Within my work I have excerpt passages from all the books within Old Testament to help you understand the fullness of truth. For He came to earth in antiquities, not in the common era. Constantine in the forged books wanted to correlate his version, and give credence to the Roman emperors, Roman times and their one world religion. God Yahweh, our Savior, came to earth himself out of such love to save his flock, the good people by bearing their sins upon himself in order to save them. Yahweh our Savior will come again, but this time it is for final judgment. Open your minds to understand, and to hear truth. Open your hearts to the love of the One True God Yahweh Sabaoth who is our true Savior.
There is no such thing as a collective salvation of souls, where one person dies to save you from your own sins. God came to earth within antiquities to save his own people from being influenced by evil to turn away from God and commit sins. God gave all the Ten Commandments which is a moral guideline to follow, and yet many people think that they can continue to commit sins, violate his laws, and think they will be saved.
Everything revolves around religion, and are morally based on the Ten Commandments of God. The very strength of the foundational pillars that our First President George Washington outlined for our Constitution and laws. Every American should give respect to our Founding Fathers who wrote into the Constitution the very freedoms and liberties for We The People. We must uphold the Constitution for it gives individual rights, and unalienable rights as to given to us by God. To respect Our Flag which represents freedoms, liberties, harmony and unity among people. The American Flag also represents freedom from slavery, captivity, suppression, tyranny, and arbitrary control. All must stand up out of love for Our Constitution, Our Flag, and Our Country. Stand up out of love for the American Flag, and build a bridge of harmony, and unity among people. Stand up out of love for one another, and have respect for all life. Stand up united in love for God and for our country.
This is the end of times when all truth is revealed in the end. “Call to me and I will answer you, and I will tell you great and mighty things, which you do not know.” Jeremiah 33:3 All the truth has been revealed by God and me as to what we witnessed, and unraveling all the mason cabal written coded material in which to bring the truth to light. God Almighty already knew what had transpired, but wanted all to know the truth in these end times. “He reveals deep and secret things; He knows what is in the darkness, and light dwells with Him.” Daniel 2:22 God Almighty has been my witness on my behalf, and I have borne witness to all the people involved in the murders, and other nefarious activities on behalf of God. God Almighty knew who murdered all these different people, and for 53 years I have traveled to different locations to bare witness against them.
My book, is my humble effort to bring to light this truth, not for the glory of myself, but for the Glory of God Almighty Yahweh, and the Blessed Mother Mary. For my love of them is far greater than any church, or endorsed ecclesiastical dogma in which they changed, or eliminated the true name of God, thereby denigrating the very concept of God. Even Sir Isaac Newton wrote that the Anglican and Catholic churches, as well as, other churches did blasphemy in promoting the concept of the trinity, thereby violating the very First Commandment of God Yahweh. People have been deceived into believing Constantine's New Testament with the logos name of jesus christ. Many try to justify that name by saying it is Yeshua, or Yehoshua. Both of those names are Hebrew for Joshua son of Nun. (Neh.8:17) In Hebrew Yahusha means Father, and Yahuah means Salvation. And the first three letters of those Hebrew words are “YAH” which is first three letters of YAHWEH, the one true God. The very First Commandment is “ I Am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage, “You shall have no other gods before me.” Det. 5:6-7 “Hear, Israel: Yahweh is our God. Yahweh is one. You shall love Yahweh your God with all your heart with all your soul, and with all your might.” Det. 6:4 Even the tetragrammaton of YHWH is Yahweh. And Yah in Hebrew means I AM, which “AM” is the first two letters of the beginning of the name AMEN. The very opening of the Hebrew prayer, “Amen Our Father who art in heaven, Holy is thy name.” Even the doxology of the prayer is “For thine is the kingdom, the power and all glory forever and ever Amen.”
Following on from Kleopatra, the glittering epic of Egypt's queen continues as she allies herself with Anthony and begins a love story that immortalizes her as one of history's greatest political players and most tragic heroines. Kleopatra has been reinstated to the throne and now shares her bed with Caesar. But in order for their infant son to be officially recognized as Caesar’s rightful heir, Kleopatra must journey with the child to Rome. There she forms an intimate bond with Antony, Caesar’s second-in command. When Caesar is assassinated, it is Antony who wages war against the slain ruler’s monstrous nephew, Octavian, who claims it is he, and not Kleopatra’s son, who is next in line to rule. Now Antony and Kleopatra are inextricably allied in love and a fierce battle against a formidable enemy, where no less than the control of the world is at stake.
These volumes provide an authoritative reference resource on leadership issues specific to women and gender, with a focus on positive aspects and opportunities for leadership in various domains.
In 1844, Lydia Sigourney asserted, "Man's warfare on the trees is terrible." Like Sigourney many American women of her day engaged with such issues as sustainability, resource wars, globalization, voluntary simplicity, Christian ecology, and environmental justice. Illuminating the foundations for contemporary women's environmental writing, Fallen Forests shows how their nineteenth-century predecessors marshaled powerful affective, ethical, and spiritual resources to chastise, educate, and motivate readers to engage in positive social change. Fallen Forests contributes to scholarship in American women's writing, ecofeminism, ecocriticism, and feminist rhetoric, expanding the literary, historical, and theoretical grounds for some of today's most pressing environmental debates. Karen L. Kilcup rejects prior critical emphases on sentimentalism to show how women writers have drawn on their literary emotional intelligence to raise readers' consciousness about social and environmental issues. She also critiques ecocriticism's idealizing tendency, which has elided women's complicity in agendas that depart from today's environmental orthodoxies. Unlike previous ecocritical works, Fallen Forests includes marginalized texts by African American, Native American, Mexican American, working-class, and non-Protestant women. Kilcup also enlarges ecocriticism's genre foundations, showing how Cherokee oratory, travel writing, slave narrative, diary, polemic, sketches, novels, poetry, and expos intervene in important environmental debates.
Rewrites our understanding of the last 50 years of Chicana/o cultural production. Chicana/o Remix casts new light not only on artists—such as Sandra de la Loza, Judy Baca, and David Botello, among others—but on the exhibitions that feature their work, and the collectors, curators, critics, and advocates who engage it. Combining feminist theory, critical ethnic studies, art historical analysis, and extensive archival and field research, Karen Mary Davalos argues that narrow notions of identity, politics, and aesthetics limit our ability to understand the full capacities of Chicana/o art. She employs fresh vernacular concepts such as the “errata exhibit,” or the staging of exhibits that critically question mainstream art museums, and the “remix,” or the act of bringing new narratives and forgotten histories from the background and into the foreground. These concepts, which emerge out of art practice itself, drive her analysis and reinforce the rejection of familiar narratives that evaluate Chicana/o art in simplistic, traditional terms, such as political versus commercial, or realist versus conceptual. Throughout Chicana/o Remix, Davalos explores undocumented or previously ignored information about artists, their cultural production, and the exhibitions and collections that feature their work. Each chapter exposes and challenges conventions in art history and Chicana/o studies, documenting how Chicana artists were the first to critically challenge exhibitions of Chicana/o art, tracing the origins of the first Chicano arts organizations, and highlighting the influence of Europe and Asia on Chicana/o artists who traveled abroad. As a leading scholar in the study of Chicana/o artists, art spaces, and exhibition practices, Davalos presents her most ambitious project to date in this re-examination of fifty years of Chicana/o art production.
You don’t have to be a straight “A” student or gifted athlete to get college scholarships. This guide will assist parents and students find small scholarships offered by organizations and institutions in their own communities. Many of these scholarships will help fill in the gaps that may be left by other financial aid sources.
This book looks at recent, high-profile anti-American terrorism crises: the Cuban skyjacking epidemic; the Tehran hostage-taking; the Beirut kidnappings; and Al Qaeda suicide bombing. It then explains how they come to an end using a framework of conflict resolution concepts: conflict ripeness and stalemate, turning points, negotiation readiness, and interest-based bargaining combined with shifts in decision-making strategies.
One method of American territory expansion in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands was the denial of property rights to Mexican landowners, which led to dispossession. Many historical accounts overlook this colonial impact on Indigenous and Mexican peoples, and existing studies that do tackle this subject tend to privilege the male experience. Here, Karen R. Roybal recenters the focus of dispossession on women, arguing that gender, sometimes more than race, dictated legal concepts of property ownership and individual autonomy. Drawing on a diverse source base—legal land records, personal letters, and literature—Roybal locates voices of Mexican American women in the Southwest to show how they fought against the erasure of their rights, both as women and as landowners. Woven throughout Roybal's analysis are these women's testimonios—their stories focusing on inheritance, property rights, and shifts in power. Roybal positions these testimonios as an alternate archive that illustrates the myriad ways in which multiple layers of dispossession—and the changes of property ownership in Mexican law—affected the formation of Mexicana identity.
While great strides have been made in documenting discrimination against women in America, our awareness of discrimination is due in large part to the efforts of a feminist movement dominated by middle-class white women, and is skewed to their experiences. Yet discrimination against racial ethnic women is in fact dramatically different--more complex and more widespread--and without a window into the lives of racial ethnic women our understanding of the full extent of discrimination against all women in America will be woefully inadequate. Now, in this illuminating volume, Karen Anderson offers the first book to examine the lives of women in the three main ethnic groups in the United States--Native American, Mexican American, and African American women--revealing the many ways in which these groups have suffered oppression, and the profound effects it has had on their lives. Here is a thought-provoking examination of the history of racial ethnic women, one which provides not only insight into their lives, but also a broader perception of the history, politics, and culture of the United States. For instance, Anderson examines the clash between Native American tribes and the U.S. government (particularly in the plains and in the West) and shows how the forced acculturation of Indian women caused the abandonment of traditional cultural values and roles (in many tribes, women held positions of power which they had to relinquish), subordination to and economic dependence on their husbands, and the loss of meaningful authority over their children. Ultimately, Indian women were forced into the labor market, the extended family was destroyed, and tribes were dispersed from the reservation and into the mainstream--all of which dramatically altered the woman's place in white society and within their own tribes. The book examines Mexican-American women, revealing that since U.S. job recruiters in Mexico have historically focused mostly on low-wage male workers, Mexicans have constituted a disproportionate number of the illegals entering the states, placing them in a highly vulnerable position. And even though Mexican-American women have in many instances achieved a measure of economic success, in their families they are still subject to constraints on their social and political autonomy at the hands of their husbands. And finally, Anderson cites a wealth of evidence to demonstrate that, in the years since World War II, African-American women have experienced dramatic changes in their social positions and political roles, and that the migration to large urban areas in the North simply heightened the conflict between homemaker and breadwinner already thrust upon them. Changing Woman provides the first history of women within each racial ethnic group, tracing the meager progress they have made right up to the present. Indeed, Anderson concludes that while white middle-class women have made strides toward liberation from male domination, women of color have not yet found, in feminism, any political remedy to their problems.
The instant #1 New York Times and USA Today best seller by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark, the voices behind the hit podcast My Favorite Murder! Sharing never-before-heard stories ranging from their struggles with depression, eating disorders, and addiction, Karen and Georgia irreverently recount their biggest mistakes and deepest fears, reflecting on the formative life events that shaped them into two of the most followed voices in the nation. In Stay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered, Karen and Georgia focus on the importance of self-advocating and valuing personal safety over being ‘nice’ or ‘helpful.’ They delve into their own pasts, true crime stories, and beyond to discuss meaningful cultural and societal issues with fierce empathy and unapologetic frankness. “In many respects, Stay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered distills the My Favorite Murder podcast into its most essential elements: Georgia and Karen. They lay themselves bare on the page, in all of their neuroses, triumphs, failures, and struggles. From eating disorders to substance abuse and kleptomania to the wonders of therapy, Kilgariff and Hardstark recount their lives with honesty, humor, and compassion, offering their best unqualified life-advice along the way.” —Entertainment Weekly “Like the podcast, the book offers funny, feminist advice for survival—both in the sense of not getting killed and just, like, getting a job and working through your personal shit so you can pay your bills and have friends.” —Rolling Stone At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
The bright future and exciting possibilities of BIM Many architects and engineers regard BIM as a disruptive force, changing the way building professionals design, build, and ultimately manage a built structure. With its emphasis on continuing advances in BIM research, teaching, and practice, Building Information Modeling: BIM in Current and Future Practice encourages readers to transform disruption to opportunity and challenges them to reconsider their preconceptions about BIM. Thought leaders from universities and professional practice composed essays exploring BIM's potential to improve the products and processes of architectural design including the structure and content of the tools themselves. These authors provide insights for assessing the current practice and research directions of BIM and speculate about its future. The twenty-six chapters are thematically grouped in six sections that present complementary and sometimes incompatible positions: Design Thinking and BIM BIM Analytics Comprehensive BIM Reasoning with BIM Professional BIM BIM Speculations Together, these authors provide stimulating ideas regarding new directions in building information modeling.
In this provocative study of eight novels, Karen E. Beardslee asserts that American writers often engage with folk traditions as a necessary part of their characters journeys to wholeness. Focusing not only on African American, Native American, and Hispanic American cultures but also on women s culture, Beardslee traces the connections between folk legacies and the search for selfhood in both nineteenth- and twentieth-century works. Within each chapter, a novel by a contemporary author and one from an earlier period are brought together: Whitney Otto s How to Make an American Quilt and Harriet Beecher Stowe s The Minister s Wooing; David Bradley s The Chaneysville Incident and Charles Chesnutt s The Conjure Woman; Leslie Marmon Silko s Ceremony and Zitkala-Sa s American Indian Stories; and Roberta Fernandez s Intaglio and Maria Cristina Mena s The Birth of the God of War. These pairings are not based on matters of intertextuality or influence but are chosen according to the folk groups to which the novels characters belong. This strategy enables Beardslee to trace the particular legacies that inform the work of the twentieth-century authors. As Beardslee notes, contemporary texts and the critical commentary on them have focused, until fairly recently, on the search for self in male (usually white) characters. Such works have also positioned that search outside the character s family or community and have usually emphasized its futility. With the growing shift toward multiculturalism in fiction, however, folk traditions have come to play an increasingly crucial role in characters journeys to self-awareness as well as in the success of those journeys. Thoroughly researched and cogently argued, this book makes a significant contribution to the study of both folklore and literature as it explores the relationship between knowing one s cultural heritage and achieving a sense of self that is whole instead of fragmented, connected instead of drifting. The Author: Karen E. Beardslee teaches in the Department of Language and Literature at Burlington County College in Pemberton, New Jersey. Her articles have appeared in MELUS, The Encyclopedia of Folklore and Literature, and the Zora Neale Hurston Forum.
The first of its kind—a Value Stream Mapping book written for those in service and office environments who need to streamline operations Value Stream Mapping is a practical, how-to guide that helps decision-makers improve value stream efficiency in virtually any setting, including construction, energy, financial service, government, healthcare, R&D, retail, and technology. It gives you the tools to address a wider range of important VSM issues than any other such book, including the psychology of change, leadership, creating teams, building consensus, and charter development. Karen Martin is principal consultant for Karen Martin & Associates, LLC, instructor for the University of California, San Diego's Lean Enterprise program, and industry advisor to the University of San Diego's Industrial and Systems Engineering program. Mike Osterling provides support and leadership to manufacturing and non-manufacturing organizations on their Lean Transformation Journey. In a continuous improvement leadership role for six years, Mike played a key role in Square D Company's lean transformation in the 1990s.
A richly illustrated overview of the storied football program at Notre Dame combines year-by-year accounts of the accomplishments of the school's greatest athletes, as well as profiles of hundreds of players and coaches, such as the Four Horsemen, Knute Rockne, Joe Montana, Digger Phelps, and others.
Provides strategies designed to help create organizational excellence by focusing on four key behaviors--including clarity, focus, discipline, and engagement--in order to get better results.
Contains articles that provide information on topics related to sports around the world, covering college sports, the culture of sports, sporting events, health and fitness, nations, media, the sports industry, types of sports, sports theories, and sport in society; arranged alphabetically from Academics to Dance.
My book, is my humble effort to bring to light this truth, not for the glory of myself, but for the Glory of God Almighty Yahweh, and the Blessed Mother Mary. For my love of them is far greater than any church, or endorsed ecclesiastical dogma in which they changed, or eliminated the true name of God, thereby denigrating the very concept of God. Even Sir Isaac Newton wrote that the Anglican and Catholic churches, as well as, other churches did blasphemy in promoting the concept of the trinity, thereby violating the very First Commandment of God Yahweh. People have been deceived into believing Constantine's New Testament with the logos name of jesus christ. Many try to justify that name by saying it is Yeshua, or Yehoshua. Both of those names are Hebrew for Joshua son of Nun. (Neh.8:17) In Hebrew Yahusha means Father, and Yahuah means Salvation. And the first three letters of those Hebrew words are “YAH” which is first three letters of YAHWEH, the one true God. The very First Commandment is “ I Am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage, “You shall have no other gods before me.” Det. 5:6-7 “Hear, Israel: Yahweh is our God. Yahweh is one. You shall love Yahweh your God with all your heart with all your soul, and with all your might.” Det. 6:4 Even the tetragrammaton of YHWH is Yahweh. And Yah in Hebrew means I AM, which “AM” is the first two letters of the beginning of the name AMEN. The very opening of the Hebrew prayer, “Amen Our Father who art in heaven, Holy is thy name.” Even the doxology of the prayer is “For thine is the kingdom, the power and all glory forever and ever Amen.”
There is no such thing as a collective salvation of souls, where one person dies to save you from your own sins. God came to earth within antiquities to save his own people from being influenced by evil to turn away from God and commit sins. God gave all the Ten Commandments which is a moral guideline to follow, and yet many people think that they can continue to commit sins, violate his laws, and think they will be saved.
Within my work I have excerpt passages from all the books within Old Testament to help you understand the fullness of truth. For He came to earth in antiquities, not in the common era. Constantine in the forged books wanted to correlate his version, and give credence to the Roman emperors, Roman times and their one world religion. God Yahweh, our Savior, came to earth himself out of such love to save his flock, the good people by bearing their sins upon himself in order to save them. Yahweh our Savior will come again, but this time it is for final judgment. Open your minds to understand, and to hear truth. Open your hearts to the love of the One True God Yahweh Sabaoth who is our true Savior.
Rachel Carson is the twentieth century's most significant environmentalist. Her books about the sea blend science and poetry as they invite readers to share her celebration of the ocean's wonders. Silent Spring, her graphic and compelling expose of the damage caused by the widespread aerial spraying of persistent organic pesticides such as DDT, opened our eyes to the interconnectedness of all living beings and the ecological systems we inhabit. Carson's work challenges our belief that science and technology can control the natural world, asks us to recognize our place in the world around us, and inspires us to treat the earth respectfully. She calls us to rekindle our sense of wonder at nature's power and beauty, and to tread lightly on the earth so that it will continue to sustain us and our descendants. This book guides readers on a journey through Carson's life and work, considers Carson's legacies, and points to some of the continuing challenges to sustainability. It provides a listing of resources for reading, learning, or teaching about the environment, about nature writing, and about Carson and the crucial issues she addressed.
This will help us customize your experience to showcase the most relevant content to your age group
Please select from below
Login
Not registered?
Sign up
Already registered?
Success – Your message will goes here
We'd love to hear from you!
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.