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Book link: https://archive.org/details/ALivingWage/page/n13/mode/2up
 
I haven't read this book yet but it sounds like an interesting title on the concept of securing living (and family) wages in society, ideally voluntarily but I think the author might argue for the government to intervene to do so (and was referenced in an article on the topic, I think as one of perhaps the first books talking about this from this theological perspective).
 
One of the four serious sins that "cry out to heaven for vengeance" is "defrauding workers of their wages": https://infogalactic.com/info/Sins_that_cry_to_heaven
 
This is obviously a problem as an individual worker needs to be able to earn a living to survive, and likewise the breadwinner(s) of a family need to be able to earn a living "family wage" in order for their family to survive.
 
I was curious where people think that wage injustice exists today and what might be done to remedy the problem.
posted 2 years ago by EJGeneric in ConsumeProduct (+5 / -0 )
posted 2 years ago by EJGeneric in ConsumeProduct (+6 / -0 )
posted 2 years ago by EJGeneric in NationalSocialism (+3 / -0 )
The Dig - Gog and Magog: A new understanding - [2.10.50]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUTTDaEbyHY
In biblical prophecy, two names stand out as signposts for the Apocalypse - Gog and Magog. Students of prophecy firmly believe that Gog and Magog means Russia (Tobolsk and Moscow being the same as Tubal and Meshek!), but with the publication of the Cepher Yashar (the Book of Jasher) information that has been otherwise withheld from the public comes to light as to the location of the House of Yapheth -- and that information changes everything!
We know Yapheth to the lands to the north, but Yashar tells us exactly which lands . . . and, as students of the Dig might well imagine, current archeological finds and the rigorous unveiling of history, now corroborate a new narrative, even a new understanding. Where did the tribes of Yashar actually land? Yashar tells us a narrative that is revealing, yet, in all of its disclosure, Magog, the son of Yapheth, goes without mention!
Fear not, because an ancient historian - one Geoffrey of Monmouth - tells us the rest of the story; a story not only told over and over again through the centuries, but one that is celebrated even today. Gog and Magog will surprise you, and one particular passage in Ezekiel makes it clear that Gog and Magog are not who we have always thought they were.
Join us tonight on the Dig with pick-axe and shovel in hand, as we sort through the record to see if we can make sense of the cryptic prophecy found in Yekhezq'el (Ezekiel) 38 and 39.
posted 2 years ago by doginventer in Christianity (+0 / -0 )
posted 2 years ago by EJGeneric in ConsumeProduct (+4 / -0 )
GM
posted 2 years ago by EJGeneric in Frenworld (+3 / -0 )
Become Ungobberanable.
Do you have personal tips on how to clean electronics?
 
Should you rubbing alcohol to clean sensitive electronic parts?
 
Do you have compressed air or an electric compressed air duster or recommendations on tools to acquire?
 
What other tips would it be valuable for people to know?
posted 2 years ago by doginventer in Christianity (+2 / -0 )
White Landowners laboring on each other's estates in order to create and maintain infrastructure. This to provide a support system for the pro White people.
  
https://gab.com/groups/71290
 
 
Land, buying/selling, zoning, regulations, taxes, homesteading, and development projects.
 
https://gab.com/groups/45481
To me this just seems like a "brand" of homeschooling, sometimes with less structure.
 
I think students can be given a lot of educational materials or curriculum to choose from and parents or teachers or tutors might be able to help them mix and match different educational resources together.
 
A framework could be provided and they could choose how they interface with it; I guess with traditional homeschool in contrast, maybe the thought is the framework is more fixed? Or with some "unschoolers" there seems to be no framework at all. This might be a view between these two poles of too much or too little framework given?
 
How then do you think "unschooling" principles would translate to the work world? I was reminded that the "antiwork" movement might think "unschooling" to be like "antiwork applied to schooling", but I'm not sure the opposite would be true, that antiwork would be like "unschooling applied to work". Would that rather look like some other kind of work reform or improvement?
posted 2 years ago by MrBojangles in Frenworld (+4 / -0 )
What's people's opinion on "aromatherapy"? Are certain scents supposed to be good for disease or to promote health?
 
I guess my view is in favor of a mild support of the theory that certain scents may create health, but perhaps more than this that I think smells may be good for an aethetic value and promote a "quality of life".
 
I have noticed a few times for example, while I might have audio-visual stimulation on a computer inside, that when I go outside I might additionally encounter such fresh air "smells" that seem to yield feelings of health, well-being, and which also stimulate the recall of certain memories associated with the smells.
 
I think I remember expecting that "smell-o-vision" would become a part of computers at some point, or of some automated way for computers to let off certain smells. I thought movie theaters might incorporate the sense of smell more at some point. I'm sure some obscure gadgets like this exist or could be a DIY project, and some places exist that do this in a theater, but it doesn't seem to have had the widespread adoption that I might have thought would have happened.
 
But anyway, any opinions on utilizing the sense of smell for health and wellness?
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