphrodisiac in the world." > – Dr Edward "Fitz" Fitzgerald.
Not really. What’s happening is called "Shackter and Singers’ Misattribution Theory". Its standard now in Behavioral Physchology. Back in the 70’s they proved that there’s no such thing as an emotion (i.e. Fear). What we experience is a physiological response that we learn on the environment to label. The tests were conclusive and when I was in College I had to reprove it for a class. I chose skydivers, especially woman who said they felt very horny after a days jumping. They thought that it was because of heightened self-esteem. What they were doing was getting a physical rush and the environment labeled it as fear. But later at night they were still getting it and in the social environment the physical response to the adrenaline was relabeled as a sexual response. Skiers get this too. Many people have reported a high sexual response after car accidents and fires or even robberies. Same thing. War vets tend to have better control of this though there’s an element of Post traumatic stress cover-ups involved too. Dr Singer (of Denver) also went on to write another book called SKIING FROM THE HEAD DOWN in the late 70’s. Cheers THOM
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<> <>What if the FAs had undressed down to just their underwear and posed in very <>sexually suggesting ways ? Wouldn’t that have distracted the terrorists long <>enough for passengers/pilots to smash them in the head and be done with the <>incident ? Kind of hard to look seductive when your throat has been slit. Robert W Lawrence Psalm 24
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Interesting theory. Are we in for a baby boom that makes the past one look VERY small? – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary >It’s nature. You see death, nature sends the signal "make more babies." >"Death, Panhandle, is the finest aphrodisiac in the world." > – Dr Edward "Fitz" Fitzgerald. >Not really. What’s happening is called "Shackter and Singers’ >Misattribution Theory". Its standard now in Behavioral Physchology. >Back in the 70’s they proved that there’s no such thing as an emotion >(i.e. Fear). What we experience is a physiological response that we >learn on the environment to label. The tests were conclusive and >when I was in College I had to reprove it for a class. >I chose skydivers, especially woman who said they felt very horny >after a days jumping. They thought that it was because of heightened >self-esteem. What they were doing was getting a physical rush and >the environment labeled it as fear. But later at night they were >still getting it and in the social environment the physical response >to the adrenaline was relabeled as a sexual response. Skiers get >this too. >Many people have reported a high sexual response after car accidents >and fires or even robberies. >Same thing. War vets tend to have better control of this though >there’s an element of Post traumatic stress cover-ups involved too. >Dr Singer (of Denver) also went on to write another book called SKIING >FROM THE HEAD >DOWN in the late 70’s. >Cheers >THOM
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> Interesting theory. Are we in for a baby boom that makes the past one > look VERY small ?
The word "boom" is no longer appropriate in public discussions ….
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> > Interesting theory. Are we in for a baby boom that makes the past one > look VERY small ? > The word "boom" is no longer appropriate in public discussions ….
Wsn’t a boombox involved in Lockerbie?
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>Interesting theory. Are we in for a baby boom that makes the past one >look VERY small?
snip snip Since I posted this I have been doing some further research. According to my sources the swingers’ clubs are booming, people are being turned away, especially in the NY Metro area because of fire regulations. It’s also never been easier to score in a single’s bar (are there any left?) But on the bad side the right wing is going nuts too. Swingers’ clubs are under attack in Jeb Bush’s Florida including in Tampa and Orlando where the dino-right wing have been using farce stuff like zoning in their religious war against personal freedom and the constitution. He also waged war on the nude beaches this past summer but that was before the attack. In Phoenix they are trying to close all four swingers’ clubs down in a crack down on personal freedom. Add the ID cards and manditory DNA smaples and you can see the start of Nazi America and soon "The Leader" Bush will have guys out in leather trench coats saying "Und I vant to see your papers". And didn’t we hear promises to repeal gun control this past election? Wheres the repeal Mein Fuhrur? More right wing lies? Now more than ever before the American people need to be personally armed. Long live the great middle path Long live the constitution THOM
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– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> yes because americans are crazy animals >This would be mored based on survival instincts.
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> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary > LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) –Sexual activity is up. Flying is
down. > So Richard Branson did have the right idea in outfitting his new planes with > bedrooms. Get people to fly by offering sex on board !
If you can’t manage a root in a 747-400 economy toilet, your girlfriend is too fat.
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– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary >It’s nature. You see death, nature sends the signal "make more babies." >"Death, Panhandle, is the finest aphrodisiac in the world." > – Dr Edward "Fitz" Fitzgerald.
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– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary > LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) –Sexual activity is up. Flying is down. >So Richard Branson did have the right idea in outfitting his new planes with >bedrooms. Get people to fly by offering sex on board !
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– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> > More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary > > LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) –Sexual activity is up. Flying is > down. > So Richard Branson did have the right idea in outfitting his new planes > with > bedrooms. Get people to fly by offering sex on board ! > If you can’t manage a root in a 747-400 economy toilet, your girlfriend is > too fat.
Or you are…….
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- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – >yes because americans are crazy animals > More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary > LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) –Sexual activity is up. Flying is down. >Gas > mask sales are soaring. People are gorging themselves on candy and ice >cream but > also ducking for cover at the smallest noise. The thought of driving into >an > underground parking garage can be chilling. > Americans are trying to cope with a new, previously unthinkable reality — >war > and the prospect of further attacks at home following the September 11 >attacks > that left 5,700 people dead or missing and presumed dead. > And it has not been easy. > "To tell you the truth I was not really expecting to return home from PNC >Park > (baseball stadium) on Friday," said Richard Kubia, a television sound >technician > in Pittsburgh. "I had convinced myself that there would be a symbolic >attack on > one of our country’s shining new ballparks as the last game of the season >was > played," he said. > The production trucks park in a garage which is under hundreds of tons of >steel > and concrete. "I wasn’t too happy about having to be parked indoors from >the > very beginning of the season, but that garage takes on a whole other >mindset > now. It is very easy to get caught up," Kubia said. > Julie, a housewife in Los Angeles, said she thought about buying gas masks >for > herself, her husband and her two young sons, but then decided it would be >futile > to try to change one’s fate under such circumstances. "Besides, I didn’t >want to > get caught in a predicament in which the gas mask fit me but not my child >or > vice versa," she said. > Risa Mandelberg, owner of a card company in Los Angeles, said she’s been >waking > up in the middle of the night with nightmares, but has found herself >trying to > have fun at several weddings since the attacks. > Fear of biochemical attack > "A lot of people are getting married," she said. "I went to a wedding >right > after it happened. There were a lot of tears and the rabbi mentioned the >attacks > during the ceremony. It was very sad." > Therapists say people’s personalities and prior history to a great extent > determine how they react to trauma, which explains why some are buying > antibiotics fearing a biochemical attack, others are abandoning their >diets with > a vengeance and still others are pretending nothing’s changed at all. > "An event of this kind triggers our personal fears and mobilizes our >coping > skills. These ways vary, are not limited to one, and may change over the >course > of events," said Catherine Riggs-Bergesen, a clinical psychologist in New >York. > "Your emotional state before the event greatly determines how you are >coping > with it now and in what style," she added. > Not surprisingly, many people throughout the country are experiencing > depression, fear and sleeplessness after witnessing on television or >firsthand > the horrific attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. > What is curious, however, is that several psychologists have noted an > improvement among some patients who had been treated for depression and >anxiety > prior to the attacks. But others say that many people prone to depression >are > depressed now by events. > Fear of flying > "I got a phone call this week from a patient I had 20 years ago who was >afraid > of flying," said Jerilyn Ross, president of the Anxiety Disorders >Association. > of America and a therapist in Washington. > "He said he had taken three flights since the attacks because he had >worked so > hard to overcome his fear of flying. He said all the techniques we used >made him > less fearful of flying than others right now," she said. > One explanation is that people with anxiety disorders or emotional >problems > suffer as a result of turning inward. But now that the external >environment is > less stable, their problems seem less serious, experts say. > While many Americans are forging ahead with planned events, like weddings, > business and family trips, many are hunkering down in ways that are >reminiscent > of America during past wars. > Indeed, some experts say that many people are turning to food, shopping, >movies > and sex as a means of escaping and coping with fear and sadness. > Pepper Schwartz, a University of Washington sociologist, said there are >many > reasons people have sex during crises. > Times of high anxiety, she said, produce strong emotions which cause >people to > fall in love more intensely, decide more often to get married, and to have >more > sex. This last activity also serves as a temporary escape. > "It’s blotting out the world and living in a moment of heightened pleasure >as > opposed to heightened peril or depression so you block that out and stop > thinking for at least a little while and just be and enjoy and get down to >those > basic emotions," Schwartz said. > Schwartz predicted a "baby boomlet" would follow nine months after the >attacks > but one not nearly as big as the baby boom that followed the end of World >War > Two.
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> yes because americans are crazy animals
This would be mored based on survival instincts.
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> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary
It’s nature. You see death, nature sends the signal "make more babies." "Death, Panhandle, is the finest aphrodisiac in the world." - Dr Edward "Fitz" Fitzgerald.
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> More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary > LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) –Sexual activity is up. Flying is down.
So Richard Branson did have the right idea in outfitting his new planes with bedrooms. Get people to fly by offering sex on board !
Response:
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->More sex, less sleep: U.S. attack reactions vary >LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) –Sexual activity is up. Flying is down. Gas >mask sales are soaring. People are gorging themselves on candy and ice cream but >also ducking for cover at the smallest noise. The thought of driving into an >underground parking garage can be chilling. >Americans are trying to cope with a new, previously unthinkable reality — war >and the prospect of further attacks at home following the September 11 attacks >that left 5,700 people dead or missing and presumed dead. >And it has not been easy. >"To tell you the truth I was not really expecting to return home from PNC Park >(baseball stadium) on Friday," said Richard Kubia, a television sound technician >in Pittsburgh. "I had convinced myself that there would be a symbolic attack on >one of our country’s shining new ballparks as the last game of the season was >played," he said. >The production trucks park in a garage which is under hundreds of tons of steel >and concrete. "I wasn’t too happy about having to be parked indoors from the >very beginning of the season, but that garage takes on a whole other mindset >now. It is very easy to get caught up," Kubia said. >Julie, a housewife in Los Angeles, said she thought about buying gas masks for >herself, her husband and her two young sons, but then decided it would be futile >to try to change one’s fate under such circumstances. "Besides, I didn’t want to >get caught in a predicament in which the gas mask fit me but not my child or >vice versa," she said. >Risa Mandelberg, owner of a card company in Los Angeles, said she’s been waking >up in the middle of the night with nightmares, but has found herself trying to >have fun at several weddings since the attacks. >Fear of biochemical attack >"A lot of people are getting married," she said. "I went to a wedding right >after it happened. There were a lot of tears and the rabbi mentioned the attacks >during the ceremony. It was very sad." >Therapists say people’s personalities and prior history to a great extent >determine how they react to trauma, which explains why some are buying >antibiotics fearing a biochemical attack, others are abandoning their diets with >a vengeance and still others are pretending nothing’s changed at all. >"An event of this kind triggers our personal fears and mobilizes our coping >skills. These ways vary, are not limited to one, and may change over the course >of events," said Catherine Riggs-Bergesen, a clinical psychologist in New York. >"Your emotional state before the event greatly determines how you are coping >with it now and in what style," she added. >Not surprisingly, many people throughout the country are experiencing >depression, fear and sleeplessness after witnessing on television or firsthand >the horrific attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. >What is curious, however, is that several psychologists have noted an >improvement among some patients who had been treated for depression and anxiety >prior to the attacks. But others say that many people prone to depression are >depressed now by events. >Fear of flying >"I got a phone call this week from a patient I had 20 years ago who was afraid >of flying," said Jerilyn Ross, president of the Anxiety Disorders Association. >of America and a therapist in Washington. >"He said he had taken three flights since the attacks because he had worked so >hard to overcome his fear of flying. He said all the techniques we used made him >less fearful of flying than others right now," she said. >One explanation is that people with anxiety disorders or emotional problems >suffer as a result of turning inward. But now that the external environment is >less stable, their problems seem less serious, experts say. >While many Americans are forging ahead with planned events, like weddings, >business and family trips, many are hunkering down in ways that are reminiscent >of America during past wars. >Indeed, some experts say that many people are turning to food, shopping, movies >and sex as a means of escaping and coping with fear and sadness. >Pepper Schwartz, a University of Washington sociologist, said there are many >reasons people have sex during crises. >Times of high anxiety, she said, produce strong emotions which cause people to >fall in love more intensely, decide more often to get married, and to have more >sex. This last activity also serves as a temporary escape. >"It’s blotting out the world and living in a moment of heightened pleasure as >opposed to heightened peril or depression so you block that out and stop >thinking for at least a little while and just be and enjoy and get down to those >basic emotions," Schwartz said. >Schwartz predicted a "baby boomlet" would follow nine months after the attacks >but one not nearly as big as the baby boom that followed the end of World War >Two.
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