I dont want to die you know, I just dont want to die.
Edited by brokenportal, 23 March 2009 - 05:30 AM.
Posted 16 October 2007 - 03:07 AM
Edited by brokenportal, 23 March 2009 - 05:30 AM.
Posted 16 October 2007 - 04:53 AM
I dont want to die you know, I just dont want to die.
Posted 16 October 2007 - 03:53 PM
And you don't have to. I don't know if it's the fact that I'm still young, but I try to take a very optimistic approach to life.I don't want to die you know, I just don't want to die.
Posted 16 October 2007 - 04:34 PM
Posted 31 October 2007 - 01:48 AM
Posted 31 October 2007 - 03:04 PM
Posted 01 November 2007 - 07:50 AM
Posted 01 November 2007 - 02:54 PM
Posted 02 November 2007 - 02:45 AM
Posted 22 March 2009 - 04:11 PM
Im not so much afraid, as you may have read into from the topic, as I am angry. Your right about that. I feel, as Ive expressed in the same or similar words in the past, that I feel like a race car ready to take on the race ............
....edited....
....... if we are to survive, we, not the next generation, or the generation after that, then we need to start a fire under our own butts.
Dont get me wrong, the things people are doing, and the progress is phenomenal, but if we are going to live, we, then there just needs to be more. Im not the first or the last to think this, its just, more. Where can we come up with more?
Posted 22 March 2009 - 04:45 PM
Im blessed to be an American, as free as an american.
Posted 23 March 2009 - 04:11 AM
Posted 23 March 2009 - 05:18 AM
Perhaps technologies such as healthy life-extension will change everyones values for the better in a way that is more conducive to liberty. With such short lifespans it is easy to be one willing to break eggs to make an omlete givin ones philosophy and poltic is one of death - mortality.Im blessed to be an American, as free as an american.
I would question this assumption. It may have been true at one time, but in my opinion it is no longer the case. I am a U.S. citizen, but I have to say that compared to other places where I often travel (Canada, Europe, South Africa), the U.S. feels a lot like a police state, and I just feel free, like a weight has come off my shoulders, when I leave. The contrast is most obvious and glaring when I travel (not the security, which everyone has, but the attitude of those enforcing it), but extends well beyond the airport gates. For example, in the U.S. I often feel intimidated by the presence of the police (and not just because some of them even still wear the SS-like flared pants and boots), whereas I do not feel this way in Canada, S.A., or Spain, where the balance of power in daily life between regular people and the arms of the state is more in favor of the regular people. On my U.S. passport, I am not free to travel to certain places, whereas my other passport does not impose such restrictions. In the U.S., a mistaken identity could lead to my being detained without trial forever. In Canada, Spain and South Africa, I am free to marry, yet in the U.S. I have no such freedom.
You are a beautiful person."Beyond the beliefs of any one religion, there is the truth of the human spirit. Beyond the power of nations, there is the power of the human heart. Beyond the ordinary mind, the power of wisdom, love, and healing energy are at work in the universe. When we can find peace within our hearts, we contact these universal powers. This is our only hope."
- Tarthang Tulku
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