i think trance is stupid

shiva...god of rants. why not try justifying yourself?

whats wrong with stupid anyway? :lol:
 
no cure for the likes of me. straight up prankster. ho ho ho you'll recognise me at the next trance party. i'm the one who dresses up as a jester because i am so flamboyant and feel the need for everyone to recognise this.

i also have a firestick system which generates a mini turbine which powers a small light show on the back of my jester's hat

i sometimes juggle n' all
 
</div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (mud lovin hippie chick @ Mar 30 2004, 04:23 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> For gods sake go preach to someone who cares unforunatley this is neither the time nor the place for religion any body who has had any kind of "religious" experience will know that the only god that exists is in side our selfs i fully understand that people need something to believe in, people are essentially sheep and need something to follow when we are not strong enough to make the decision ourselves, look at all the wars that have happened in GODS name do you really think that all all loving all understanding all tolerant almighty god would tell people to go to war to kill any of gods children, NO I DONT THINK SOOOOOOOOOOOO christianity is hypercritical and is a contrdiction to its self.

please come back when religion makes sense and you can have a rational conversation using your own brain rather than what some one has pored in to your brain........
this may seem harsh but i was a christian untill i realised that it was just maddness, and no body could debate with me because there is no logical explanation for christianity (or many religions)..
if you think youd like to debate with me the finer points of religion just let me know...

no offence was meant to any body who reads this but looking at it another way i am offended by people who preach at me.................................................xx. [/quote:d58ca20572]
you sound like an ex-smoker.
 
i dont want to be rude...but i am. please don't say anything more on this site unless it's something interesting. you're starting to bore me

:wacko:
 
benny fli said:
"try paying a little attention next time you mic yourselves up or whatever it is you hippies types do these days, i dont know... clarky cats, triple sods, yellow bentines whatever..."

Yeah that cake's really beginning to get to my shatners basoon!
 
i think benny has created one of the most noticeable introductions to date, wish i could have made such a grand entrance.

oh yeah and i smelled a rat the second you mentioned the mcdonalds thing
 
well spotted mate.

incidentally am going to organise a field trip to throw eggs at noel edmonds' house in devon soon, chris morris has agreed to drive the bus. anyone interested?
 
</div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (psytrix @ Mar 30 2004, 07:55 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'>churches are cool.

a lot of them are built on old pagan sites i think, so at least these old pagan sites are sort of preserved.[/quote:6bc41bb8b9]

yeah and you know what....

the pagan sites/buildings/etc where perfectly in line with the leylines and other sources of greatness.....the churches may be in the same place...but they purposely turned them to face in the wrong direction...check it out...well if u were to check it out ud have to be living somewhere where a ley line ran through...and then go look at the church there...n notice that its going through the ley line not with it...

but hey anyhoo....:) how is everyone...:D not posted in ehre in a veryyyy long time...:(


HELLOOOOOOOOOO :D

byeeee n *huggles* n nice bouncy stuff...

Goa
 
ley lines are a common misconception by people who do not read much or subscribe to popular science myths. they were in fact made by groups of huckleberry sellers who were the stone age equivalent of double glazing salesman travelling the lengths of the country and converging at popular stopping points such as stonehenge where they used to organise large markets, in fact stone henge was the first covered huckleberry market in the uk, the equivalent of bluewaters shopping centre

sorry to burst your bubble but i do read...
 
DaDa
GooGoo
weeeeeee...........
um, er, um,...........huh?!!
weeeeeeeeeeee
No comprehende'
no literate
googoo
da

EVERYONE - THIS IS GREAT NEWS, benny can actually read..........yay!!
 
oooooooo mince, like your photo... is that you you handsome chappie..... and can we please go for a pint sooooooooon

NB: arms are for hugging, ohms not bombs!!!!
 
on the subject of ley lines

**cough**

Ley lines are alleged alignments of ancient sites or holy places, such as stone circles, standing stones, cairns, and churches. Interest in ley lines began with the publication in 1922 of Early British Trackways by Alfred Watkins (1855-1935), a self-taught amateur archaeologist and antiquarian. Based upon the fact that on a map of Blackwardine, near Leominster, England, he could link a number of ancient landmarks by a series of straight lines, he became convinced that he had discovered an ancient trade route. Interest in these alleged trade routes as sources of mystical energy has become very popular among New Agers in Great Britain.

Today, ley lines have been adopted by New Age occultists everywhere as sources of power or energy, attracting not only curious New Agers but aliens in their UFOs and locals with their dowsing rods. These New Age occultists believe that there are certain sites on the earth which are filled with special "energy." Stonehenge, Mt. Everest, Ayers Rock in Australia, Nazca in Peru, the Great Pyramid at Giza, Sedona (Arizona), Mutiny Bay, among other places,  are believed to be places of special energy.  There is no evidence for this belief save the usual subjective certainty based on uncontrolled observations by untutored devotees. Nevertheless, advocates claim that the alleged energy is connected to changes in magnetic fields. None of this has been scientifically verified. Maps have been produced, however, with lines on them which allegedly mark off special energy spots on earth. For example, the Seattle Arts Commission gave $5,000 to a group of New Age dowsers, the Geo Group,  to do a ley line map of Seattle. Photographs of the result, which looks like a defaced satellite photo of the Seattle area, can be purchased for $7.00 from the group. It proudly proclaims that the "project made Seattle the first city on Earth to balance and tune its ley-line system." The Arts Commission has been criticized by skeptical citizens for funding a New Age, pagan sect, but the artwork continues to be displayed on a rotating basis in city-owned buildings within Seattle.

well thats that back to work....
 
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