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  • Atricle Dump - Days of Darkness (AD 535-AD 546)

    The Killer Interview Question You Need to Answer Well
    In a job interview, the best way to separate the men from the boys, the sheep from the goats, is to ask a candidate what could go wrong with a project. If they had only done a course on the subject, they wouldn’t be able to answer. If they had only used it very sparingly then their replies would be very limited.However, if they had extensive experience of a technical area, then they could probably go on at length about the possible problems and their solutions. Experience in troubleshooting past technical problems can vastly expedite your interview process.As an interviewer I have found greater value in asking the candidate what problems they have had when using the particular skill instead of giving them a technical test. Too few interviewers actually do this.Turn the Interview AroundWhy not turn the interview around so that you are able to bring out your knowledge of a particular technical area or skill?Before you go to the interview, think of all the things that can go wrong when using the particular skill – and what you have done in the past to make them right.Go to the interview determined to get this across – that you know what can go wrong and you can sort it out. It should be pretty easy at the interview to be able to bring up the topic, one way or another, of the problems that you have had and your solutions.You might want to ask them about the main problems that they have had at their site, and then discuss the solutions with them. You can then go on to state other problems that you have had and what you did to correct them. If they haven’t come across some of those problems yet, they might be very keen to have you for when they do.Even if they have come across the problems, by bringing them up you will show that you have a broad based knowledge of the subject and can sort out problems in it.Bad Previous ExperienceI once did a series of interviews to find a couple of project managers. I interviewed quite a few people.They all did well at the first part of the interview, and their resumes seemed gr
    >

    4 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    5 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    6 Henry N. Pollack. Uncertain Science… Uncertain World. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) 197.

    7 The Dark Ages Caused By Volcanism? September 23, 2001. 27 April, 2006. http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ds_darka.htm and everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    8 PBS Program – “Secrets Of The Dead.” May 15, 2005. 2 March 2006. http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/history/535ad.htm

    9 Climate changes of 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006. 27 April, 2006. http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1

    10 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    11 SEMP Biot #214: Did a Krakatoa Eruption in 535 A.D. Help Precipitate the Decline of Antiquity and the Spread of Islam? 27 April, 2006. http://www.semp.us/biots/biot_214.html

    12 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    13 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    14 Mike Baillie. Did Asteroids And Comets Turn The Tides Of Civilization? Discovering Archeology July/August 1999. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/714636/posts

    15 6th-century crop failures: comet collision? Cronaca. February 4, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002037.html

    16 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    17 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    18 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    19 Markus Lindholm. Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine. August 27-31, 2001. 28 April, 2006. http://atlas-conferences.com/c/a/g/c/74.htm

    20 Catastrophic event preceded Dark Ages – scientist. Reuters. September 8, 2000. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39b91ca42b27.htm

    21 Laura Knight-Jadczyk. Jupiter, Nostradamus, Edgar Cayce, and the Return of the Mongols. March 9, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/Laura-Knight-Jadczyk/article-lkj-04-03-06-d.htm

    22 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    23 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    24 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu

    Is a Web Site Builder Right for You?
    A web site builder can be a real life saver to someone without advanced HTML knowledge or tools. Web site builders allow a relative newbie to the internet create a professional website in very little time. How can you know if using a web site builder will meet your needs? Here are some things to consider...Do you need a unique, one of a kind website?Almost all web site builders restrict you to their premade templates. Because of this, there is a risk that your website will look like other websites on the internet. For many businesses, this is not important. With millions of websites out there and billions of potential eyeballs visiting your site, the only way a template is a real risk is if your competitor is using the very same web site builder system and chooses the very same template as yours. Still, for some business owners, a unique template is important. If a unqiue template is very important to you, you may need to consider the services of a web designer instead.Do you plan to make lots of changes to your web site?One of the strengths to a good web site builder is the fact that you can make changes to your website yourself without needing a web designer's help. For instance, if you own a retail store and your stock changes regularly, you may want to change your stock online to reflect what's new in store. With a web site builder, this is easy to do. Without a web site builder or a good content management system, making changes will usually involve website maintenance costs for your web designer to go in and make the necessary changes. At so much per hour, and lots of changes, this can add up to a significant expense at the end of the year.Is access to a web site builder worth the extra monthly or yearly cost?When you know that you want to be making lots of little or not so little changes to the text and images on your website, a site builder is well worth the expense. Consider what it would cost for you to hire a professional web designer to first create the web site, than to make reg
    Each day, the morning sunrise is taken for granted. Based on the laws of science, it is expected that the sun will rise each day from east to west. Yet, the question must be asked, “what would happen if the sun didn’t rise?” This was the case from AD 535 through AD 546, with the darkest days in AD 536.

    “A mighty roar of thunder” came out of the local mountain; there was a furious shaking of the earth, total darkness, thunder and lightning.”1 A Chinese court journal also made mention of “a huge thunderous sound coming from the south west” in February 535.2 And as a Hopi elder had said, thousands of miles away, “When the changes begin, there will be a big noise heard all over the Earth,”3 a low rumble reverberated across the planet.

    “Then came forth a furious gale together with torrential rain and a deadly storm darkened the entire world,” read the Pustaka Raja Purwa or The Book of Ancient Kings, a buried Indonesian chronicle.4

    “The sun began to go dark, rain poured red, as if tinted by blood. Clouds of dust enveloped the earth… Yellow dust rained down like snow. It could be scooped up in handfuls,”5 wrote The Nan Shi Ancient Chronicle of Southern China, referring to the country’s weather in November and December 535.

    Darkness followed making the day indistinguishable from the night. “There was a sign from the Sun, the likes of which had never been seen or reported before. The Sun became dark, and its darkness lasted for about 18 months. Each day, it shone for about four hours and still this light was only a feeble shadow. Everyone declared that the Sun would never recover its full light again. The fruits did not ripen and the wine tasted like sour grapes,”6 John of Ephesus, a Syrian bishop and contemporary writer, wrote in describing the unending darkness. “The sun became dim… for nearly the whole year… so that the fruits were killed at an unseasonable time,” John Lydus added, which was further confirmed by Procopius, a prominent Roman historian who served as Emperor Justinian’s chief archivist and secretary, when he wrote of 536, “…during this year a most dread portent took place. For the sun gave forth its light without brightness, like the Moon, during this whole year… and it seemed exceedingly like the sun in eclipse, for the beams it shed were not clear.”7 “The sun… seems to have lost its wonted light, and appears of a bluish color. We marvel to see no shadows of our bodies at noon, to feel the mighty vigor of the sun’s heat wasted into feebleness,”8 Flavius Cassiodorus, another Roman historian wrote. Reports even indicated that midday consisted of “almost night-like darkness.”9

    A cold then gripped the world as temperatures declined. “We have had a winter without storms…”10 “a spring without mildness [and] a summer without heat… The months which should have been maturing the crops have been chilled by north winds,”11 wrote Cassiodorus. “When can we hope for mild weather, now that the months that once ripened the crops have become deadly sick under the northern blasts? …Out of all the elements, we find these two against us: perpetual frost and unnatural drought,”12 he added,13 while in China, it was written, “the stars were lost from view for three months. The sun dimmed, the rain failed, and snow fell in the summertime. Famine spread, and the emperor abandoned his capital…”14 Other Chinese records referred to a “‘dust veil’ obscuring the sky” while Mediterranean historians wrote about a “‘dry fog’ blocking out much of the sun’s heat for more than year.”15 The sun was so ineffective that snow even fell during August in southern China and in every month of the year in northern Europe.

    “Then came drought [or floods], famine, plague, death…”16 “Food is the basis of the Empire. Yellow gold and ten thousand strings of cash cannot cure hunger. What avails a thousand boxes of pearls to him who is starving of cold,” the Japanese Great King lamented in 540, while Cassiodorus added, “Rain is denied and the reaper fears new frosts.”17 And “as hard winters and drought continued into the second and third years [in Mongolia and parts of China, the Avars] unable to find food, unable to barter food from others…” began a 3,000-mile trek to new lands to save themselves and their families from annihilation and starvation.18

    During this sustained period of unseasonably cold temperatures from 535-546 when the sun was ineffective and blotted out, plant life experienced stunted growth – tree rings from this period show little or no growth – and many crops failed. According to climatological research presented in 2001 by Markus Lindholm of the University of Helsinki, Finland, Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine, the “most dramatic shift in growing conditions, from favorable to unfavorable, between two years, took place between A.D. 535-536” in Europe and Africa.19 His findings were corroborated by Mike Baillie of the University of Belfast, who based on his tree ring chronologies, some from specimens preserved in bogs, that dated back thousands of years stated, "It was a catastrophic environmental downturn that shows up in trees all over the world.20 Temperatures dropped enough to hinder the growth of trees as widely dispersed as northern Europe, Siberia, western North America, and southern South America.”21 Ominously, the cold brought rats, mice and fleas that normally lived outdoors, into peoples’ homes in search of food and warmth because of the decimation that was occurring to the animal population in the suddenly hostile, chilly dark environment. Deadly bacterium, Yersinia pestis was then transmitted to people and their pets.

    In the ensuing unending darkness, chaos reigned as “whole cities were wiped out – civilizations crumbled.”22 Wars raged across Europe and the Middle East, prosperous societies were stripped of sustenance and wealth, economies collapsed and huge swaths of populations succumbed to disease and plague. “With some people it began in the head, made the eyes bloody and the face swollen, descended to the throat and then removed them from Mankind. With others, there was a flowing of the bowels. Some came out in buboes [pus-filled swellings] which gave rise to great fevers, and they would die two or three days later with their minds in the same state as those who had suffered nothing and with their bodies still robust. Others lost their senses before dying. Malignant pustules erupted and did away with them. Sometimes people were afflicted once or twice and then recovered, only to fall victim a third time and then succumb,”23 Evagrius, a 6th century Church historian wrote. In their final stages, people “generally entered a semi-conscious, lethargic state, and would not… eat or drink. Following this stage, the victims would be seized by madness… Many people died painfully when their buboes gangrened. A number of victims broke out with black blisters covering their bodies, and these individuals died swiftly.”24

    Within seven years, due to the ivory trade, in which ships brought rats and sailors infected by the plague, Europe and the Middle East were being ravaged. In Constantinople alone, “they had to dispose of over 10,000 bodies a day, week after week, throwing them into the sea off special boats, sticking them in the towers of the city wall, filling up cisterns, digging up orchards. Soldiers were forced to dig mass graves… chaos and pandemonium [reigned]. Constantinople stank for months after months [from the decaying bodies that were stuffed in towers and stacked or dumped in streets]… [and] when the number of dead reached a quarter of a million, Constantinople officials simply stopped counting.25

    An account by Procopius went as follows: “At first, relatives and domestics attended to the burial of the dead, but as the violence of the plague increased this duty was neglected, and corpses lay forlorn narrow in the streets, but even in the houses of notable men whose servants were sick or dead. Aware of this, Justinian placed considerable sums at the disposal of Theodore, one of his private secretaries, to take measures for the disposal of the dead. Huge pits [that could hold up to 70,000 corpses] were dug at Sycae, on the other side of the Golden Horn, in which the bodies were laid in rows and tramped down tightly; but the men who were engaged on this work, unable to keep up with the number of the dying, mounted the towers of the wall of the suburb, tore off their roofs, and threw the bodies in. Virtually all the towers were filled with corpses, and as a result ‘an evil stench pervaded the city and distressed the inhabitants still more, and especially whenever the wind blew fresh from that quarter.’”26

    Out of fear, many people refused to venture out of their homes -- “…houses became tombs, as whole families died from the plague without anyone from the outside world even knowing. Streets were deserted…”27 Furthermore because of this fear and/or the affects of suffering from high fever, scores of people hallucinated, seeing apparitions and visions. And with the vast pestilence and destruction all around them, many could not help but wonder if the apocalypse as described in Revelation 6:8 “And I looked, and behold, a pale horse; and his name that sat on him was Death”28 was upon them.

    It was so bad that some thirty years later, Pope Gregory The Great wrote of Rome, “Ruins on ruins… Where is the senate? Where [are] the people? All the pomp of secular dignities has been destroyed… And we, the few that we are who remain, every day we are menaced by scourges and innumerable trials.”29 In its height, the plague "depopulated towns, turned the country into a desert and made the habitations of men to become the haunts of wild beasts”30 while in Africa, major ports ceased to exist and agricultural practices all but vanished.

    “[And] as [others] left the stricken city [wearing identification tags so that their bodies would be buried if found] they took the plague to towns, villages and farms throughout the empire. [To compound matters, with trade and commerce virtually nonexistent, food became scarce leading to the starvation of others].31 Untold millions perished,"32 with an estimated death toll of 100 million, the worst pandemic in human history.

    “Scandinavian elites” in feeble desperation, “sacrificed large amounts of gold… to appease the angry gods and get the sunlight back.”33 In Mesoamerica and the Andes, cities “of perhaps one million people” emptied out “practically overnight” through starvation and disease. Peoples turned on their gods and goddesses, violently smashing their images and burning temples and towards the end, they viciously fought each other having become “savage and warlike.”34

    When the sun finally came out, overcoming the affects of a massive volcanic eruption, even though it hadn’t really been gone, minimizing the adverse affects and saving living creatures from complete extinction, the world was forever transformed. Countries and civilizations had ceased to exist while others emerged as the days of darkness “weakened the Eastern Roman Empire; created horrendous living conditions in the western part of Great Britain; contributed through drought… to the fall of the Teotihuacan civilization in Mexico; and through flooding to the collapse of a major center of civilization in Yemen;”35 while major upheavals occurred in China and France. More than half the world’s population when taking Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, into account, along with countless numbers of plants and animals, had perished illustrating the fragile relationship that exists between people and nature.

    ________________________________________________________________

    1 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    2 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    3 Precursors Of The Pole Shift And Earth Changes of 2000-2001. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 27 April, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/PSResearch/PrecursorOfPS&EC2000.htm

    4 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    5 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    6 Henry N. Pollack. Uncertain Science… Uncertain World. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) 197.

    7 The Dark Ages Caused By Volcanism? September 23, 2001. 27 April, 2006. http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ds_darka.htm and everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    8 PBS Program – “Secrets Of The Dead.” May 15, 2005. 2 March 2006. http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/history/535ad.htm

    9 Climate changes of 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006. 27 April, 2006. http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1

    10 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    11 SEMP Biot #214: Did a Krakatoa Eruption in 535 A.D. Help Precipitate the Decline of Antiquity and the Spread of Islam? 27 April, 2006. http://www.semp.us/biots/biot_214.html

    12 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    13 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    14 Mike Baillie. Did Asteroids And Comets Turn The Tides Of Civilization? Discovering Archeology July/August 1999. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/714636/posts

    15 6th-century crop failures: comet collision? Cronaca. February 4, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002037.html

    16 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    17 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    18 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    19 Markus Lindholm. Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine. August 27-31, 2001. 28 April, 2006. http://atlas-conferences.com/c/a/g/c/74.htm

    20 Catastrophic event preceded Dark Ages – scientist. Reuters. September 8, 2000. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39b91ca42b27.htm

    21 Laura Knight-Jadczyk. Jupiter, Nostradamus, Edgar Cayce, and the Return of the Mongols. March 9, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/Laura-Knight-Jadczyk/article-lkj-04-03-06-d.htm

    22 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    23 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    24 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu

    Buying Houses With Classified Ads
    So, you have just decided to start your real estate investing business and realize that actively putting out marketing to find motivated sellers is going to get you better deals and more flexible sellers than just calling on houses listed in the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) or For Sale By Owner (FSBO). Congratulations! That's an important realization and it is going to make your life as an investor much easier.One quick and relatively low cost method of marketing to find motivated sellers is to use classified ads.There are a few things that you need to know about using classified ads as a means of finding motivated sellers.Volume of Motivated Seller CallsFirst, you will probably not be overwhelmed with calls from a single classified ad, but it is a relatively inexpensive method of generating some calls from motivated sellers.One Step or Two StepSince classified ads are cost effective only when you keep them small, you usually can not get your full marketing message out in the classified ad itself. So, classified ads require two steps to get your full marketing message to your potential sellers: the first step is the classified ad. The second step is an automated way for the seller to get your full marketing message before contacting your directly.With classified ads I tend to use either a 24 hour recorded information line or both a 24 hour recorded information line and my website.On my 24 hour recorded information line, the seller can hear me explain all the benefits I can offer them for selling their house to me. My message is a about 5 minutes long and once they have listened to it, they know my full marketing message and are, at that point, ready to talk to me live. So, at the end of the recorded message I give them a way to talk to someone live.On my website, I have a type out version of my entire marketing message and a means for sellers to contact me directly.Using two steps significantly cuts down on the number of uninterested callers, gives all potential sellers an opportunity to get more information wit
    of all the elements, we find these two against us: perpetual frost and unnatural drought,”12 he added,13 while in China, it was written, “the stars were lost from view for three months. The sun dimmed, the rain failed, and snow fell in the summertime. Famine spread, and the emperor abandoned his capital…”14 Other Chinese records referred to a “‘dust veil’ obscuring the sky” while Mediterranean historians wrote about a “‘dry fog’ blocking out much of the sun’s heat for more than year.”15 The sun was so ineffective that snow even fell during August in southern China and in every month of the year in northern Europe.

    “Then came drought [or floods], famine, plague, death…”16 “Food is the basis of the Empire. Yellow gold and ten thousand strings of cash cannot cure hunger. What avails a thousand boxes of pearls to him who is starving of cold,” the Japanese Great King lamented in 540, while Cassiodorus added, “Rain is denied and the reaper fears new frosts.”17 And “as hard winters and drought continued into the second and third years [in Mongolia and parts of China, the Avars] unable to find food, unable to barter food from others…” began a 3,000-mile trek to new lands to save themselves and their families from annihilation and starvation.18

    During this sustained period of unseasonably cold temperatures from 535-546 when the sun was ineffective and blotted out, plant life experienced stunted growth – tree rings from this period show little or no growth – and many crops failed. According to climatological research presented in 2001 by Markus Lindholm of the University of Helsinki, Finland, Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine, the “most dramatic shift in growing conditions, from favorable to unfavorable, between two years, took place between A.D. 535-536” in Europe and Africa.19 His findings were corroborated by Mike Baillie of the University of Belfast, who based on his tree ring chronologies, some from specimens preserved in bogs, that dated back thousands of years stated, "It was a catastrophic environmental downturn that shows up in trees all over the world.20 Temperatures dropped enough to hinder the growth of trees as widely dispersed as northern Europe, Siberia, western North America, and southern South America.”21 Ominously, the cold brought rats, mice and fleas that normally lived outdoors, into peoples’ homes in search of food and warmth because of the decimation that was occurring to the animal population in the suddenly hostile, chilly dark environment. Deadly bacterium, Yersinia pestis was then transmitted to people and their pets.

    In the ensuing unending darkness, chaos reigned as “whole cities were wiped out – civilizations crumbled.”22 Wars raged across Europe and the Middle East, prosperous societies were stripped of sustenance and wealth, economies collapsed and huge swaths of populations succumbed to disease and plague. “With some people it began in the head, made the eyes bloody and the face swollen, descended to the throat and then removed them from Mankind. With others, there was a flowing of the bowels. Some came out in buboes [pus-filled swellings] which gave rise to great fevers, and they would die two or three days later with their minds in the same state as those who had suffered nothing and with their bodies still robust. Others lost their senses before dying. Malignant pustules erupted and did away with them. Sometimes people were afflicted once or twice and then recovered, only to fall victim a third time and then succumb,”23 Evagrius, a 6th century Church historian wrote. In their final stages, people “generally entered a semi-conscious, lethargic state, and would not… eat or drink. Following this stage, the victims would be seized by madness… Many people died painfully when their buboes gangrened. A number of victims broke out with black blisters covering their bodies, and these individuals died swiftly.”24

    Within seven years, due to the ivory trade, in which ships brought rats and sailors infected by the plague, Europe and the Middle East were being ravaged. In Constantinople alone, “they had to dispose of over 10,000 bodies a day, week after week, throwing them into the sea off special boats, sticking them in the towers of the city wall, filling up cisterns, digging up orchards. Soldiers were forced to dig mass graves… chaos and pandemonium [reigned]. Constantinople stank for months after months [from the decaying bodies that were stuffed in towers and stacked or dumped in streets]… [and] when the number of dead reached a quarter of a million, Constantinople officials simply stopped counting.25

    An account by Procopius went as follows: “At first, relatives and domestics attended to the burial of the dead, but as the violence of the plague increased this duty was neglected, and corpses lay forlorn narrow in the streets, but even in the houses of notable men whose servants were sick or dead. Aware of this, Justinian placed considerable sums at the disposal of Theodore, one of his private secretaries, to take measures for the disposal of the dead. Huge pits [that could hold up to 70,000 corpses] were dug at Sycae, on the other side of the Golden Horn, in which the bodies were laid in rows and tramped down tightly; but the men who were engaged on this work, unable to keep up with the number of the dying, mounted the towers of the wall of the suburb, tore off their roofs, and threw the bodies in. Virtually all the towers were filled with corpses, and as a result ‘an evil stench pervaded the city and distressed the inhabitants still more, and especially whenever the wind blew fresh from that quarter.’”26

    Out of fear, many people refused to venture out of their homes -- “…houses became tombs, as whole families died from the plague without anyone from the outside world even knowing. Streets were deserted…”27 Furthermore because of this fear and/or the affects of suffering from high fever, scores of people hallucinated, seeing apparitions and visions. And with the vast pestilence and destruction all around them, many could not help but wonder if the apocalypse as described in Revelation 6:8 “And I looked, and behold, a pale horse; and his name that sat on him was Death”28 was upon them.

    It was so bad that some thirty years later, Pope Gregory The Great wrote of Rome, “Ruins on ruins… Where is the senate? Where [are] the people? All the pomp of secular dignities has been destroyed… And we, the few that we are who remain, every day we are menaced by scourges and innumerable trials.”29 In its height, the plague "depopulated towns, turned the country into a desert and made the habitations of men to become the haunts of wild beasts”30 while in Africa, major ports ceased to exist and agricultural practices all but vanished.

    “[And] as [others] left the stricken city [wearing identification tags so that their bodies would be buried if found] they took the plague to towns, villages and farms throughout the empire. [To compound matters, with trade and commerce virtually nonexistent, food became scarce leading to the starvation of others].31 Untold millions perished,"32 with an estimated death toll of 100 million, the worst pandemic in human history.

    “Scandinavian elites” in feeble desperation, “sacrificed large amounts of gold… to appease the angry gods and get the sunlight back.”33 In Mesoamerica and the Andes, cities “of perhaps one million people” emptied out “practically overnight” through starvation and disease. Peoples turned on their gods and goddesses, violently smashing their images and burning temples and towards the end, they viciously fought each other having become “savage and warlike.”34

    When the sun finally came out, overcoming the affects of a massive volcanic eruption, even though it hadn’t really been gone, minimizing the adverse affects and saving living creatures from complete extinction, the world was forever transformed. Countries and civilizations had ceased to exist while others emerged as the days of darkness “weakened the Eastern Roman Empire; created horrendous living conditions in the western part of Great Britain; contributed through drought… to the fall of the Teotihuacan civilization in Mexico; and through flooding to the collapse of a major center of civilization in Yemen;”35 while major upheavals occurred in China and France. More than half the world’s population when taking Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, into account, along with countless numbers of plants and animals, had perished illustrating the fragile relationship that exists between people and nature.

    ________________________________________________________________

    1 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    2 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    3 Precursors Of The Pole Shift And Earth Changes of 2000-2001. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 27 April, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/PSResearch/PrecursorOfPS&EC2000.htm

    4 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    5 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    6 Henry N. Pollack. Uncertain Science… Uncertain World. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) 197.

    7 The Dark Ages Caused By Volcanism? September 23, 2001. 27 April, 2006. http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ds_darka.htm and everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    8 PBS Program – “Secrets Of The Dead.” May 15, 2005. 2 March 2006. http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/history/535ad.htm

    9 Climate changes of 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006. 27 April, 2006. http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1

    10 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    11 SEMP Biot #214: Did a Krakatoa Eruption in 535 A.D. Help Precipitate the Decline of Antiquity and the Spread of Islam? 27 April, 2006. http://www.semp.us/biots/biot_214.html

    12 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    13 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    14 Mike Baillie. Did Asteroids And Comets Turn The Tides Of Civilization? Discovering Archeology July/August 1999. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/714636/posts

    15 6th-century crop failures: comet collision? Cronaca. February 4, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002037.html

    16 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    17 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    18 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    19 Markus Lindholm. Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine. August 27-31, 2001. 28 April, 2006. http://atlas-conferences.com/c/a/g/c/74.htm

    20 Catastrophic event preceded Dark Ages – scientist. Reuters. September 8, 2000. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39b91ca42b27.htm

    21 Laura Knight-Jadczyk. Jupiter, Nostradamus, Edgar Cayce, and the Return of the Mongols. March 9, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/Laura-Knight-Jadczyk/article-lkj-04-03-06-d.htm

    22 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    23 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    24 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu

    A Recipe for Romance
    Cooking together at home is a great idea for a romantic evening. The emphasis on food in our lives makes cooking a great aphrodisiac for most of us. Two lovers in the kitchen, passing ingredients back and forth, flipping steaks and baking French bread to a crunchy brown crust. Boiling edamame for an appetizer and popping the cork on a new bottle of red wine, and then sitting down with a heaping plate of steaming hot food.The variations are endless, but you can see the appeal.The cooking is the anticipation, and the payoff is not only the meal, but a lovely evening with your date. I am practical cook, too. I believe in simple recipes, easy clean-up and a well-balanced meal. If you know in advance a romantic dinner is pending, marinating the meat or fish overnight is a simple way to get a flavorful main dish without a lot of fuss. Some salad dressings do work as a marinade, but make sure they are complementary flavors. And in this case, I do not mean complementary as in a faithful companion to what else you might be serving, but complementary as in, does not taste like death after soaking in the meat overnight. Soy sauce also works well as a marinade.Easy clean-up usually means putting foil on anything that goes in the oven, so you can rip the foil off after dinner and toss it, and the baking pan is clean. My kitchen is pretty non-stick as a rule, and after dinner, I soak everything. It serves a dual purpose; you do not spend your entire evening at the sink washing dishes, and if you forget about them, you do not spend the entire next morning trying to scrap the caked leftovers off of your pots.In the early stages of dating, I like to avoid starches because it can make some people feel bloated or heavy. Pasta can be a beautiful dinner, but you have to know how you and your date are going to react to it because nothing kills a romantic evening like suddenly developing a three-pound ball in your stomach.For romantic evenings, too much of any one flavor is counterproductive. Remember, small portions, a variety of flavors and lots of color
    len, descended to the throat and then removed them from Mankind. With others, there was a flowing of the bowels. Some came out in buboes [pus-filled swellings] which gave rise to great fevers, and they would die two or three days later with their minds in the same state as those who had suffered nothing and with their bodies still robust. Others lost their senses before dying. Malignant pustules erupted and did away with them. Sometimes people were afflicted once or twice and then recovered, only to fall victim a third time and then succumb,”23 Evagrius, a 6th century Church historian wrote. In their final stages, people “generally entered a semi-conscious, lethargic state, and would not… eat or drink. Following this stage, the victims would be seized by madness… Many people died painfully when their buboes gangrened. A number of victims broke out with black blisters covering their bodies, and these individuals died swiftly.”24

    Within seven years, due to the ivory trade, in which ships brought rats and sailors infected by the plague, Europe and the Middle East were being ravaged. In Constantinople alone, “they had to dispose of over 10,000 bodies a day, week after week, throwing them into the sea off special boats, sticking them in the towers of the city wall, filling up cisterns, digging up orchards. Soldiers were forced to dig mass graves… chaos and pandemonium [reigned]. Constantinople stank for months after months [from the decaying bodies that were stuffed in towers and stacked or dumped in streets]… [and] when the number of dead reached a quarter of a million, Constantinople officials simply stopped counting.25

    An account by Procopius went as follows: “At first, relatives and domestics attended to the burial of the dead, but as the violence of the plague increased this duty was neglected, and corpses lay forlorn narrow in the streets, but even in the houses of notable men whose servants were sick or dead. Aware of this, Justinian placed considerable sums at the disposal of Theodore, one of his private secretaries, to take measures for the disposal of the dead. Huge pits [that could hold up to 70,000 corpses] were dug at Sycae, on the other side of the Golden Horn, in which the bodies were laid in rows and tramped down tightly; but the men who were engaged on this work, unable to keep up with the number of the dying, mounted the towers of the wall of the suburb, tore off their roofs, and threw the bodies in. Virtually all the towers were filled with corpses, and as a result ‘an evil stench pervaded the city and distressed the inhabitants still more, and especially whenever the wind blew fresh from that quarter.’”26

    Out of fear, many people refused to venture out of their homes -- “…houses became tombs, as whole families died from the plague without anyone from the outside world even knowing. Streets were deserted…”27 Furthermore because of this fear and/or the affects of suffering from high fever, scores of people hallucinated, seeing apparitions and visions. And with the vast pestilence and destruction all around them, many could not help but wonder if the apocalypse as described in Revelation 6:8 “And I looked, and behold, a pale horse; and his name that sat on him was Death”28 was upon them.

    It was so bad that some thirty years later, Pope Gregory The Great wrote of Rome, “Ruins on ruins… Where is the senate? Where [are] the people? All the pomp of secular dignities has been destroyed… And we, the few that we are who remain, every day we are menaced by scourges and innumerable trials.”29 In its height, the plague "depopulated towns, turned the country into a desert and made the habitations of men to become the haunts of wild beasts”30 while in Africa, major ports ceased to exist and agricultural practices all but vanished.

    “[And] as [others] left the stricken city [wearing identification tags so that their bodies would be buried if found] they took the plague to towns, villages and farms throughout the empire. [To compound matters, with trade and commerce virtually nonexistent, food became scarce leading to the starvation of others].31 Untold millions perished,"32 with an estimated death toll of 100 million, the worst pandemic in human history.

    “Scandinavian elites” in feeble desperation, “sacrificed large amounts of gold… to appease the angry gods and get the sunlight back.”33 In Mesoamerica and the Andes, cities “of perhaps one million people” emptied out “practically overnight” through starvation and disease. Peoples turned on their gods and goddesses, violently smashing their images and burning temples and towards the end, they viciously fought each other having become “savage and warlike.”34

    When the sun finally came out, overcoming the affects of a massive volcanic eruption, even though it hadn’t really been gone, minimizing the adverse affects and saving living creatures from complete extinction, the world was forever transformed. Countries and civilizations had ceased to exist while others emerged as the days of darkness “weakened the Eastern Roman Empire; created horrendous living conditions in the western part of Great Britain; contributed through drought… to the fall of the Teotihuacan civilization in Mexico; and through flooding to the collapse of a major center of civilization in Yemen;”35 while major upheavals occurred in China and France. More than half the world’s population when taking Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, into account, along with countless numbers of plants and animals, had perished illustrating the fragile relationship that exists between people and nature.

    ________________________________________________________________

    1 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    2 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    3 Precursors Of The Pole Shift And Earth Changes of 2000-2001. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 27 April, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/PSResearch/PrecursorOfPS&EC2000.htm

    4 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    5 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    6 Henry N. Pollack. Uncertain Science… Uncertain World. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) 197.

    7 The Dark Ages Caused By Volcanism? September 23, 2001. 27 April, 2006. http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ds_darka.htm and everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    8 PBS Program – “Secrets Of The Dead.” May 15, 2005. 2 March 2006. http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/history/535ad.htm

    9 Climate changes of 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006. 27 April, 2006. http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1

    10 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    11 SEMP Biot #214: Did a Krakatoa Eruption in 535 A.D. Help Precipitate the Decline of Antiquity and the Spread of Islam? 27 April, 2006. http://www.semp.us/biots/biot_214.html

    12 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    13 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    14 Mike Baillie. Did Asteroids And Comets Turn The Tides Of Civilization? Discovering Archeology July/August 1999. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/714636/posts

    15 6th-century crop failures: comet collision? Cronaca. February 4, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002037.html

    16 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    17 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    18 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    19 Markus Lindholm. Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine. August 27-31, 2001. 28 April, 2006. http://atlas-conferences.com/c/a/g/c/74.htm

    20 Catastrophic event preceded Dark Ages – scientist. Reuters. September 8, 2000. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39b91ca42b27.htm

    21 Laura Knight-Jadczyk. Jupiter, Nostradamus, Edgar Cayce, and the Return of the Mongols. March 9, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/Laura-Knight-Jadczyk/article-lkj-04-03-06-d.htm

    22 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    23 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    24 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu

    Buying DDR Memory for Your Computer
    Many aspects of the personal computer have increased in leaps and bounds in terms of performance and what they are capable of doing.Computer memory, often referred to as Random Access Memory (RAM), has become of greater and greater performance as time has gone on.One of the famous quotes from back in the eighties was one made by Bill Gates when he said that no one would ever need more than 640KB of memory. Well that has been passed for ages now, with high performance machines sometimes sporting over 1GB of it.There are many advantages that can be had with more memory. Programs run fasterLess waiting time for programs to loadMore programs can be run at a timeOverall computer speed is increased Double Data Rate (DDR) memory is the staple of the consumer market. It has taken off due to public demand and now comes quite reasonably priced.Computers don't generally come with less than 256MB of memory nowadays. My computer after freshly installing Windows 2000 (no, I haven't gone to Windows XP yet) takes about 80MB or memory. That is the very least, with no additional programs or anything else installed. After I have installed all the graphics drivers, Internet connection software for ADSL, virus protection and firewall it takes around 160MB of total memory.From my previous experience, 256MB will do, but after it becomes quickly filled when running a few programs, Windows reverts to using the hard drive for memory. It's a way to fake more memory, by using the hard drive as a temporary store. 512MB now does it for my needs, but if you run many programs or memory intensive ones, 768MB or even 1GB will do better.But is memory size the only factor?An equally important factor is the memory speed. It is measured in MHz. Most systems use 400MHz DDR memory. This would be the safe bet with almost any processor you may have. 400MHz has also become the most common to buy, there is not much slower than that left to buy.Memory from a reputable manufacturer will ensur
    nd destruction all around them, many could not help but wonder if the apocalypse as described in Revelation 6:8 “And I looked, and behold, a pale horse; and his name that sat on him was Death”28 was upon them.

    It was so bad that some thirty years later, Pope Gregory The Great wrote of Rome, “Ruins on ruins… Where is the senate? Where [are] the people? All the pomp of secular dignities has been destroyed… And we, the few that we are who remain, every day we are menaced by scourges and innumerable trials.”29 In its height, the plague "depopulated towns, turned the country into a desert and made the habitations of men to become the haunts of wild beasts”30 while in Africa, major ports ceased to exist and agricultural practices all but vanished.

    “[And] as [others] left the stricken city [wearing identification tags so that their bodies would be buried if found] they took the plague to towns, villages and farms throughout the empire. [To compound matters, with trade and commerce virtually nonexistent, food became scarce leading to the starvation of others].31 Untold millions perished,"32 with an estimated death toll of 100 million, the worst pandemic in human history.

    “Scandinavian elites” in feeble desperation, “sacrificed large amounts of gold… to appease the angry gods and get the sunlight back.”33 In Mesoamerica and the Andes, cities “of perhaps one million people” emptied out “practically overnight” through starvation and disease. Peoples turned on their gods and goddesses, violently smashing their images and burning temples and towards the end, they viciously fought each other having become “savage and warlike.”34

    When the sun finally came out, overcoming the affects of a massive volcanic eruption, even though it hadn’t really been gone, minimizing the adverse affects and saving living creatures from complete extinction, the world was forever transformed. Countries and civilizations had ceased to exist while others emerged as the days of darkness “weakened the Eastern Roman Empire; created horrendous living conditions in the western part of Great Britain; contributed through drought… to the fall of the Teotihuacan civilization in Mexico; and through flooding to the collapse of a major center of civilization in Yemen;”35 while major upheavals occurred in China and France. More than half the world’s population when taking Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, into account, along with countless numbers of plants and animals, had perished illustrating the fragile relationship that exists between people and nature.

    ________________________________________________________________

    1 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    2 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    3 Precursors Of The Pole Shift And Earth Changes of 2000-2001. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 27 April, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/PSResearch/PrecursorOfPS&EC2000.htm

    4 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    5 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    6 Henry N. Pollack. Uncertain Science… Uncertain World. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) 197.

    7 The Dark Ages Caused By Volcanism? September 23, 2001. 27 April, 2006. http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ds_darka.htm and everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    8 PBS Program – “Secrets Of The Dead.” May 15, 2005. 2 March 2006. http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/history/535ad.htm

    9 Climate changes of 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006. 27 April, 2006. http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1

    10 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    11 SEMP Biot #214: Did a Krakatoa Eruption in 535 A.D. Help Precipitate the Decline of Antiquity and the Spread of Islam? 27 April, 2006. http://www.semp.us/biots/biot_214.html

    12 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    13 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    14 Mike Baillie. Did Asteroids And Comets Turn The Tides Of Civilization? Discovering Archeology July/August 1999. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/714636/posts

    15 6th-century crop failures: comet collision? Cronaca. February 4, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002037.html

    16 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    17 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    18 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    19 Markus Lindholm. Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine. August 27-31, 2001. 28 April, 2006. http://atlas-conferences.com/c/a/g/c/74.htm

    20 Catastrophic event preceded Dark Ages – scientist. Reuters. September 8, 2000. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39b91ca42b27.htm

    21 Laura Knight-Jadczyk. Jupiter, Nostradamus, Edgar Cayce, and the Return of the Mongols. March 9, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/Laura-Knight-Jadczyk/article-lkj-04-03-06-d.htm

    22 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    23 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    24 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu

    The Truth About Clutter And 8 Simple Steps To Get It Out Of Your Life Forever
    A couple of weeks ago, we held our first Combat Clutter Day for the home-based entrepreneur. It was a tremendous success for participants.The goal was simple -- rid your workspace and life of unnecessary clutter and reap the rewards of a clear mind and clear desk.Feng shui experts agree that a cluttered environment can cripple your creativity and the flow of money into your life.You may think the term "environment" refers only to your physical surroundings, but not so. Your environment may also be cluttered with toxic or unbalanced relationships, a negative mindset or faulty mental programming.If you find your energy drained and creativity stalled, it's probably time to rid yourself of unnecessary clutter in your life.Take a look at the following statements as they relate to your life and physical environment. Answer them as either true or false.1. Your desk is covered with loose papers, stacks of file folders, receipts, empty coffee mugs, kid's school projects, pens, pencils, post-it notes, unread documents and a half eaten bag of Oreos.2. You're afraid to open your hallway closet because if you do, it may take days before your body is found beneath the rubble.3. You have so many cardboard boxes and plastic bins accumulated in your office, there's a family of squirrels living among them that you're not even aware of.4. There are people in your life who call you several times a day because they're bored, need to borrow something, want to gossip and complain, talk about what happened on Days of Our Lives, or can't make a decision without your opinion first.5. You spend the majority of your time thinking about everything that is wrong in your life instead of what is possible and available to you.If you answered "true" to even one of these statements, you have clutter and whether or not you realize it, it brings with it a negative energy that is blocking your progress.When you're surrounded by clutter, your efficiency is reduced, productivity is thwarted, creativity is diminished, tolerance is lowered a
    >

    4 Krakatau. E.R.A. Inc., 2000. 2 March, 2006. http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm

    5 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    6 Henry N. Pollack. Uncertain Science… Uncertain World. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) 197.

    7 The Dark Ages Caused By Volcanism? September 23, 2001. 27 April, 2006. http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ds_darka.htm and everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    8 PBS Program – “Secrets Of The Dead.” May 15, 2005. 2 March 2006. http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/history/535ad.htm

    9 Climate changes of 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006. 27 April, 2006. http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1

    10 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    11 SEMP Biot #214: Did a Krakatoa Eruption in 535 A.D. Help Precipitate the Decline of Antiquity and the Spread of Islam? 27 April, 2006. http://www.semp.us/biots/biot_214.html

    12 everything2: The disaster of 535. September 14, 2001. 27 April 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691

    13 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    14 Mike Baillie. Did Asteroids And Comets Turn The Tides Of Civilization? Discovering Archeology July/August 1999. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/714636/posts

    15 6th-century crop failures: comet collision? Cronaca. February 4, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002037.html

    16 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    17 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    18 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    19 Markus Lindholm. Abrupt changes in northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures extracted from the 7500-year ring-width chronology of Scots pine. August 27-31, 2001. 28 April, 2006. http://atlas-conferences.com/c/a/g/c/74.htm

    20 Catastrophic event preceded Dark Ages – scientist. Reuters. September 8, 2000. 28 April, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39b91ca42b27.htm

    21 Laura Knight-Jadczyk. Jupiter, Nostradamus, Edgar Cayce, and the Return of the Mongols. March 9, 2004. 28 April, 2006. http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/Laura-Knight-Jadczyk/article-lkj-04-03-06-d.htm

    22 Catastrophe! Part I. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html

    23 Catastrophe! New Internationalist. December 1999. 27 April, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm

    24 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu/~history/journal/1996-7/Smith.html

    25 Catastrophe! Part II. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe2_script.html

    26 J.B. Bury. History of the Later Roman Empire. (New York: Macmillan & Co., Ltd. 1923).

    27 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu/~history/journal/1996-7/Smith.html

    28 Miguel A. Faria, Jr., MD. Medical History – Plagues & Epidemics. 2002. 28 April, 2006. http://www.haciendapub.com/faria4.html

    29 Abominations of Desolation. 28 April, 2006. http://www.whyprophets.com/prophets/a_of_d.htm

    30 Roy Porter. The Black Death. 28 April, 2006. http://www.strath.ac.uk/Departments/History/barton/ds11.htm

    31 Christine A. Smith. Plague in the Ancient World: A Study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997. 28 April, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu/~history/journal/1996-7/Smith.html

    32 Catastrophe! Part II. 27 April, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe2_script.html

    33 Climate changes of 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006. 27 April, 2006. http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1

    34 Dr. Laina Farhat-Holzman. Climate Change, Volcanoes, and Plagues – the New Tools of History. Globalthink.net. January 23, 2003. 27 April, 2006. http://www.globalthink.net/global/dsppaper.cfm?ArticleID=96

    35 Brian Micklethwait. 535 AD. December 25, 2002. 28 April, 2006. http://www.samizdata.net/blog/archives/002719.html

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