AndyHolland wrote:Dear Ebor,
It is not my responsibility to educate you. For example, You asked about lying wonders claiming to have read the bible.
I am familiar with the phase in the Bible. My question is "What do YOU, Mr. Holland mean by "lying wonders"? What does it mean to You? What do you have in mind?
This is just like the Holy Thorn thing. I provide all sorts of references, and you ignore them or take their differences and concentrate on them without seeing the common thread.
The common thread was that a plant exists in England called the Holy Thorn and that it blooms "around Christmas". It is your assertion and claim that it is on the EO/Julian calendar that I question. There were differences or contradictions in some of what you provided, and others could not be traced to see the Primary Source. Merely repeating something does not prove it. I provided that the church (Anglican) in Glastonbury was having it's cutting of the Thorn in December, not January. It is not the EO Calendar Christmas then. And why should not differences in reports be taken into account?
On and on your assertions go and allegations as well. For example, what were the minority demographics in the 1890s, and how many minorities actually worked in sweat shops per capita compared to the white population? My bet is, the black population was happier in a rural setting away from those hardships relative to the white population. Just a hunch though.
You base your claim and ideas on hunches and bets? My "assertions and allegations"?
And you want me to educate you? The sweatshops were where poor people worked, women, children (no child labour laws then) immigrants/ethnic minorities. Conditions that most of us here cannot concieve of working in, I suspect. Have you ever heard of the "Triangle Shirtwaist Fire" of 1911?
http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/trianglefire/narrative2.html
A multipage site with information and documents from people who worked in the sweatshops.
From Maryland History:
http://www.mdoe.org/sweatshops.html
"Also at this time, persecution in Eastern Europe drove many Orthodox Jews to immigrate. The Jewish population of Baltimore expanded from 10,000 to 50,000 by 1900. These immigrant orthodox Jews were by far the largest group of workers in the sweatshops because employers in other industries usually declined to hire them. For one thing, a six-day workweek was standard, and the immigrants refused to work on Saturdays. Since other laws forbid anyone working on Sundays, the immigrants could only offer a five-day workweek. Unable to find work elsewhere, they became the employees of their co-religionists, the sweatshop contractors."
"June 3, 1900
Garment workers form the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union to protest low pay, fifteen-hour workdays, no benefits, and unsafe working conditions. While weak at the onset, the ILGWU struggles to help all workers fight for better conditions and higher pay."
http://www.soc.duke.edu/courses/soc142/time.html
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www ... cn173.html
At the beginning of the century, 1-in-8 U.S. residents was of a race
other than white; at the end of the century, the ratio was 1-in-4.
The black population remained concentrated in the South and the
Asian and Pacific Islander population in the West through the
century, but these regional concentrations declined sharply by 2000.
I provide links.
The Constitution was so sealed with that name, and yes - I got details wrong as to its origin. So my near 30 year old memory of seeing these things is a bit foggy - crucify me. I still could have sworn that reading a 1976 Constitution booklet, the Great Seal was described in detail.
How is it "crucifying" someone to correct mistakes? One of the wonderful things that the 'Net does is make it possible to check on information and things like looking at very fine photos of the Constitution. It is not evil to make errors, but if they are errors, they should be corrected and not repeated. Double checking facts before posting can be helpful. Details do matter.
I do know, thanks to your prodding, that the Great Seal with all its masonic nonsense is attached to every important document of the United States since 1782. I do know the nation is referred to by that name.
And Charles Thomson, who was instrumental in the design of the Seal and was not a mason is a better source of what it means then your interpretation, I'm sorry. http://www.greatseal.com/symbols/blazon.html
I ask again, are you not familiar with rhetorical devices in speech such as referring to the subject of a speech by other titles? I can provide you with examples of people saying "Here in the Treasure State" about my home state of Montana. But that is a phrase, a sobriquet
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sobriquet
The name is still Montana.
Ebor