Biological sex: | Male |
Gender: | Male |
Sexual orientation: | 100% straight |
Faith: | Compassion & scientific method |
Biological sex: | Male |
Gender: | Male |
Sexual orientation: | 100% straight |
Faith: | Compassion & scientific method |
@LukefromDC @janetlogan Well, many want to create the WW3, it seems. Then there might be too few of us? Many of us ruin lives. Many vote for genocide and democide, again and again. When one finger is pointing, then usually three points right back at ourselves.
What is God? Thich Nhat Hanh answers questions" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VeL3YBUNaD4
@gpilz @godpod I have also heard witnesses. One was a man who was raped as a child. He said a creature called Faun took him there to witness what happened to the satanists in hell. He said, what happened to them, was 100 times worse, than anything they did to him as a child.
So Jesus words about people who want to hurt children might be a very good advice for those people, before the satanists actually go after the children! I do not believe they understand what they do.
We speak with scientist Tyrone Hayes of the University of California, Berkeley, who discovered a widely used herbicide may have harmful effects on the endocrine system. But when he tried to publish the results, the chemical’s manufacturer launched a campaign to discredit his work. Hayes was first hired in 1997 by a company, which later became agribusiness giant Syngenta, to study their product, atrazine, a pesticide that is applied to more than half the corn crops in the United States, and widely used on golf courses and Christmas tree farms. When Hayes found results Syngenta did not expect — that atrazine causes sexual abnormalities in frogs, and could cause the same problems for humans — it refused to allow him to publish his findings. A new article in The New Yorker magazine uses court documents from a class action lawsuit against Syngenta to show how it sought to smear Hayes’ reputation and prevent the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency from banning the profitable chemical, which is already banned by the European Union.