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Pastor who endorsed Perry on Friday says Romney is a cultist


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2011 Oct 7, 9:45am   12,475 views  62 comments

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http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/pastor-endorsed-perry-friday-says-romney-cultist-214202497.html

To tell the truth, I consider these legalistic Baptists to be a cult. But to each his own. I gave up on traditional church long time ago, although I still consider myself a Christian.

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29   joshuatrio   2011 Oct 12, 9:01am  

Regarding the book of Mormon:

"The Book of Mormon is considered by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints to be a divinely inspired book of equal value to the Bible. Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormon religion, claimed that he was directed by an Angel to a hill near his home in which he found golden tablets containing the full text of the book. With the books he found two objects called the Urim and Thummim which he described as a pair of crystals joined in the form of a large pair of spectacles. Unfortunately, after Smith finished his translation, he had to return the tablets to the Angel, so there is no physical evidence that they ever existed.

The book refers to a group of Jews that moved to and settled in America where Jesus visited them. Some segments of the Book of Mormon contain sections copied directly from the King James version of the Bible – the Bible that was most popular at the time and used by Joseph Smith. One example is Mark 16:15-18 which is quoted nearly word-for-word in Mormon 9:22-24. In addition, the book mimics the literary and linguistic style of the King James Bible. Linguistic experts have stated that the entire book is written by one man, and is not written by a combination of authors (the prophets as claimed by Smith). Additionally, the book refers to animals and crops that did not exist in America until Columbus arrived: ass, bull, calf, cattle, cow, domestic goat, horse, ox, domestic sheep, sow, swine, elephants, wheat, and barley.

The most compelling proof that Joseph Smith was perpetuating a fraud is the Book of Abraham. In 1835 Smith was able to use his Urim and Thummim to translate some Egyptian scrolls that he was given access to (at that time no one could read hieroglyphics). Upon inspection, Smith declared that they contained the Book of Abraham. He promptly translated the lot and it was accepted as scripture by the church. The scrolls vanished and everyone thought the story would end there. But it didn’t – in 1966 the original scrolls were found in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. The scrolls turned out to be a standard Egyptian text that was often buried with the dead. To this day the Book of Abraham is a source of discomfort for the Mormon religion."

http://listverse.com/2007/08/30/top-10-famous-hoaxes/

30   leo707   2011 Oct 12, 9:18am  

joshuatrio says

http://listverse.com/2007/08/30/top-10-famous-hoaxes/

Funny that the BoM is the only holly book on that list.

31   corntrollio   2011 Oct 12, 9:43am  

Bap33 says

you missed most of the points due to my poor writing habits. Please re-read my answer to leo in context.

That's not really responsive to my points. You haven't really explained how the prophetic stuff in the bible is batting 1.000, and you also continue with your flawed definitions of liberal vs. conservative and are unable to actually portray the two accurately, instead falling back on a flawed Nixonian notion that has nothing to do with the actual meanings.

32   leo707   2011 Oct 12, 9:46am  

corntrollio says

You haven't really explained how the prophetic stuff in the bible is batting 1.000

Yeah, I would like to see this explained. I have seen/heard discussed this many times, and have never been presented with a convincing reasoning.

33   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 12, 10:20am  

joshuatrio says

With the books he found two objects called the Urim and Thummim which he described as a pair of crystals joined in the form of a large pair of spectacles.

http://www.southparkstudios.com/clips/104253/joseph-smith-part-1

A Classic.

34   leo707   2011 Oct 12, 10:25am  

thunderlips11 says

joshuatrio says

With the books he found two objects called the Urim and Thummim which he described as a pair of crystals joined in the form of a large pair of spectacles.

http://www.southparkstudios.com/clips/104253/joseph-smith-part-1

A Classic.

Homo Economicus. Like Bigfoot, reported to exist in fantasy books, but never seen in the wild.

Dum da dum dum...

35   Reality   2011 Oct 12, 10:57am  

leoj707 says

corntrollio says

You haven't really explained how the prophetic stuff in the bible is batting 1.000

Yeah, I would like to see this explained. I have seen/heard discussed this many times, and have never been presented with a convincing reasoning.

All the prophesies indeed came true . . . because the prophets were recording the past, not the future as we understand it. The ancient Egyptians believed that which happened in the past must happen again in the future; time/events to them were simply a continuously revolving replication of itself, to every detail. That's why they went to the great length of carving all those gigantic monuments with inscriptions (stellas etc.); they firmly believed the predicative power of "history." Otherwise they wouldn't have spent the effort and we wouldn't have known them (just like we do not know the history of zillions of other tribes; the sampling bias inherent in history study).

Who were "they"? They were the ancient Egyptian Pharaohs ( "the Lord"), especially of the 18th dynasty (New Kingdom), and their princely relatives (prophets). The term "Lord" also applied to whichever royal family member happen to be in charge of real power at the time. Their instructions were the commands of "the Lord."

The most important story arch concerned with how Joseph/Yuya massively expanded Egyptian imperial government power through market manipulation (7yr harvest, 7yr famine, leading to the tightly inbred imperial family enslaving everyone in the known world, as boasted in the Old Testament). The subsequent government bubble allowed Solomon/AmenhotepIII engage in massive monument building programs. Then the bubble burst, leading to Moses/Akhenaten's unpopular draconian rule and overthrow, followed by Joshua/Jesus/Tutankhamun's more relaxed/tolerant rule and subsequent murder by a coup orchestrated by the military and priests.

Yuya/Joseph's grain purchase program to fill the granaries probably caused a massive agro and agro land bubble, the burst of which bankrupted almost all the farmers and grain dealers, and put the Pharaoh (Joseph/Yuya's brother Amenhotep III/Solomon) in a position to buy up everything cheap and essentially enslave everyone in the known world. That centralization of power however was ultimately proven to be disasterous to the Pharaoh's own royal family. Within a few decades, things got so bad Moses/AmenhotepIV/Akhenaten had to be deposed by his own mother Tiye (the "jealous" Lord) in a palace coup and sent on a journey of Exodus. The more relaxed rule of the next Pharaoh Tutankhamun/Joshua/Jesus apparently won the hearts and minds of Egyptians. Not only was his visage revived in Roman time 15 centuries later, but his tomb is the only one not robbed in the Valley of Kings. In a way, the ongoing King Tut exhibit is the second coming.

I can't help wondering whether Yuya/Joseph came up with fiat credit money to buy up grains. Did they get a new supply of gold from Nubia, or did they monetize silver to expand money supply (as seem to be implied by the Bible), or did Yuya/Joseph come up with the world's first fiat credit/representation money pretending to be having the gold/silver, in order to blow the bubble to massive proportions. The last proposition also seems to be implied by the Bible, as Joseph/Yuya managed to let Jacob/AmenhotepII and his sons/princes buy grains and yet keep the silver coins at the same time; i.e. some kind of money multiplier or fractional reserve banking was invented.

36   elliemae   2011 Oct 12, 12:28pm  

Anyone who wants to read about mormonism from a different point of view should check out this site:

http://www.utlm.org/

The Utah Lighthouse Ministry was started by Jerald & Sandra Tanner - she is a great (etc) grand daughter of Brigham Young (I believe he is now deceased) She & her husband have a book that shows the Book of Mormon and the changes that have been made to it over time. For example, Joseph Smith predicted that men lived on the moon - as soon as we made it to the moon (and found no men or green cheese), the BoM was changed.

It's a great book - Mormonism, Shadow or Reality. Check on the books on the book list. It's awesome - I had a Mormon friend who excommunicated me from her life (& cast me out!) because I had a copy of the book.

37   Bap33   2011 Oct 12, 5:47pm  

corntrollio says

Bap33 says



you missed most of the points due to my poor writing habits. Please re-read my answer to leo in context.


That's not really responsive to my points. You haven't really explained how the prophetic stuff in the bible is batting 1.000, and you also continue with your flawed definitions of liberal vs. conservative and are unable to actually portray the two accurately, instead falling back on a flawed Nixonian notion that has nothing to do with the actual meanings.

The stuff that was predicted to happen, has, but you can ignore that if you wish. The Jews ignored it too.

As for my flawed view of blah blah blah, that is the part where your line of attack left the tracks. Site your concern again, and READ THE ENTIRE EXCHANGE. Then, if that issue is still bugging you, post my point that you disagree with, and I'll do my best.

If you are the one who decides what is conservative and what is liberal, you should wear a special hat so we all know. It can match the hat worn by the guy that decides what is rich.

38   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 13, 2:52am  

Reality says

I can't help wondering whether Yuya/Joseph came up with fiat credit money to buy up grains.

Why would he need fiat money? Joseph was made an official of Egypt. Grain ended up in central granaries because the Egyptian Government built them all, it was the only place to store it in bulk. It wasn't a coin-dominated economy; taxes were paid in grain. Throughout most of history taxes have been payable in foodstuffs. Most ancient river-civilizations in the M/E worked the same way.

I think you're viewing Ancient Egypt through the prism of a modern commercialized society.

Interesting read about agriculture in Egypt:
http://www.reshafim.org.il/ad/egypt/timelines/topics/agriculture.htm

39   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 3:28am  

thunderlips11 says

Why would he need fiat money? Joseph was made an official of Egypt. Grain ended up in central granaries because the Egyptian Government built them all, it was the only place to store it in bulk. It wasn't a coin-dominated economy; taxes were paid in grain. Throughout most of history taxes have been payable in foodstuffs. Most ancient river-civilizations in the M/E worked the same way.

I think you're viewing Ancient Egypt through the prism of a modern commercialized society.

Ancient economies were much more sophisticated than what most have been taught in schools. There wouldn't be the concept of "jubilee" (debt forgiveness every 60 years, necessitated by generational debt bubble like we are having now) or ban against usury in the Bible if not for a thriving monetary economy involving sophisticated lending practices. There were even laws regarding interest in Sumerian codes. Periodically the economies probably fell back to grain-in-kind but at other times, ancients were smart and advanced enough to have commercial centers that necessitated indoor plumbing (e.g. Harapa of 1500-2000BC, not long before Yuya/Joseph). Heck, the Bible's own account told the story as Jacob (Amenhotep II) sending his sons (princes) to buy grain from Egypt with silver coins, and Joseph (Yuya) enabled them to come back with grain and the silver coins unspent! That ability to give the seller illusion of money in exchange for his goods and still being able to keep the money at the same time is indicative of fractional reserve banking

It would be silly to think Joseph/Yuya invented the granary itself. Granaries are found in achaelogical digs dating back to 10,000 years ago. It's doubtful the Egyptian government could just have forcibly collected all grain. Buying them at a bid above market rate in some form would have been a much less costly way of convincing the people to transfer grain from private granaries to the government granaries.

40   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 13, 3:38am  

Reality says

It would be silly to think Joseph/Yuya invented the granary itself. Granaries are found in achaelogical digs dating back to 10,000 years ago. It's doubtful the Egyptian government could just have forcibly collected all grain.

They did, from the above link:

Egyptian officials were not noted for sparing the rod (nor have peasants ever shown an alacrity to part with the fruit of their labour):

Now the scribe lands on the shore. He surveys the harvest. Attendants are behind him with staffs, Nubians with clubs. One says (to the peasant): "Give grain."
"There is none."
He is beaten savagely. He is bound, thrown in the well, submerged head down.
The Instruction of Amenemope
M. Lichtheim, Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume II, p.

If you check the link above, you'll see that Ancient Egypt was a centrally planned economy. Peasants didn't generally own their plots, it was granted to them by the state, on a life-long lease. The irrigation system was centrally controlled, as well.

Priests were more administrators than Clerics. Yes, they performed public rituals, but they spent much of their time estimating the harvest, calculating the dates the Nile would flood, planning canals and estimating the potential harvest.

Reality says

Ancient economies were much more sophisticated than what most have been taught in schools. There wouldn't be the concept of "jubilee" or ban against usury in the Bible if not for a thriving monetary economy. There were even laws regarding interest in Sumerian codes.

Not arguing that there was "no Money". My argument is that is was nowhere near as commercialized as today's economies. In Sumer things were a little different, but even there the system was more about borrowing seed after a failed crop, rather than cash money. If you had many failed crops in succession, you and your family would have to become sharecroppers and lose your land. Most records from the Fertile Crescent deal in loans of grain and grain seed, not in coin.

But Sumer isn't Egypt, which was centrally planned.

The idea of a Jubilee is very interesting, and there are many theories about why they had to forgive debt. One I find compelling is that there eventually got to be so many powerful families, that the nobility felt threatened, and ordered periodic jubilees in order to break the power of competitors who had the wealth and influence to overthrow them. Another one is that the sharecroppers produced less than free peasants. There's also the idea that sharecroppers/debt slaves couldn't be used as soldiers or for corvee labor, as their first duty was to their Master; so periodically the Nobles would declare jubilees so they had people to fight and use as laborers. This was important since the canals were generally public works, and required extensive manual labor to build and maintain.

And finally, it's proposed that once the numbers of sharecroppers got to high, there would be a lot of civil unrest. In those days there wasn't much of a police force and no tear gas, so a teeming mass of disenfranchised humanity had nothing to lose and couldn't really be stopped if they got mad enough.

41   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 4:00am  

thunderlips11 says

If you check the link above, you'll see that Ancient Egypt was a centrally planned economy. Peasants didn't generally own their plots, it was granted to them by the state, on a life-long lease. The irrigation system was centrally controlled, as well.

Priests were more administrators than Clerics. Yes, they performed public rituals, but they spent much of their time estimating the harvest, calculating the dates the Nile would flood, planning canals and estimating the potential harvest.

Was that before Yuya or after Yuya? It's silly to consider all ancient Egypt as a monolith. The various kindom period and dynasties spanned 3000 years! Things run in cycles not unchanging monoliths. It was quite clearly stated in the Bible that people all over the land were forced to sell themselves into slavery to the Pharaoh in the later stages of Joseph/Yuya's economic bust. Obviously, they had to be non-slaves before they sold themselves into slavery.

Most records from the Fertile Crescent deal in loans of grain and grain seed, not in coin.

One can have monetary accounting units in grains, cattles or weight of precious metal. So long as they were dealing with accounts, it hardly mattered. Grain, when specified as generic grain instead of specific type and moisture, and represented in numbers in accounts could well be the currency, just like dollar is today, instead of any reference to silver coins.

And finally, it's proposed that once the numbers of sharecroppers got to high, there would be a lot of civil unrest. In those days there wasn't much of a police force and no tear gas, so a teeming mass of disenfranchised humanity had nothing to lose and couldn't really be stopped if they got mad enough.

That's another reason why I take a dim view of any conception of Egyptian pharaohs always ruled by the whip and treated everyone like slaves owned by the state (i.e. the idealized bureaucratic state). Pharaohs who chose to rule that way probably did not last very long.

42   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 13, 5:36am  

Reality says

Was that before Yuya or after Yuya? It's silly to consider all ancient Egypt as a monolith. The various kindom period and dynasties spanned 3000 years!

That's true, but Egypt was a centrally planned economy pretty much the whole time through with few exceptions until the coming of Alexander. Nile-flood dependent agriculture, the basis of Egypt's wealth and power, lends itself to central planning.

As for Yuya, is there any evidence he was Joseph? Or that he was involved in running the economy? He is referenced as the "Master of Horse", and before that a Priest of a Fertility Deity (not Yahweh) in Upper Egypt. It appears he was a high official under King Tut, but nothing suggests he was in charge of the economy of Egypt, other than his gravesite. But that could be for his status as Cavalry Commander of all Egypt, or the fact he was the Pharaoh's father in law.

Reality says

One can have monetary accounting units in grains, cattles or weight of precious metal. So long as they were dealing with accounts, it hardly mattered. Grain, when specified as generic grain instead of specific type and moisture, and represented in numbers in accounts could well be the currency, just like dollar is today, instead of any reference to silver coins.

Yes, but by definition, commodities aren't fiat money, which was one possibility you suggested above. I'm also not sure that farmers traded grain in an abstract way for goods, such as using papyrus currency or other commodity "representation". It's more likely they got a few jugs of wine today, for the promise of sacks of grain during the harvest.

I'm under the impression that coinage or other forms of money rarely found in the homes or burial sites of ancient Egyptians, and that the vast majority of the daily economy was reciprocity barter. At least until the end of the pre-Classical Dark Age.

But I'm open to be evidence that it isn't the case.

43   Bap33   2011 Oct 13, 5:42am  

thunderlips11 says

The idea of a Jubilee is very interesting, and there are many theories about why they had to forgive debt.

Mayan did the same thing every 52 (I think it was 52) years. All debts reset, plus they completely put out all fire for one entire day.

44   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 13, 6:03am  

Bap33 says

Mayan did the same thing every 52 (I think it was 52) years. All debts reset, plus they completely put out all fire for one entire day.

It's interesting stuff, eh?

For some reason, I find Jubilees appealing. The idea that periodically, the slate is cleared and everyone gets a fresh start.

45   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 7:02am  

thunderlips11 says

That's true, but Egypt was a centrally planned economy pretty much the whole time through with few exceptions until the coming of Alexander. Nile-flood dependent agriculture, the basis of Egypt's wealth and power, lends itself to central planning.

How many centrally planned economies do we know have lasted a really long time? That's with even the help of modern broadcasting systems radiating out central commands. Central planning tend not to be sustainable; even Yuya/Joseph's was no exception. Before the arrival of Alexander, the Egyptian court historian system simply lent itself to tall tales, just like Rameses' boast inscription boasting a great victory at Kadesh when in fact the Egyptians had a qualified loss and were forced into a treaty.

As for Yuya, is there any evidence he was Joseph?

Yes. Do a google search, there are multiple sources making the link.

Yes, but by definition, commodities aren't fiat money, which was one possibility you suggested above. I'm also not sure that farmers traded grain in an abstract way for goods, such as using papyrus currency or other commodity "representation". It's more likely they got a few jugs of wine today, for the promise of sacks of grain during the harvest.

Commodity money -> representation money -> fractional reserve banking -> fiat money -> bubble and collapse. Rinse and repeat. As for jugs of wine today in exchange for sacks of grain at harvest in the future, after such a credit is established how long do you think it would be before "a standard sack of grain" is developed for accounting/representation purpose as the creditor sell off that promise to someone else in exchange for something else.

I'm under the impression that coinage or other forms of money rarely found in the homes or burial sites of ancient Egyptians, and that the vast majority of the daily economy was reciprocity barter. At least until the end of the pre-Classical Dark Age.

Coinage need not arise when economies use commodity as currency. In fact, coinage by governments is the first step towards debasement and eventually fiat money. Gold and silver by weight as money do not have to be coined. If the society has institutional memory for past government abusive currency debasement, they wouldn't use coin but would accept metal by weight instead. Examples include the rise of 92% (Sterling) silver measured in Troyes weight as currency in the markets in Northern France at the end of the post-Roman Dark Ages (that gave us Pound-Sterling eventually), as people still remembered how Romans debased silver dinarii a few hundred years previously. The Egyptians apparently used "talent" (a weight unit) for gold and silver in large transactions.

46   corntrollio   2011 Oct 13, 9:05am  

Bap33 says

The stuff that was predicted to happen, has, but you can ignore that if you wish. The Jews ignored it too.

What specific prophecies came true? Come on, list them, like you've been asked multiple times.

Bap33 says

As for my flawed view of blah blah blah, that is the part where your line of attack left the tracks. Site your concern again, and READ THE ENTIRE EXCHANGE. Then, if that issue is still bugging you, post my point that you disagree with, and I'll do my best.

Dude, if you think forced tubal ligation is conservative, you are high. Nuf said.

47   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 13, 9:24am  

Reality says

Yes. Do a google search, there are multiple sources making the link.

There are, but all the links refer to the writings of one Journalist named Osman. I could find no links that quoted any other source besides Osman for Yayu=Joseph, except a mention on wikipedia that his view was not held by Egyptologists with a link to a refutation published in a scholarly Journal.

Reality says

As for jugs of wine today in exchange for sacks of grain at harvest in the future, after such a credit is established how long do you think it would be before "a standard sack of grain" is developed for accounting/representation purpose as the creditor sell off that promise to someone else in exchange for something else.

Let me put my example in better context.

This is a place where most people are related by blood or marriage, and at the least have known each other their whole lives. When Ra promises Re a sack of grain for a jug of wine today, it's not as an alienated credit transaction between modern people who barely know each other, but closer to an elementary form of reciprocity. You know, Re's cousin is married to Ra's elder brother; and hardly anybody in the village has travelled more than 10 miles from where they were born.

Workmen are paid in rations of bread, beer, and clothing, not currency. People lease land and make big purchases by exchanging not one or two items, but a wide ranch of things, like a bronze statuette, some fish, a few jugs of beer and some linen in return for a land lease. Fee Simple was not practiced in Egypt; all land was owned by the State.

Reality says

How many centrally planned economies do we know have lasted a really long time?

That depends on your definition of centrally planned. Ancient Bronze Age economies had centrally planned infrastructure, corvee labor, all land either owned by the Ruling Class or Communal. In many cases workshops were located in the Villa or Palace or Temple, under the direct control of the Planners. On the other hand, farmers could choose their own crops, and either made their stuff at home or bartered for them in an informal marketplace.

If that fits, then here's some Centrally Planned Economies that survived for a damn long time:
Minoan & Mycenaean Civilization (1000 years)
Assyrian (1200 years)
Sumerian (many thousands of years, but not perfect because Sumerian city-states dispersed and coalesced based on climatic and soil conditions).

I don't know much about Chinese or Indian civilizations prior to 300-500BC, but I bet there are parallels.
Reality says

Coinage need not arise when economies use commodity as currency.

Well, I agree with that. But when currency is an edible commodity, it's hard to see the difference between barter and commercialized transactions.

Grain and sheep have to be eaten fairly soon; copper doesn't rot and can't be eaten. If somebody trades a sack of grain for a roughspun linen kilt, or a lamb for a new copper pickaxe, is the grain or lamb being used as currency or as barter?

48   Bap33   2011 Oct 13, 9:36am  

so you are saying that liberals want forced birthcontrol for those who show no personal accountability? Anyways, my statement was mine, specificly, and I did not lable it "conservative's view", as you well know, so your entire issue was ziltch? Okie dokie.

As for specific prophecies that I believe were fortold and happened as stated: Here's one, Abraham and Sarah having a son as old folks. Or, for something newer, the savior was to be born 1) to a virgin, 2) in Bethelham, 3) a Jew of King David's blood line, and 4) rejected by the Jews. There are lots more, but most require faith in the Bible having truth, so why bother asking me?

John the Baptist told the folks he was dunking in the river who was coming up next, but I don't know if that counts.

The temple (Solomon's) will be rebuild, right about where the arabs put that golden dome, and that is a sure sign that Jesus is coming back soon. I can imagine that the building of the Temple by removing the arab dome is a good indication of what would trigger the last big war, huh?

49   leo707   2011 Oct 13, 10:07am  

Bap33 says

There are lots more, but most require faith in the Bible having truth, so why bother asking me?

Right, and without faith in the bible there is nothing that would indicate the the prophesies are accurate. In my mind for a prophesy to be valid it must.
1. Be recorded before the event it foretells
2. Be detailed -- there should be no room for "alternative" interpretations
3. Something that was not "foreseeable"

The problem with all prophesies that "came true" during bible times, are that they were recorded after the fact. It would be like me writing a book today about how I prophesied all events of the last 10 years, and then pointing to that book as proof that I am a god. You would need to have "faith" that I was not making it all up.

The problem is that all post bible times prophesies are very vague, and could (and have) be interpreted any number of ways.

50   corntrollio   2011 Oct 13, 10:12am  

Bap33 says

so you are saying that liberals want forced birthcontrol for those who show no personal accountability?

Where did you get that from?

Bap33 says

I did not lable it "conservative's view",

In context, it sure looks like you did. You are a self-described "conservative".

Bap33 says

As for specific prophecies that I believe were fortold and happened as stated:

So, you have proof that those things were both prophesied and happened? News to me. :p

Bap33 says

2) in Bethelham

Also, I'd note that not all the Gospels agree that Jesus was from Bethlehem -- Mark and John make no reference to the city. In addition, not all biblical scholars think Jesus was born there.

Bap33 says

3) a Jew of King David's blood line

Not all biblical scholars think Jesus was of David's blood line. In fact, many believe that the Gospels were manipulated to have fulfilled the prophecies.

51   Bap33   2011 Oct 13, 12:27pm  

corntrollio says

Dude, if you think forced tubal ligation is conservative, you are high. Nuf said.

opposite of Con is Lib on here. But, I also gave more to that answer that you skip over in order to futher your trolling.

As for the rest, you are just trolling. Happy trolling, sir.

52   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 1:21pm  

thunderlips11 says

This is a place where most people are related by blood or marriage, and at the least have known each other their whole lives. When Ra promises Re a sack of grain for a jug of wine today, it's not as an alienated credit transaction between modern people who barely know each other, but closer to an elementary form of reciprocity. You know, Re's cousin is married to Ra's elder brother; and hardly anybody in the village has travelled more than 10 miles from where they were born.

Are you talking about 10,000BC or 1500BC? The simplistic isolated hermit view of the ancient world may have been true in 10,000BC or at times after periodic collapses, but certainly not true during the prosperous times even circa 1500BC (we don't know enough about earlier time). The sophisticated city states along Indus Valley with indoor plumbing dating to between 2000BC to 1500BC clearly indicated they largely lived off their trading network stretching to Persian Gulf and the Nile Delta. The Pyramids and Sphinx (along with zillions of stellas and monuments) indicated that the Egyptians from 3000BC to Alexander's time (circa 350BC), or an even earlier time than that, were not small time villagers or village idiots. Something may have been happening to set them back every few hundred years or every 1500 years or so, but there were periods of very sophisticated economies.

For comparison, it would be a grave mistake to look at bartering society in the 7th century in Europe and conclude that there was never money or banking in Europe before the rise of market towns and cities in the 9th and 10th century. The Romans with their very sophisticated trading netowrks, currency and banking systems came before the 5th-8th century dark age.

On the other hand, farmers could choose their own crops, and either made their stuff at home or bartered for them in an informal marketplace.

In an agricultural society, deciding what crop to plant in which plot is the most important decision. When that decision is left to the farmers and farmers are allowed to trade among themselves, that's not a centrally planned economy. Central planning refers to tightly controlled production planning and exchange ratios conducted by bureaucrats in lieu of market exchange. If farmers are allowed to decide what to plan in a predominantly agro economy, what you have is government tax collection, not central planning for the whole economy per se. In an agro economy, deciding what to plant where is the most important decision in the economy.

Well, I agree with that. But when currency is an edible commodity, it's hard to see the difference between barter and commercialized transactions.

The key there would be whether the grain/sheep is actually used in the exchange or merely a nominal unit of count. i.e. if the parties care about the exact conditions of the specific sheep then it's barter involving the specific sheep; if it's just a unit of sheep among dozens if not hundreds of sheep, then it's a currency. It's a little like numistic value of a coin vs. bullion coin. When dealing with numistics, i.e. quality of the specific coin matter then it's barter. If coins are treated as bullion then it's just commodity "money."

Grain and sheep have to be eaten fairly soon; copper doesn't rot and can't be eaten. If somebody trades a sack of grain for a roughspun linen kilt, or a lamb for a new copper pickaxe, is the grain or lamb being used as currency or as barter?

Depends on whether the grain and lamb are treated as specific goods to be enjoyed for their own use value (i.e. to be eaten, so obvious the quality of grain and lamb matter) . . . or whether the grain and lamb are accounting units to be passed off to someone else; the real thing may not even exist in the transaction but merely a representation. Wasn't "shekel" a weight for barley?

53   corntrollio   2011 Oct 14, 3:53am  

Bap33 says

opposite of Con is Lib on here.

No, it's not. That's what uninformed people think. Forced tubal ligation is facsist or some other totalitarian regime. Again, not clear you really know what you're talking about, in addition to being a bigoted religious zealot, which doesn't help.

54   Bap33   2011 Oct 14, 3:24pm  

I know you are, but what am I?

You just said, in writing, that Con is not opposite of Lib here on PatNet ..... interesting. I guess that is correct, as the opposites are only in certian topics. Let me try again: In the arena of religion, it sure seems like there is a division along the Con / Lib line on PatNet, that could be called opposite.

For the 3rd time, I did not say having welfare abusers get fixed was a conservaive idea, I said it was mine. Go double check, and you will find I mentioned this last time too. It's my idea, you can lable it as you wish.

55   corntrollio   2011 Oct 17, 4:24am  

Bap33 says

You just said, in writing, that Con is not opposite of Lib here on PatNet ..... interesting.

So you are saying there cannot be things that are said that are neither liberal nor conservative? Everything is black and white? Your side or my side? That's an incredibly naive view of the world. There are no degrees of anything? There's no middle? There are no other categorizations?

56   Bap33   2011 Oct 17, 4:39am  

Bap33 says

I guess that is correct, as the opposites are only in certian topics. Let me try again

corntrollio says

So you are saying there cannot be things that are said that are neither liberal nor conservative? Everything is black and white? Your side or my side? That's an incredibly naive view of the world. There are no degrees of anything? There's no middle? There are no other categorizations?

You must have missed my post that showed that I realized I did not allow for all posibilities. Better?

57   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 18, 3:33am  

Reality says

The Pyramids and Sphinx (along with zillions of stellas and monuments) indicated that the Egyptians from 3000BC to Alexander's time (circa 350BC), or an even earlier time than that, were not small time villagers or village idiots.

I didn't make that assertion that the ancient worlder was dumber or not at all urbanized. He just didn't live in an era of widespread commercialization. And while many Egyptians lived in cities, most did not - Grain comes from villages on the Nile, it wasn't grown in the center of cities. I'm illustrating that Joe Bronzeage also wasn't engaging in routine currency transactions as part of his daily life, just like a typical medieval peasant did not so. In fact, from the palaces in Crete, production for trade and trade itself appears to have been managed by the Elite, and not by the ordinary denizen.

We don't have evidence that there was even an independent, private merchant class at all in the Bronze Age Med. Most academics, even those postulating a well developed and widespread scale of trade in the Bronze Age Med, identify the trade as more of a tribute system between palaces and states. Copper and Tin were strategic metals carefully traded, hoarded and distributed by the authorities of the day, not by independent traders. Those individuals who were identified with trade, in whose dwellings are found many foreign items and records of transactions, are also government officials of high rank.

Almost all the archeological evidence for grain collection and storage, international trade, etc. are government or temple records, not private transactions.

It's odd that a society that records government land lease contracts and tax and storage transactions failed to implement such record keeping among private citizens involving bulk trades over long distances.

Reality says

In an agricultural society, deciding what crop to plant in which plot is the most important decision. When that decision is left to the farmers and farmers are allowed to trade among themselves, that's not a centrally planned economy. Central planning refers to tightly controlled production planning and exchange ratios conducted by bureaucrats in lieu of market exchange. If farmers are allowed to decide what to plan in a predominantly agro economy, what you have is government tax collection, not central planning for the whole economy per se. In an agro economy, deciding what to plant where is the most important decision in the economy.

Deciding what to plant is definitely a big decision.

But having all the workshops making all finished goods in the Palaces (Crete) and having all the land ownership in the hands of an elite isn't central planning? The organization of roads, canals, storage systems? Having the elites come to your farm and account for all of your crop production?

Except for choosing what to produce on your leased farm that you are prohibited from owning outright, it seems to me that every other link in the chain resembles a centralized economy.

In Knossos, the gender and age of tens of thousands of sheep were recorded by "collectors", government workers. The wool was processed by hundreds of slaves or "palace-dependent" workers (we're not sure exactly about their status, but they received regular rations from the state). Clothes were made largely by other palace-dependent workers. The resulting textiles were either distributed to the workers in the form of clothes as part of a ration, or given as tribute as decided by administrators. Nowhere in the chain are any independent merchants, outside of palace administrators, either explicitly mentioned in records, or evident in the form of uncovered sites.

I know I'm using a lot of Cretan history, but it's the one I'm most familiar with. I do love ancient Greece.

Russians were allowed to have garden plots in the Soviet Union and decide what vegetables to grow on them. When government run stores actually had goods, they were free to choose which ones to buy. But nobody calls the Soviet Union a free market economy because some decisions were made by individuals.

There is no such thing as a perfectly free market or a perfect command economy. However, the Bronze Age Mediterranean strikes me as a lot closer to the latter.

58   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Oct 18, 4:16am  

Reality says

Depends on whether the grain and lamb are treated as specific goods to be enjoyed for their own use value (i.e. to be eaten, so obvious the quality of grain and lamb matter) . . . or whether the grain and lamb are accounting units to be passed off to someone else; the real thing may not even exist in the transaction but merely a representation. Wasn't "shekel" a weight for barley?

You can't store sheep or grain for very long, it doesn't keep indefinitely. Even if it's a representation, it has to be stored somewhere, and eventually it has to be consumed. Which begs the question what the ultimate purpose was for.

I believe it was largely collected to feed the elite, provide laborers with rations, short term famine insurance, and aid for the poor or indigent, with all praise to the Pharaoh and the various Gods when it was distributed.

Using these commodities as currency was probably quite secondary to consuming it.

Not saying they weren't used as currencies at all.

59   Patrick   2011 Oct 22, 3:30am  

Many of the stories about Jesus' birth were intended to legitimize him by using neighboring religions.

The three wise men were supposed to be Zoroastrian priests who had a tradition that their savior would be born from a virgin.

John the Baptist was the principle prophet of the Mandaeans, a now-obscure water cult that still exists in Iraq:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandaeism

These stories and many others like them serves to say "Look, this other nearby religion acknowledges the legitimacy of Jesus."

Doesn't prove that Christianity is wrong, but it is a bit funny that they repeatedly assimilated stories and people from nearby religions into their own.

60   Bap33   2011 Oct 22, 10:31am  

I'm thinking that Enoch's book needs to be included so the tech and alien crowd can get on board the God bus too.

This next week should be exciting. I'd like to see the Arc of the Covenant turn up, or some other artifact.

61   corntrollio   2011 Oct 24, 7:07am  


Many of the stories about Jesus' birth were intended to legitimize him by using neighboring religions.

Yeah, as Patrick said, even the various traits of Jesus were probably cribbed -- resurrection, not much known between birth and age 30 or so, Dec 25, etc.:

http://listverse.com/2009/04/13/10-christ-like-figures-who-pre-date-jesus/

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Tony Manero says

The holy spirit needs a good fuck.

Yeah, probably. I mean if it only gets laid every several thousand years, that's probably the case, even if people can't stop talking about it for thousands of years afterward.

62   leo707   2011 Oct 24, 7:37am  

corntrollio says

Yeah, as Patrick said, even the various traits of Jesus were probably cribbed -- resurrection, not much known between birth and age 30 or so, Dec 25, etc.:

Yeah, I would say highly probable that that Jesus was a retelling of much older stories.

http://www.religioustolerance.org/chr_jcpa2.htm

Dionysus, a Greek God, and Osiris, an Egyptian God were viewed as mythical characters. Osiris may have been the first god-man. His story has been found recorded in pyramid texts which were written prior to 2,500 BCE. These and other saviors were truly interchangeable.
...A person who was initiated into one of the mysteries had no difficulty switching to another Pagan mystery religion.

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