Sunday, April 24, 2011

The words of Socrates, writing on the subject of Easter, about AD 450, are these: "Those who inhabit the princely city of Rome fast together before Easter three weeks, excepting the Saturday and Lord's-day." But at last, when the worship of Astarte was rising into the ascendant, steps were taken to get the whole Chaldean Lent of six weeks, or forty days, made imperative on all within the Roman empire of the West. The way was prepared for this by a Council held at Aurelia in the time of Hormisdas, Bishop of Rome, about the year 519, which decreed that Lent should be solemnly kept before Easter. It was with the view, no doubt, of carrying out this decree that the calendar was, a few days after, readjusted by Dionysius. This decree could not be carried out all at once. About the end of the sixth century, the first decisive attempt was made to enforce the observance of the new calendar. It was in Britain that the first attempt was made in this way; and here the attempt met with vigorous resistance. The difference, in point of time, betwixt the Christian Pasch, as observed in Britain by the native Christians, and the Pagan Easter enforced by Rome, at the time of its enforcement, was a whole month; * and it was only by violence and bloodshed, at last, that the Festival of the Anglo-Saxon or Chaldean goddess came to supersede that which had been held in honour of Christ.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Friday, April 22, 2011

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

10,000 students take to DC streets calling for Action on Climate & BP Spill






































It's pretty amazing -- 10,000 young, engaged activists spread across DC yesterday, calling for climate action and better democracy. But guess what the nation's mainstream news outlets are lending their coverage to instead? CNN chose to run a piece on -- A new bacon-scented cologne and another piece on how "Dog the bounty hunter" had to bail Nicholas Cage out of jail in New Orleans.

Who else wonders why these two stories could have ever possibly been considered more important than 10,000 youths getting organized and marching on DC, protesting about the corporate savages who aim to fuck-up our Planet to the point of no recovery with their pocketed-politicians' b.s. policies to boot?

Perhaps, politicians and mainstream medias' biggest fear is that engaged activists from our youth generation will no longer tolerate the apathy of our aging society who just turn away. Ironically, these kids' parents were likely some of the 250,000 that marched on DC in efforts to Stop the Vietnam War.

I'll end this piece by giving proper respect to the real folks at TreeHugger, who were the source info, where much of this discourse was resurfacing from and with an applicable quote from a Bob Marley song, "All politicians are humans in disguise."

Thursday, April 7, 2011