Philologos
BPR Mailing List Digest
July 27, 2000


Digest Home | 2000 | July, 2000

 

To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - Bible Prophecy
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Charlie")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 03:35:56 -0500

Is a 'State of Judea' Coming?

The Word of God says: Matthew 24:14-22 "And this gospel of the
kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and
then shall the end come. When ye therefore shall see the abomination
of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place,
(whoso readeth, let him understand:) then let them which be in Judaea
flee into the mountains: let him which is on the housetop not come
down to take any thing out of his house: neither let him which is in the
field return back to take his clothes. And woe unto them that are
with child, and to them that give suck in those days! But pray ye that
your flight be not in the winter, neither on the sabbath day: for then
shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world
to this time, no, nor ever shall be. And except those days should be
shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect's sake
those days shall be shortened."

IsraelWire - Tue. Jul 25,2000 -- Efforts towards the establishment of
the State of Judea, intended to fill the void left by Israel's
abandonment of any and all lands of Israel to the PLO Authority, has been
announced. The organizers carefully point out in their statement of purpose that
the goals are in no way to combat Israeli forces, or engage in any
inciteful activity against the current Israeli administration.
Following are some of the points of clarification appearing on the State of
Judea website. --- We do not advocate any seditious activity against the
current Israeli regime and therefore present no threat to the State of
Israel. --- We intend to act only if abandoned to the enemy State of
Palestine and to act only against the forces of the enemy State of
Palestine. --- We believe that the existence of the State of Judea is
in the best interests of the State of Israel in that it will provide a
safety valve to relieve religious/secular tensions and in the
eventuality of the creation of a State of Palestine, the emergence of
a State of Judea in that area will make for a better neighbor and peace
partner to the State of Israel than the alternative. --- That part of
historical Eretz Israel known as Yesha has never been part of the
modern State of Israel, but has remained since 1967 "disputed territory" that
was never annexed or placed under Israeli sovereignty.

I think the gospel "shall be preached in all the world", by the angel
of Rev. 14:6, during the 30 days which follow the second 1,260 days, and
"they shall see the abomination of desolation … stand in the holy
place" on the first day of the 45 days, which follow the 30 days.
(1,290-1,260 = 30) and (1,335-1,290 = 45) See Daniel 12:11-12.

Charlie Baker.

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To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - July 27, 2000 TV Programs
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Moza")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 08:43:02 -0400

8:00 PM Eastern

 HIST - ANCIENT ALIENS - Ancient texts refer to
          extraterrestrials.(CC)(TVG)

 MTV - TRUE LIFE - "I'm a Professional Wrestler" -
          Professional wrestling; on the road with Triple H and
          Chyna.(CC)(From 7:30pm) (Ends 9:00pm)

 TLC - SUPER STRUCTURES OF THE WORLD - "Oil Derrick" - A
          colossal oil platform, the Hibernia GBS, operates in the
          Grand Banks off Newfoundland.(CC)(TVG)

9:00

 DISC - STIGMATA - Some people exhibit the wounds of the
          Crucifixion.(CC)(TVG)

 HIST - MUMMIES: TALES FROM THE EGYPTIAN CRYPTS - Ancient
          religious beliefs; well-known pharaohs.(CC)(TVG)

10:00

 ABC - YOU CAN'T SAY THAT! WHATEVER HAPPENED TO FREE
SPEECH? WITH
          JOHN STOSSEL (Repeat) - John Stossel examines issues
          affecting free speech.(CC)

 PBS - AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHY: A CENTURY OF IMAGES -
          "Photography Transformed, 1960-1999" - Television challenges
          photography; surveillance photography; photojournalism;
          photography as an art form; media-image
          politics.(CC)(TVPG)

 TLC - DETECTIVES OF THE DEEP - Archaeologists and divers
          explore the sunken British warship Pandora.(CC)(TVG)

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To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - Saddam cancer fear spurs rivals
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Moza")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 08:43:02 -0400

 
July 27 2000
                                    MIDDLE EAST

     Saddam cancer fear spurs rivals

     BY MICHAEL THEODOULOU AND GILES WHITTELL

                      Links
  PRESIDENT Saddam Hussein of Iraq, the world's most
  resilient leader, is seriously ill and thought to have cancer,
  according to reports from Baghdad.

  Word of his deteriorating health will intensify a power
  struggle between his two sons and undermine the myth of
  invincibility that he has carefully fostered during two
  decades of autocratic rule.

  "We know Saddam is unwell and understand it may be
  cancer, but we don't know how bad it is or how long he can
  go on for," an Iraqi businessman in Jordan said. Other
  well-connected Iraqi travellers, who are not connected to
  opposition groups, have made similar claims in recent days.

  Ordinary Iraqis, too, have been speculating about Saddam's
  health since he made a far shorter than usual address to his
  countrymen last week to mark the 32nd anniversary of the
  coup that brought his Baath Party to power. He did not
  refer directly to his long stand-off with the West and spoke
  in almost mystical terms, comparing the Baath revolution to
  "the smile of a baby, the prayer of a hermit and rain falling
  on parched land".

  Dressed in a dark suit and tie for the televised speech, the
  63-year-old Iraqi leader appeared haggard but there were
  no other signs of illness. His hair, as usual, was dyed a virile
  jet black.

  Rumours that Saddam has cancer have circulated before
  but have proved impossible to confirm, given the secrecy of
  his regime. The Iraqi leader has always prided himself on a
  healthy lifestyle. He once ordered Cabinet ministers to lose
  weight and took a well-publicised dip in the Tigris River to
  demonstrate his political buoyancy during a period of
  tension with the West.

  The unconfirmed reports of his deteriorating health came as
  President Putin welcomed Tariq Aziz, Iraq's Deputy Prime
  Minister, to the Kremlin yesterday to discuss the lifting UN
  sanctions.

  Proceeds from oil smuggling in the past ten years have
  ensured that the regime remains immune from the suffering
  caused by sanctions. There is little organised opposition
  within the country and Saddam's Western-backed exiled
  opponents remain weak. Assassination attempts, coup plots
  and an uprising in the wake of the 1991 Gulf War failed to
  unseat him.

  Any succession in the Iraqi regime is unlikely to be as
  smooth as that in neighbouring Syria after the death in June
  of President Hafez al-Assad. The reins of power in
  Damascus were passed uncontested to his son, Bashar, a
  British-trained eye doctor.

  The rivalry between Saddam's sons is compounded by his
  reluctance to make clear which one will succeed him.
  Uday, 36, is portrayed by defectors as a torturer, serial
  rapist and killer. The less mercurial Qusay, 34, controls the
  intelligence and security apparatus.

http://www.the-times.co.uk/news/pages/tim/2000/07/27/timfgnmid01001.html

Link via:
http://www.newsviewtoday.com

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To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - Infobeat News items (7/27/00)
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Moza")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 09:01:44 -0400

*** U.N. faces funding shortfall

GENEVA (AP) - The U.N. said Wednesday it faces a major funding
shortfall in tackling humanitarian crises from Congo to North Korea,
with donors so far providing only a third of the $2.5 billion it has
sought for this year. The world body asked for the money to support
some 35 million people in 16 countries. "We are very dismayed" that
richer nations so far have paid out only 36.6% of the overall
funding, a U.N. official said. "At the same time last year, we were
at approximately 50%." Uganda has attracted only $2.4 million - far
less than the required $27.5 million - forcing cutbacks to refugee
and food programs, the United Nations told donors. Congo, the
Republic of Congo and Burundi received around one-fifth. See
http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2568445495-c35

*** Senate OKs $600 mln for AIDS

WASHINGTON (AP) - Legislation committing up to $600 million in U.S.
aid for fighting HIV and AIDS in Africa and developing countries
elsewhere was passed Wednesday by the Senate. On a voice vote, the
Senate approved a bill by Sens. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., and Jesse Helms,
R-N.C., authorizing $300 million in each of the next two years for
AIDS prevention and treatment and also for the care of AIDS orphans
in developing countries. The bill directs the Treasury Department to
establish a trust fund with the World Bank for the prevention efforts
and the treatment of orphans. Helms, chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said the bill requires that up to $220 million
of all U.S. bilateral funding for HIV-AIDS programs over the next two
years be spent on supporting orphans in Africa. The United Nations
has predicted that the disease is expected to wipe out half the
teen-age population in some poor countries in Africa. See
http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2568444345-6f7

*** Arrests made in Jerusalem fires

JERUSALEM (AP) - Israeli police have arrested 3 Orthodox Jews
suspected of setting fire to a Conservative synagogue in Jerusalem
and vandalizing a sanctuary of Messianic Jews, officials said. The
suspects were arrested in the last two days, a Jerusalem police
spokeswoman said. One is a minor. The suspects, secular Jews who
recently became religious, are suspected in the June 24 firebombing
at the Ramot Forest synagogue, affiliated with the Conservative
stream of Judaism. Several prayer books and chairs were lost in the
fire. The damage was estimated at several thousands of dollars. The
synagogue, located in the well-to-do section of Jerusalem's Ramot
neighborhood, had been the target of demonstrations and protests by
ultra-Orthodox Jews before. See
http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2568442302-3a0

*** Extinction traced to methane burp

(AP) - Huge reservoirs of methane trapped beneath the ocean floor
rapidly escaped during prehistoric global warming and depleted much
of the sea's oxygen, according to new research into why many forms of

life suddenly vanished 183 million years ago. The findings, reported
in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature, shed new light not only on

the disappearance of as many as 80% of some deep-sea species but also a
process suspected in other prehistoric mass extinctions. The study also
raised questions about today's sea floor reservoir of methane hydrate, which
the federal government plans to study as a possible energy source. "One of
the important questions that is debated a lot today is the stability of this
methane hydrate reservoir and how easy it is to release the methane that is
there," said Stephen Hesselbo, an Oxford University researcher and the
study's lead author. See
http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2568437281-16e

*** Study: Net bigger than we think

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The Internet has become so large so fast that
sophisticated search engines are just scratching the surface of the
Web's vast information reservoir, according to a new study released
Wednesday. The 41-page research paper, prepared by a South Dakota
company that has developed new software to plumb the Internet's
depths, estimates the World Wide Web is 500 times larger than the
maps provided by popular search engines like Yahoo!, AltaVista and
Google.com. "These days it seems like search engines are a little
like the weather: Everyone likes to complain about them," said Danny
Sullivan, editor of SearchEngineWatch.com, which analyzes search
engines. "The World Wide Web is getting to be so humongous that you
need specialized engines. A centralized approach like this isn't
going to be successful," predicted Carl Malamud, co-founder of
Petaluma-based Invisible Worlds. See
http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2568446616-9d8

*** Court rejects N.J. abortion law

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - A federal appeals court agreed Wednesday that a
New Jersey law banning certain late-term abortions is
unconstitutional. The finding by a three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals upholds the ruling of a federal judge in
Trenton who struck down the law in 1998. The panel said the court's
decision was made before the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments on a
Nebraska law also aimed at banning so-called "partial-birth"
abortion. The Supreme Court found the Nebraska law unconstitutional.
Abortion rights advocates had argued that the ban was so broad and
vague it could be used to prohibit all abortions. Their opponents
countered that the law applied specifically to "partial-birth"
abortion, in which the fetus is pulled part of the way through the
birth canal and the brain is removed to allow the head to pass. See
http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2568441028-47b ***
Also: Judge rules on abortion protesters, see
http://www.infobeat.com/stories/cgi/story.cgi?id=2568446617-07d

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To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - Record Sunspot Count Reported
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Moza")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 09:19:23 -0400

 July 27, 2000
 
                                       Record Sunspot
                                       Count Reported

                                       By Larry O'Hanlon,
                                       Discovery.com News

                                       July 25, 2000 =97 July is
                                       becoming the most
                                       sunspot-laden month in
                                       years, say solar
                                       scientists who are
                                       watching the sun this
                                       summer for signs of the
                                       solar maximum.

                     On July 20, some 401 sunspots were counted on
                     the sun =97 a number that hasn't been reached in
                     six years. Such a large sunspot value is rare. The
                     daily sunspot numbers surpass 400 on no more
                     than a few days during the sun's 11-year cycles of
                     activity.

                     Scientists can identify when the sun has entered its
                     maximum period of activity =97 called the solar
                     maximum and predicted to fall this year =97 by
                     looking for the months during the solar cycle when
                     sunspot activity is at its highest.

                     Whether the abnormally high sunspot count last
                     Thursday means the sun has hit its maximum will
                     take some time to determine, say scientists.

                     What they can say with certainty, however, is that
                     the danger of the Earth being blasted by powerful
                     solar storms has not passed.

                     "Sunspots (numbers) are interesting because there
                     is a long historical record to compare to," said Joe
                     Kunches, a lead space weather forecaster at the
                     National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's
                     Space Environment Center in Boulder, Colo. "But we
                     don't live and die by the daily sunspot number."

                     Researchers still have to average out the sunspot
                     numbers and compare them to other months
                     before they can say whether sunspot activity has
                     peaked, said Kunches. "You don't know if you're at
                     the maximum by counting sunspots until six
                     months or more later," he said.

                     In other words, we could be at the solar maximum,
                     but it all depends on what the sun does next =97
                     which is anyone's guess.

                     "There are three possibilities," quipped Jo Ann
                     Joselyn, a solar scientist with the University of
                     Colorado at Boulder, "it can increase, decrease or
                     remain the same."

                     Until mid-July the sun has been behaving
                     remarkably docile with few sunspots and fewer
                     flares, Joselyn said. Now it seems to be back on
                     course for the cycle, she said.

                     Of more practical importance than figuring out the
                     month of the solar maximum, however, is watching
                     for sunspot groups that might aim at Earth and
                     hammer it with X-rays, super-hot charged particles
                     and heavy radiation, said Kunches. That doesn't
                     require 401 sunspots but just a few, clustered
                     together and lined up dead center.

                     Such a setup gives the sunspots the opportunity to
                     release their energy right at us, as Sunspot Group
                     9077 did two weeks ago when it let loose the most
                     powerful storm of the current solar cycle.

http://www.discovery.com/news/briefs/20000725/sp_sunspot.html

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To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - United Societies in Space
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Moza")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 09:24:55 -0400

 United Societies in Space (usis.org) Constitutional Convention, will
 be held at the University of Denver Law School, Denver, Colorado,
 USA on August 4-5, 2000. The convention is open to the public.
 
 USIS' Constitution, to be adopted at the Convention, establishes a
 private governance entity in Space, independent of the U.N. and
 national governments, and based on the common law. Exopolitic's
 author Alfred Webre, a Yale Law School-trained international
 lawyer, has been invited to address the Convention with a
 mechanism to allow for institutional docking with extraterrestrial
 government, as that occurs.
 
 Exopolitics and USIS will be discussed by author Alfred Webre as
 guest July 28 at 1 AM PT on KOA radio (Rick Barber). You can
 listen to the program live at: http://www.850koa.com/listen.html
 
 Exopolitics is the study of government and politics in the Universe.
 EXOPOLITICS, EPISODE ONE, an idea-manifesto, is available free
 at Universebooks.com.
 

USIS Constitution
http://usis.org/constitu.htm

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To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - Disappearing Sun takes its toll
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Shophar_Sho_Good")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 09:03:48 -0500

Disappearing Sun takes its toll
http://www.newscientist.com/nl/0729/sun.html

WATCHING a solar eclipse may be so stressful that it is bad for your health,
say British researchers. So there might be a grain of truth in myths
surrounding eclipses after all.
 
Omar Mian at Manchester University and Rubina Mian and Doug Thake at
Coventry University were mocking tales of eclipses making people sick, or
even causing deformities in unborn children. "Then I pointed out there was
no evidence either way," says Rubina Mian.

Mian took her graduate students to a field in Briey, France, to watch the
1999 summer eclipse. By analysing their blood samples with a luminometer,
the researchers found that leukocyte activity increased by 8.7 per cent
during the eclipse. These white blood cells usually help our immune system,
but if overstimulated they can damage DNA by releasing free radicals.
Experiments after the eclipse showed that darkness, silence and temperature
had no effect on leukocyte activity. But in other studies being prepared for
publication Mian has found that stress can have a big effect.

"I know I was stressed," says Mian about the eclipse. "It was really quite
overwhelming." And if it's stressful for her, Mian says it must be worse for
those who don't understand what an eclipse is, or who believe legends about
the phenomenon.

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To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - Force Fields and 'Plasma' Shields Get Closer to Reality
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Moza")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 12:28:50 -0400

Thursday, July 27, 2000

                                     Force Fields and
                                     'Plasma' Shields Get
                                     Closer to Reality

                                     By James Schultz
                                     Special to SPACE.com
                                     posted: 07:00 am ET
                                     25 July 2000

                  Space-borne protective energy systems, like the
                  deflector shields on the fictional starship U.S.S.
                  Voyager, are on the drawing board of real-world
                  scientists.

                  These "cold plasmas" -- analogs to the sophisticated
                  defensive grids envisioned by Star Trek's creators --
                  are ambient-temperature, ionized gases related to those
                  found deep within the sun´s core.

                  Such plasmas are capable of shielding satellites and
                  other spacecraft; or making them invisible to radars; or
                  both. Nor will they fry electronics or melt metal.

                  On Earth, cold plasmas should permit
                  rapid, room-temperature sterilization of
                  food, medical equipment and
                  contaminated civilian and military gear.
                  Low-temperature plasmas could one day
                  also make possible an entire new
                  generation of miniature lasers and ultra-low-energy
                  fluorescent light tubes.

                  While scientists have known of low-temperature plasmas
                  since at least the end of the 19th century, only within
                  the past several years have techniques emerged to make
                  cold plasma generation practical.

                  “This Star Wars stuff is coming .... A good cold
                  plasma could really help out by reflecting or
                  absorbing energy from a microwave war
                  weapon.”
                       Igor Alexeff, president of the Institute of
                       Electrical and
                  Electronics Engineers' Nuclear and Plasma Sciences
                  Society

                  Vaulting to the first ranks of cold-plasma research in
                  the last three years has been soft-spoken, unassuming
                  Tunisian native Mounir Laroussi, an electrical and
                  computer engineer at Old Dominion University in Norfolk,
                  Va. Research groups at Stanford, Princeton, Ohio State,
                  Wisconsin and New York Polytechnic also are conducting
                  their own plasma-research programs.


                  Side view of a cold plasma inside a Pyrex glass
                  container. Cold
plasmas can
                  cloak satellites and spacecraft from radar view and
                  shield
against attack from
                               certain kinds of energy weapons.

                  Laroussi has literally put plasma on the table: devising
                  an apparatus that creates a mini-plasma inside a
                  plexiglass cube by passing an electric current through
                  helium gas via specially calibrated electrodes.

http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/cold_plasma_000724.
html

Part 2

                  Force Fields and 'Plasma' Shields Get
                  Closer to Reality(cont.)

                  Laroussi´s process, specified in pending patent
                  applications, is scalable; cold-plasma containers of
                  virtually any size are feasible. No vacuum pumps are
                  required, since the plasma is generated at normal
                  atmospheric pressure.

                  "Mounir is on the forefront. He´s one of the pioneers,"
                  said Igor Alexeff, president of the Institute of
                  Electrical and Electronics Engineers' Nuclear and Plasma
                  Sciences Society and professor emeritus of electrical
                  engineering at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.
                  "He´s pushing very hard to develop a variety of
                  practical plasmas. His work is pretty impressive."

                  Invulnerable and invisible

                  The U.S. Air Force allocates some $10 million a year for
                  research geared toward satellite protection. Of that
                  amount, $2 million is dedicated to low-temperature
                  plasma studies.

                  Robert Barker, program manager for plasma physics in the
                  Air Force´s Office of Scientific Research in Arlington,
                  Va. is so taken with Laroussi´s approach that he thus
                  far has funneled $250,000 into Laroussi´s research since
                  his arrival at Old Dominion from the University of
                  Tennessee a little over a year ago. The Air Force has
                  supported Laroussi´s work since 1996.

                  Barker is drawn not just by Laroussi´s plasma-creating
                  prowess, but his ability to make low-temperature plasma
                  inexpensively, in bulk and without the need for hulking
                  equipment.

                  "What´s intriguing about Mounir´s work is the large
                  volumes of plasma he´s been able to generate," Barker
                  said. "He´s making very good progress in keeping costs
                  and weight low. His approach gives the best power
                  figures for practical, large-volume generation of cold
                  plasma we have to date."

                  Power-hungry plasmas

                  Poke a finger inside Laroussi´s tabletop
                  plasma-generating apparatus and all you´ll get from the
                  bluish, pilot-light-like ionized gas is a slight tingle.
                  But the harmless sensation is misleading, since it
                  doesn´t give a complete picture of plasma´s power.
                  Depending on how a plasma is "tuned," or how it is made
                  more dense by increasing its frequency, it could ward
                  off microwave bursts and discharges from ground-based,
                  energized sources of potential damage and disruption.

                  Swirling in and around one another, a plasma´s charged
                  particles interact constantly, giving rise to localized
                  attractions or repulsions. External energy splashing
                  against the plasma --- say, from a potentially
                  disabling, concentrated burst of microwaves, or perhaps
                  even from certain varieties of particle-beam weapons
                  fired from military bases on Earth --- could be caught
                  up within the plasma´s complex electromagnetic fields
                  and dissipated completely or deflected into space.

                  Hotter plasmas, while dense, don´t appear immediately
                  practical as a defensive shield because of destructive
                  temperatures and high power requirements. In theory,
                  cold plasmas can be made more dense, but like their
                  hotter kin will demand more power. Energy availability
                  and weight --- the larger the required wattage, the
                  heavier the equipment --- would remain thorny issues.

                  "In theory, a plasma could deflect a particle beam or
                  laser attack," Laroussi says. "It depends on what you´re
                  shooting at it and how high you can tune the plasma
                  frequency. That doesn´t mean it´s easy or practically
                  achievable, particularly with a cold plasma. It´s a
                  tough requirement to meet at present."

                  Cloaking mirrors

                  A nearer-term application is cloaking. With the proper
                  adjustments, a plasma can be made into a kind of energy
                  mirror, reflecting back or away incoming electromagnetic
                  waves, such as those emitted from ground-based radars.
                  In essence, any spacecraft outfitted with this kind of
                  plasma field would be completely cloaked from the
                  probing attentions of radar operators.

                  "The idea is to deflect or absorb the energy
                  completely," Laroussi said. "If you absorb the energy
                  --- completely dissipating it within the plasma --- the
                  radar doesn´t see anything. Nothing reflects back."

                  Light but potent

                  Lofting payloads into space must currently observe one
                  of the Space Age´s key commandants: Make nothing so
                  heavy that it must cost much to launch.

                  Any on-board plasma-generation equipment would therefore
                  have to be small and lightweight. Laroussi´s gear seems
                  to fit the bill: compact enough to save on weight, yet
                  powerful enough to produce the necessary plasma volume.

                  But don´t expect completely impervious shields anytime
                  soon. Any number of technical issues remains to be
                  solved, not the least of which is exactly how to make
                  cold plasmas dense enough to withstand attack. The
                  ultimate --- protection against projectiles or lasers
                  --- is likely decades away, at best.

                  "Ablative shields made of solid material might work,"
                  said the Air Force´s Barker. "A portion of the solid
                  would be converted to plasma [when hit]. But In a strict
                  sense, I don´t consider that plasma shielding."

                  Star wars defense

                  Less immediately space-like, but no less practical, are
                  biological applications. Cold plasmas allow for rapid
                  decontamination of clothing, equipment or personal gear.
                  In disrupting the integrity of cell membranes, the
                  plasmas appear to offer a rapid, simple and inexpensive
                  means of destroying even the hardiest bacterial spores.
                  At present, sterilization time can run hours; use of a
                  cold plasma could sanitize in mere minutes.


                   End-on view of a cold plasma inside a glass cylinder.
                   This particular variety
                     can be used to break down toxic gases into harmless
                     constituents. The
                   apparent "steering wheel" is an optical byproduct of
                   the cylinder's shape and
                                the way the plasma is generated.

                  Should this application pan out, it could offer to
                  hospitals and armies alike a safe and reliable way to
                  counteract potential health hazards, either those posed
                  by disease or in combat. Likewise, exobiologists might
                  rest easy knowing that cold plasmas could remove the
                  potential threat of contamination from collected
                  interplanetary samples returned to Earth´s surface.

                  Still, it´s hard to vanquish all the SF combat
                  scenarios. Plasmas may be one of the best defensive
                  options as offensive capabilities continue a rapid and
                  relentless advance.

                  "This Star Wars stuff is coming," said Igor Alexeff.
                  "Laser and high-power microwave weapons are on the way;
                  they´re almost here. Lasers are fierce weapons. To
                  protect against them, you´d need a very dense plasma,
                  almost a solid. But a good cold plasma could really help
                  out by reflecting or absorbing energy from a microwave
                  war weapon."

http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/cold_plasma_000724_
2.html

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========
To: bpr-list@philologos.org (BPR Mailing List)
Subject: [BPR] - Muddled Muggles
From: bpr-list@philologos.org("Shophar_Sho_Good")
Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 13:22:53 -0500

This is the line of thinking trying to rationalize
the acceptance of witches/wicca---as is par for this course, they are short
on facts and long on personal attacks and aspersions...one might even
say,"intolerant"!
-------------------------------------------

Muddled Muggles
Conservatives Missing the Magic in Harry Potter

Perhaps jealous its sales may trounce those of the wildly popular Left
Behind novels -- the evangelical publishing phenomenon scribbled by
fundamentalists Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins -- many religious
conservatives have been up in arms over J.K. Rowling's phenomenally
successful Harry Potter series. The case against the books? According to
some evangelicals, they promote Satanism and witchcraft.

No one in the media seems to have reported what actual flesh and blood
Wiccans (or, for that matter, Satanists) think of these allegations. But
when the fourth book in Rowling's series, Harry Potter and the Goblet of
Fire, came out last weekend, religious rightists were heard in abundance.
Anti-Potterite camps include the following:

Move over, Tinky Winky. Some have alleged that the lightning bolt scar on
Harry Potter's forehead, which is vaguely S-shaped, stands for "Satan."
Always searching out threats to his brand of Christian morals, Jerry Falwell
once accused the purple, purse-carrying Teletubbies character Tinky Winky of
being gay; Satan-pushing Harry Potter may trump even Tinky Winky on the list
of evils.

Also conspiracy-mongering is this theological faction:

The Anti-Witch Establishmentarians. Not all members of the Christian right
think that Satan is behind the success of Rowling's books. But a number
object that the Harry Potter novels, which they view as friendly to the
occult, give the IRS-recognized religion of Wiccanism a leg up in school
classrooms, while Christian students still can't hold organized prayer in
public schools. "There's no denying Harry Potter has a lot of symbolism for
Wiccans," comments Karen Jo Gounaud, president of Family Friendly Libraries.
"Everyone is a witch or warlock; they cast spells, drink blood. They believe
in reincarnation." Lobbing an even more vicious charge, Linda Beam,
contributing culture analyst for Focus on the Family, says of Rowling's
fiction that "these stories are not fueled by witchcraft, but by
secularism."

On the other side of the Atlantic, meanwhile, the anti-Potterites seem to
have made friends with:

Henry VIII's "Always Anxious to Please" Church. One might think that the
Harry Potter novels would receive an enthusiastic reception in Britain. But
in fact, officials at Canterbury Cathedral recently dissed Warner Bros. when
the film company asked to shoot the medieval building as the Hogwarts School
of Witchcraft and Wizardry for its upcoming movie version of the Harry
Potter series. "Because this is the leading center of the Anglican
Communion, we had to be sensitive to the feeling of some Christians that
there is something anti-Christian in these books," said a Cathedral
spokesperson. "We had to be sensitive to all shades of opinion."

Reflecting a related shade of opinion:

The "Slippery Slope" Theorists. Reverend Lori Jo Scheppers, a "troubled
youth counselor," told CNN, "As we expose our kids to the occult, we expose
our kids to blood, to violence, and desensitize them to that. What I can
expect is those kids, as they mature, have a very good chance of becoming
another Dylan Klebold and those guys in Columbine."

But not all evangelicals hate Harry Potter:

The Repentant Nixonites. Chuck Colson, who went to prison for Watergate
offenses and later founded the evangelical Prison Fellowship Ministries,
likes Harry Potter. Harry and cohorts, Colson opines, "develop courage,
loyalty, and a willingness to sacrifice for one another, even at the risk of
their lives. . . . Not bad lessons in a self-centered world." And then there
are . . .

The Bootstrappers. Indeed, some conservatives find admirable values embodied
not only by the characters of Rowling's novels, but by Rowling's own
perseverance as a writer in the face of considerable hardship and poverty.
In an op-ed on literary aspects of the Potter novels, George Will glowingly
depicts this resilience and personal initiative:

"Not long ago Rowling was a single mother living on welfare in an unheated
Edinburgh flat. She would push a stroller through the streets until her
young daughter fell asleep, then she would nurse a cup of coffee in a warm
cafe while she wrote about a bespectacled 11-year-old orphan boy whose
parents were wizards."
How touching. But before conservatives start touting writing best-selling
children's novels as an alternative to welfare (and advocating cuts in
welfare programs as the only way to encourage such authorship), one should
note that Rowling originally began plotting the Potter plots when she was
still a teenager, in 1976.

And not everyone has Rowling's literary talents. Conservative columnist Bill
Murchison crashes and burns with this syrupy paean to Harry Potter:

"Hooray for Harry, I feel entitled to cry, without having so much as slipped
a Potter book into a Borders bag. If he's bad or mediocre, so what? He's a
book -- two covers, see? A thick spine to weigh in the hand; pages to thrust
a nose between, for the sake of appropriating the aroma of glue and paper;
summer dreams to dream."
Among libertarians, too, one finds celebration of the moral overtones of
Rowling's tale. Consider:

The George Lucas School. Those at the libertarian Ayn Rand Institute commend
the Harry Potter series for imparting enduring philosophical wisdom about
the nature of good and evil to children. In a highly Latinate op-ed e-mailed
out by the Mothership, objectivist Dianne L. Durante argues Rowling's novels
can teach kids yin-yang lessons, including how to see the glass as half full
instead of half empty:

"When my seven-year-old races around the dining room table swathed in an old
bathrobe, with a broomstick made of a mini-blind wand and cardboard, she is
not expressing an interest in witches or the supernatural. Rather, she is
trying on the personality of an independent, courageous intelligent
individual who conquers evil. She is enthusiastically endorsing a positive
philosophic perspective on herself and on the world."
Or just playing.

But regardless of their perspective, conservatives seem to be overlooking
another reason to "just say no" to Harry Potter. Haven't they noticed that
kids seem unfailingly attracted to books with the word "Potter" on the
cover? First Beatrix, now Harry. . . . Could it be a plot to spread
marijuana use among the young?

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