Over 16,530,566 people are on fubar.
What are you waiting for?

Witch Doctor's blog: "Fubar Stuff"

created on 12/19/2007  |  http://fubar.com/fubar-stuff/b169577
It never seems to end. Been here since July of last year. I'm pretty close to Fu-King, yet I see all these little ladies, who've not been here that long, having way more points than I. I see stupid bastards buying all sorts of stuff for these gals, and for what? To see a little butt? To win a little heart? So all these girls get all sorts of more attention from lotsa others. They thrive on it. Meanwhile, myself and the other average fellas out there, struggle. We are not rude, we are not obnoxious, we do not make demands in shoutboxes, we do not try and put people in some sort of fantasy scene. We rate you, we fan you, and we ask only the same given to us. Do we get it, oh but rarely. I've had one thing purchased for me while being here, a blast. ONE BLAST. I've bought numerous things for others. I try and live by what goes around comes around, and its supposed to come around in a 10 fold. That theory does not apply on fubar. How bout some of all you women buying something for the man for once? Its a two way street, not a one way. We all get equal points, though, it is the decent man who struggles the most. But than again, who really cares about them?

HELP MY FRIEND

shay
tn_295504646.jpg

@ fubar Show her some fu-love please!

10 Random Facts about me

Once you have been tagged, you have to write a blog with 10 weird or random things, facts, or habits about yourself. At the end, you choose at least 5 people to be tagged, listing their names . Don't forget to leave a comment that says, "You're it!" on their profile and ask them to read your blog. You can't tag the person who tagged you. 1. I enjoy reading 2. I am learning the saw and the tenor banjo - fits my environment 3. I take naps for the simple pleasure of it 4. I really do not care at all about any sports....makes a fine guy to have around, cause i aint the one who'll be spending his sunday afternoons watching some sporting event 5. I like puzzles, but I like em best when i can share the fun of doing them with someone else. 6. Animals LOVE me....probably more than I love them, yet I have no pets, but I do have a few deer that visit the yard from time to time, and they are perfectly happy with allowing me to converse with them, while they graze. 7. I wish I could fly, cause it never lasts long enough in my dreams 8. I don't drive fast, though I have made exceptions 9. Cheese is good for my blood type 10. I have no piercings nor tats, tis bout the only pure thing about me

Just do not get it

Why do people, women in particular, feel they have to whore themselves out to get stuff from people? I have bought a VIP for one lady here, and it was not to see her private pictures, she had added me to her family long before I bought it. I just did it to be nice. I have bought some ladies blasts, again for the same reason.....if I have to spend money on you to see you in the nude, than no thank you, I will save it for a whore. At least I'll get a piece out of it.
Those of you who "Check people out" and don't do anything....you all suck. If your going to visit someones page, at least leave them a comment.....people who check me out, but don't rate me, i'm just going to start blocking them....cause your rude.....maybe your jealous even.
A tradition of the Church which our fathers have inherited, was the adoption of the words "cross" and "crucify". These words are nowhere to be found in the Greek of the New Testament. These words are mistranslations, a "later rendering", of the Greek words stauros and stauroo. Vine's Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words says, "STAUROS denotes, primarily, an upright pole or stake ... Both the noun and the verb stauroo, to fasten to a stake or pole, are originally to be distinguished from the ecclesiastical form of a two-beamed cross. The shape of the latter had its origin in ancient Chaldea (Babylon), and was used as the symbol of the god Tammuz (being in the shape of the mystic Tau, the initial of his name) ... By the middle of the 3rd century A.D. the churches had either departed from, or had travestied, certain doctrines of the Christian faith. In order to increase the prestige of the apostate ecclesiastical system pagans were received into the churches apart from regeneration by faith, and were permitted largely to retain their pagan signs and symbols. Hence the Tau or T, in its most frequent form, with the cross piece lowered, was adopted . Dr. Bullinger, in the Companion Bible, appx. 162, states, "crosses were used as symbols of the Babylonian Sun-god ... It should be stated that Constantine was a Sun-god worshipper ... The evidence is thus complete, that the Lord was put to death upon an upright stake, and not on two pieces of timber placed at any angle." Rev. Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons, pp. 197-205, frankly calls the cross "this Pagan symbol ... the Tau, the sign of the cross, the indisputable sign of Tammuz, the false Messiah ... the mystic Tau of the Cladeans (Babylonians) and Egyptians - the true original form of the letter T the initial of the name of Tammuz ... the Babylonian cross was the recognised emblem of Tammuz." In the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th edition, vol. 14, p. 273, we read, "In the Egyption churches the cross was a pagan symbol of life borrowed by the Christians and interpreted in the pagan manner." Jacob Grimm, in his Deutsche Mythologie, says that the Teutonic (Germanic) tribes had their idol Thor, symbolised by a hammer, while the Roman Christians had their crux (cross). It was thus somewhat easier for the Teutons to accept the Roman Cross. Greek dictionaries, lexicons and other study books also declare the primary meaning of stauros to be an upright pale, pole or stake. The secondary meaning of "cross" is admitted by them to be a "later" rendering. At least two of them do not even mention "cross", and only render the meaning as "pole or stake". In spite of this strong evidence and proof that the word stauros should have been translated "stake", and the verb stauroo to have been translated "impale", almost all the common versions of the Scriptures persist with the Latin Vulgate's crux (cross), a fallacious "later" rendering of the Greek stauros. Why then was the "cross" (crux) brought into the Faith? Again, historical evidence points to Constantine as the one who had the major share in uniting Sun-worship and the Messianic Faith. Constantine's famous vision of "the cross superimposed on the sun", in the year 312, is usually cited. Writers, ignorant of the fact that the cross was not to be found in the New Testament Scriptures, put much emphasis on this vision as the onset of the so-called "conversion" of Constantine. But, unless Constantine had been misguided by the Gnostic Manichean half-Christians, who indeed used the cross in their hybrid religion, this vision of the cross superimposed on the sun could only be the same old cosmic religion, the astrological religion of Babylon. The fact remains: that which Constantine saw, is nowhere to be found in Scripture. We read in the book of Johannes Geffcken, The Last Days of Greco-Roman Paganism, p.319, "that even after 314 A.D. the coins of Constantine show an even-armed cross as a symbol for the Sun-god." Many scholars have doubted the "conversion" of Constantine because of the wicked deeds that he did afterwards, and because of the fact that he only requested to be baptized on his death-bed many years later, in the year 337. So, if the vision of the cross impressed him, and was used as a rallying symbol, it could not have been in honour of YahushĂșa, because Constantine continued paying homage to the Sun-deity and to one of the Sun-deity's symbols, the cross. This continuation of Sun-worship by Constantine is of by his persistent use of images of the Sun-deity on his coins that were issued by him up to the year 323. Secondly, the fact of his motivation to issue his Sunday-keeping edict in the year 321, which was not done in honour of YahushĂșa, but was done because of the "venerable day of the Sun", as the edict read, is proof of this continued allegiance to Sol Invictus. We shall expand on this later. Where did the cross come from, then? J.C. Cooper, An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Traditional Symbols, p. 45, aptly summarises it, "Cross - A universal symbol from the most remote times; it is the cosmic symbol par excellence." Other authorities also call it a sun-symbol, a Babylonian sun-symbol, an astrological Babylonian-Assyrian and heathen run-symbol, also in the form of an encircled cross referred to as a "solar wheel", and many other varieties of crosses. Also, "the cross represents the Tree of Life", the age-old fertility symbol, combining the vertical male and horizontal female principles, especially in Egypt, either as an ordinary cross, or better known in the form of the crux ansata, the Egyptian ankh (sometimes called the Tau cross), which had been carried over into our modern-day symbol of the female, well known in biology. As stated above, the indisputable sign of Tammuz, the mystic Tau of the Babylonians and Egyptians, was brought into the Church chiefly because of Constantine, and has since been adored with all the homage due only to the Most High. The Protestants have for many years refrained from undue adoration of, or homage to the cross, especially in England at the time of the Puritans in the 16th - 17th centuries. But lately this un-Scriptural symbol has been increasingly accepted in Protestantism. We have previously discussed "the weeping for Tammuz", and the similarity between the Easter resurrection and the return or rising of Tammuz. Tammuz was the young incarnate Sun, the Sun-divinity incarnate. This same Sun-deity, known amongst the Babylonians as Tammuz, was identified with the Greek Adonis and with the Phoenician Adoni,96 all of them Sun-deities, being slain in winter, then being "wept for", and their return being celebrated by a festivity in spring, while some had it in summer - according to the myths of pagan idolatry. The evidence for its pagan origin is so convincing that The Catholic Encyclopedia admits that "the sign of the cross, represented in its simplest form by a crossing of two lines at right angles, greatly antedates, in both East and the West, the introduction of Christianity. It goes back to a very remote period of human civilization." It then continues and revers to the Tau cross of the pagan Egyptians, "In later times the Egyptian Christians (Copts), attracted by its form, and perhaps by its symbolism, adopted it as the emblem of the cross."98 Further proof of its pagan origin is the recorded evidence of the Vestal Virgins of pagan Rome having the cross hanging on a necklace,99 and the Egyptians doing it too, as early as the 15th century B.C.E.100 The Buddhists, and Ancient Egyptian Rot-n-no priests. Note the crosses on the robe, and hanging from their necks. Numerous other sects of India, also used the sign of the cross as a mark on their followers' heads. "The cross thus widely worshipped, or regarded as a 'sacred emblem', was the unequivocal symbol of Bacchus, the Babylonian Messiah, for he was represented with a head-band covered with crosses. "It was also the symbol of Jupiter Foederis in Rome.103 Furthermore, we read of the cross on top of the temple of Serapis,104 the Sun-deity of Alexandria. This is Tammuz, whom the Greeks called Bacchus, with the crosses on his head-band. After Constantine had the "vision of the cross", he and his army promoted another variety of the cross, the Chi-Rho or Labarum or sometimes . This has subsequently been explained as representing the first letters of the name Christos, the being the Greek for "Ch" and the being the Greek for "r". but again, this emblem had a pagan origin. The identical symbols were found as inscriptions on a rock, dating from the year ca. 2 500 B.C., being interpreted as "a combination of two Sun-symbols", as the Ax or Hammer-symbol of the Sun- or Sky-deity, and the or as the ancient symbol of the Sun, both of these signs having a sensual or fertility meaning as well. Another proof of its pagan origin is the identical found on a coin of Ptolemeus III from the year 247 - 222 B.C. A well-known encyclopaedia describes the Labarum (Chi-Rho) as, "The labarum was also an emblem of the Chaldean (Babylonian) sky-god and in Christianity it was adopted..."Emperor Constantine adopted this Labarum as the imperial ensign and thereby succeeded in "uniting both divisions of his troops, pagans and Christians, in a common worship ... according to Suicer the word (labarum) came into use in the reign of Hadrian, and was probably adopted from one of the nations conquered by the Romans. "It must be remembered that Hadrian reigned in the years 76 - 138, that he was a pagan emperor, worshipped the Sun-deity Serapis when he visited Alexandria, and was vehemently anti-Judaistic, being responsible for the final near-destruction of Jerusalem in the year 130. Another dictionary relates the following about the Chi-Rho, "However, the symbol was in use long before Christianity, and X (Chi) probably stood for Great Fire or Sun,and P (Rho) probably stood for Pater or Patah (Father). The word labarum (labarum) yields everlasting Father Sun." What is the "mark of the beast" of which we read in Rev 13:16-17, Rev 14:9-11, Rev 15:2, Rev 16:2, Rev 19:20 and Rev 20:4 - a mark on people's foreheads and on their right hands? Rev 14:11 reveals the mark to be "the mark of his (the beast's) name." Have we not read about the mystic Tau, the T, the initial of Tammuz's name, his mark? This same letter T (Tau) was written in Egyptian hieroglyphics and in the old Wemitic languages as, representing the CROSS. Different interpretations have been given to the "mark of the beast", and also the cross has been suggested. There has been some research done on the strange crosses found on quite a few statues of pagan priests, on their foreheads. However, these scholars have been unable to come to an agreement. Conclusive evidence may still come (see among others: Dr. F.J. Dolger, Antike und Christentum, vol. 2, pp. 281-293). Let us rather use the true rendering of the Scriptural words stauros and stauro, namely "stake" and "impale" and eliminate the un-Scriptural "cross" and "crucify".

Shoutbox

Avoid these topics. Religion and Witchcraft, paganism and all that jazz. I am not into it, I don't care about it. I don't consider myself a part of it. I do what I do, and it makes me happy. Do not put a title to what I do, because you think you understand or know it all. Cars and Trucks....most sports....I am simply not your average guy. Wars that are currently happening, I am Pro-peace, discussing our current state of affairs is utterly depressing. Your fu-drama. If I sense that you are hurting, and I bring it up, than that is okay. But don't come knocking on my door begging me to hear your woes. Go cool off, take a break from being online, stop bring others down.

Contests

I HATE COMMENT BOMBING. PERIOD! Rates are okay.

MUMMS

I like mumms, and most mummers....I have no complaints so far. The most upfront in your face, non-backstabing fuckers on the site. At least I know where I stand with them all the time. They never ask anything of me. Thank fucking god.

LOUNGES

I hang out in 3 maybe 4 at any given time, until shit hits the fan, and I'm not longer happy there. Fu-Drama is gay, if you accuse me of starting. I'll leave and never return. If you ban me because I associate with someone you dislike, your a little boy or girl that needs to be punched in the eye. If you act like I'm not doing enough, like hanging out enough in this lounge or that lounge. Grow the fuck up....I like different atmospheres, I like different types of people. Its like bar hopping.
last post
15 years ago
posts
15
views
4,178
can view
everyone
can comment
everyone
atom/rss

other blogs by this author

 14 years ago
Words on Paper
 15 years ago
Pissed off
 15 years ago
I did a Train?
 15 years ago
Life in Arkansas
 15 years ago
Sometimes
 16 years ago
Religious Outlooks
 16 years ago
The Secret
 16 years ago
Health Related
 16 years ago
Out of Town
 16 years ago
BOMBING FAMILY
official fubar blogs
 8 years ago
fubar news by babyjesus  
 13 years ago
fubar.com ideas! by babyjesus  
 10 years ago
fubar'd Official Wishli... by SCRAPPER  
 11 years ago
Word of Esix by esixfiddy  

discover blogs on fubar

blog.php' rendered in 0.0648 seconds on machine '179'.