johnpaulca 12,036 posts msg #93738 - Ignore johnpaulca |
6/11/2010 4:27:20 PM
E...it's breaking above the lower BB, you are right.
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straken 469 posts msg #93739 - Ignore straken |
6/11/2010 4:30:34 PM
Eman,
Maybe you should try daytrading options. Its very profitable during hi vol weeks.
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Eman93 4,750 posts msg #93741 - Ignore Eman93 |
6/11/2010 5:18:17 PM
Cant trade options in my account...
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johnpaulca 12,036 posts msg #93747 - Ignore johnpaulca |
6/11/2010 9:12:44 PM
'STREET GANGS IN CALGARY, ALBERTA...'
It's gangs like these that the people of Calgary have to put up with.
A bit different from the problems in most other cities...
It just proves that every city has its own 'unique' gang problems.
They roam the streets and yards by both night and day.
They hang out in even the best of neighborhoods!
..and you CANNOT (legally) stop them...!!

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Eman93 4,750 posts msg #93752 - Ignore Eman93 modified |
6/11/2010 11:50:42 PM
You can get a few pit bulls or electric fence.......
Hey they were there first you are the intruder. did you know there is a whole sect of monks that try to go through life with out killing any thing? They walk bear foot and wear scarfs around there mouths for fear of breathing in the smallest insect.
Karma........
Jainism
General Information
{jy'-nizm}
Jainism is a religious faith of India that is usually said to have originated with Mahavira, a contemporary of the Buddha (6th century BC). Jains, however, count Mahavira as the last of 24 founders, or Tirthamkaras, the first being Rishabha. In 1990 the number of Jains worldwide was estimated at 3,650,000, almost all of whom live in India. Jainism has been present in India since Mahavira's time without interruption, and its influence has been significant.
The major distinction within Jainism is between the Digambara and Svetambara sects, a schism that appears to date from about the 1st century AD. The major difference between them is that whereas the Svetambaras wear white clothes, the Digambaras traditionally go naked. Fundamentally, however, the views of both sects on ethics and philosophy are identical.
The most notable feature of Jain ethics is its insistence on noninjury to all forms of life. Jain philosophy finds that every kind of thing has a soul; therefore strict observance of this precept of nonviolence (ahimsa) requires extreme caution in all activity. Jain monks frequently wear cloths over their mouths to avoid unwittingly killing anything by breathing it in, and Jain floors are kept meticulously clean to avert the danger of stepping on a living being. Jains regard the intentional taking of life, or even violent thoughts, however, as much more serious. Jain philosophy posits a gradation of beings, from those with five senses down to those with only one sense.
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Ordinary householders cannot help harming the latter, although they should strive to limit themselves in this regard by refraining from eating meat, certain fruits, or honey or from drinking wine. In addition Jain householders are expected to practice other virtues, similar to those in Hinduism. The vows taken by the Jain monks are more severe. They eventually involve elements of Asceticism: fasting, peripatetic begging, learning to endure bodily discomfort, and various internal austerities constituting a Jain variety of Yoga. Jainism is unique in allowing the very spiritually advanced to hasten their own death by certain practices (principally fasting) and under specified circumstances.
Jain philosophy is based on a fundamental distinction between living and nonliving matter. Living souls are divided into bound and liberated; the living souls are found in both mobile and immobile loci. Nonliving matter is composed of karman or very fine particles that enter a soul and produce changes in it, thus causing its bondage. This influx of karman is induced by activity and has to be burned off by experience. Karmans are of infinitely numerous varieties and account for all distinctions noted in the world. By nonattachment, however, an individual can prevent influx of further karmans and thus escape from the bonds of action. A soul, which is thought of as having the same size as its body, at liberation has lost the matter that weights it down and thus ascends to the top of the universe, where it remains forever.
Jainism recognizes no supreme deity; its ideal is the perfection attained by the 24 Tirthamkaras. Numerous temples have been built celebrating the perfected souls; a notable example is the temple at Mount Abu in Rajasthan.
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jrbikes 624 posts msg #93753 - Ignore jrbikes |
6/12/2010 1:53:30 AM
WOW, that is beautiful, the scenery, and kinda cool to have those big creatures just laying there, maybe not so cool if you have to deal with it, but hey, it's better than cats!
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johnpaulca 12,036 posts msg #93755 - Ignore johnpaulca |
6/12/2010 8:35:29 AM
They feed on your shrubs and trees, dogs are scared of them. I take out the garden hose on them.
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Eman93 4,750 posts msg #93756 - Ignore Eman93 |
6/12/2010 10:25:05 AM
You need the right dog... Irish Wolfhound?

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jrbikes 624 posts msg #93771 - Ignore jrbikes |
6/13/2010 3:37:54 AM
LOL, hey JP, is that your yard?
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johnpaulca 12,036 posts msg #93802 - Ignore johnpaulca |
6/13/2010 11:44:52 PM
Not my yard but on the same street.
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