Amo la Libertad... Inglés. Nº 25

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Índice Editorial Why Baruch? By Miguel A. Morra Present Beautiful, dark soul By Fernando Giuliani Stories Luminous footprints By Constanza Margaret Mead Concepts Deities By Raimundo Collado Reflections Argentina: The Kingdom of María Elena By an old liberal wolf Reflexión en imágenes. Humor 2


Riddles Uni2 The party What is Uni2? What sets Uni2 apart from other parties? Who is it? What do we want in politics? Uni2 Santa Fe Contact Archive I love freedom Puzzle solution


Editorial Why Baruch? By Miguel A. Morra

Baruch Spinoza, also known as Baruj, Bento, Benito, Benedicto or Benedictus Spinoza or Espinosa, according to the different translations of his name, based on the hypotheses about his origin, was a Dutch philosopher of Sephardic origin. His name in Portuguese was Benedito de Espinosa. He was influenced by RenĂŠ Descartes, Plato, Aristotle, MORE 4


He was born on November 24, 1632 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands and died on February 21, 1677 in The Hague, Netherlands . His notable work: Ethics Wikipedia ………………… .. To say that Spinoza took rationalism to its maximum consequences , is not less wise, however, in general and pretentious of the statement, it does not necessarily allude in a correct way to the structured and deep thought of this philosopher of Jewish- Hispanic origin residing in Holland. Spinoza's life and work reflect not only a true commitment, but also a congruent questioning of dogmas and privileges of his time, perhaps that is why Toni Negri describes him as subversive. Considered by some as minor for the sake of his exacerbated rationalism, Spinoza's thought is by the way conciliatory and shows a facet of man that no one had dared to investigate, perhaps because only he imagined the rational being and discarded the infinitely imagined rational being .


By Alejandro Ocampo. Reason and Word No. 36. ……………………. Spinoza's phrases have that singular combination of simplicity and depth that only great intelligences produce. Many philosophers, such as Hegel and Schelling, considered him the father of modern thought. On the other hand, compared to these philosophers of such complex prose, their statements are clear and understandable. His family, Jewish, was persecuted for generations. We have references from his exodus from Spain, Portugal and France. Only in Holland did they find an atmosphere that allowed them to settle and live in peace. Perhaps this explains why in Spinoza's works and phrases the theme of religion occupies a central place. The thing about this philosopher was not to propagate religious beliefs, but to question them. That is why he was expelled from Judaism. Several of his works were banned. It was his friends who after his death published much of the material he had 6


written. Many of Spinoza's phrases have an impressive lucidity that we still admire today. Spinoza was a freethinker ahead of his time. His were not dogmas, or prejudices, or beliefs without support. His liberal spirit gave his ideas a deep critical sense . Hence one of his phrases says: "There is as much difference between heads as between palates." This small statement in favor of diversity of thought did not have much acceptance among his contemporaries. . Paragraphs taken from an article by Edith Sånchez ¡ September 25, 2018 from the publication La Mente es Maravillosa

Spinoza was a GREAT DEFENDER OF REASON at a time in history that was very difficult to do, and reason is the fundamental tool in the defense of LIFE, FREEDOM, and PROPERTY that are the base trilogy of


Liberalism and consequently the development of the world. Something interesting to read about Baruch Spinoza for beginners https://huelladelotro.files.wordpress.c om/2013/03/120629704-spinoza-paraprincipiantes1.pdf …… "I have diligently tried not to laugh at human actions, or mourn them, or hate them, but to understand them." -Baruch Spinoza……. A hug, and good reading. The author is CPN Independent, Liberal and Editor

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Present Beautiful, dark soul By Fernando Giuliani It had started as a simple piece of wood, in some past time, it was part of a trunk of a tree in that wonderful forest that covers the slopes of those foothills. Covered with different brushstrokes of green in spring and summer, to turn to various shades of ocher in autumn and finish covered in the white of snow for much of the winter. That native forest, so necessary to maintain the proper balance of the fauna and flora of the place, its place, its world, there so far from everything, so far south, lung of our soil, which breathes with a life of its own and allows us to breathe at the same time, necessary, vital and essential. That piece of wood never imagined what his future would be, it was not different from any other piece that was gathered in that pile, it was just that, a piece of wood awaiting its destiny.


The blacksmith went down to the city early, it was not unusual for him to do it, in short, he repeated it every fifteen days, when he came down from his mountain to stock up on merchandise, he had to do a few purchases of provisions before returning to his cabin in the middle of mount, before leaving he would stop by the sawmill in search of what he needed. He checked the well-arranged pile of different rods that were stacked there. Various cuts and sizes, all types of trees in the area, maitĂŠn wood, cypresses, lenga, myrtles, araucarias and other pines, native red woods, dark hard or semi-hard woods, some older, others not so much. He carefully reviewed the pile, until he took it in his hands, weighed it to measure its balance, examined it in the smallest details to verify that it did not have any knots or cracks, above all, he knew the importance of not having a crack. He took that simple stick with nothing special to his home, began to shape it, working it slowly, with great care, he knew what he 10


wanted to obtain and he treated it with great affection. The loneliness of the human being leads you to do unthinkable things and the loneliness of the blacksmith felt accompanied while he spoke to his creations. While he was molding that table, he conversed with her, as if he could understand it. He told her how beautiful it would be, explained the importance of his future task, caressed it every time he worked its surface, first with different chisels, removing more material, then with sandpaper of various grains until reaching the finest and most well finish with the last caress. I thought that piece of wood I did not understand, but I forget that it was part of a living being, taken from an old cypress that had been born in those forests several years ago. He then began to cut with the circular saw a piece of elastic from an old Ford 8 truck, which he found in a scrap yard in the city, along with other pieces of metal.


He joined different layers of the spring strap, previously cleaned them to ensure a good union in the forge, then he inserted the other plates of different steel, soldered the package covering it with flux and took it to the forge. The coke was already lit, and he fanned the flames by turning the hand fan a few turns, and began forging. The blacksmith was a craftsman, he knew where and how to strike, every so often he would reheat his steel in the forge to be able to continue molding. The strikes of the hammer in rhythmic intervals were the lilting bars of a symphony that was giving way to his masterpiece. Blow by blow the head of the ax took shape, when he had finished he reheated it, verifying the color that was between yellow and orange, homogeneous in the ideal temperature and then he tempered it. He took it out of the oil and began to polish it, allowing him to notice its beauty at every step.

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The veined steel began to emerge, with whimsical curves in his figure following a damask pattern, perfect to the eye. The iron of that steel had been removed from the earth in the Loma de Hierro mine, the ferrous exploitation of Venezuela, so it had a Venezuelan base in its essence. Alloyed with chromium, manganese and vanadium, I don't know if it's a coincidence, but vanadium makes me think of vanity and she was filled with that excessive desire to be admired. Then he sharpened it to a hard and shiny edge like diamonds and that fascinated her, it was known sublime, but built to destroy. Beautiful, dark soul, cute but lethal. Once finished, he knew that alone he would not achieve it, he needed an instrument to be able to take advantage of it and achieve its destructive end. Then the blacksmith came with the handle and he knew immediately that this was what he needed.


The craftsman began to mount the head of the ax on the wooden end, with great precision and care, he adjusted it so that it did not give way to any blow and thus gave it the power of destruction that he always had in his mind. That perverse head understood immediately that, manipulating the handle, she would achieve her purpose, it did not take long to make him believe that the important one would be him, he flattered him with his oratory and verbiage. The poor wood, remembering what the blacksmith said to him while he was carving it, believed him and without realizing it submissively served his cause. From the beginning it was used and manipulated, it was transformed into the clumsy instrument that was believed important, but we all know that who in each accurate blow, penetrates with lethal voracity and destroys, is truly her. The trees grew up in the same place where they were born, they did not travel, they had no contact with other things other than 14


their environment, the handle of the ax had already been in the city, with which he knew more than the trees themselves, but the ax was He had forged with various materials that came from different and distant places, he believed himself to be superior, arrogant and intelligent, greedy and despotic. She was deceiving them little by little, one by one until they all believed her and took her as their friend, they never doubted her, they never understood where she would lead them, they were an uneducated mass easy to tame and deceive and she was a specialist in deception. She would undoubtedly use the mango to reach her end, always making the trees believe that she cared for their well-being, gave them small gifts without them knowing exactly what their destination would be, cut their branches, tidied their tops, telling them that they would look better. , but she was only looking to cut the ledges that consumed them energy, so that they can grow better and faster, then she would get better benefits by cutting them. cheated.


Her oratory convinced them, they became fanatical defenders of her, clumsy and blindly accepted their fates. “The forest kept dying and the trees kept voting for the ax. She was smart, she had convinced them that because she had a wooden handle, she was one of them " End. The last paragraph came to me on WhatsApp, I transcribed it literally, it was what motivated me to write the story. All characters are fictional, any resemblance to reality is just coincidence. Some books Author's find in Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ ls/1MH8RR5QQ3TQ0?type=wishlist&filter=un purchased&sort=price-asc&viewType=list

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Stories Luminous footprints By Constanza Margaret Mead Did you know that Margaret Mead was one of the researchers who contributed the most to Anthropology in the study of different cultures? It was the forerunner of the concept of gender widely used after and to the present day, introduced in Psychology and Sexology from the 1950s, as a social construction. Margaret compared what it meant to be a man or a woman in seven South Pacific societies with the ideas circulating in American society at the time. From there, he questioned the sexist biologist vision that existed at that time in the social sciences, according to which the different jobs that men and women performed were due to an innate difference. The roles, the passive, obedient and loving woman who raises and cares for children and their home and the tough,


dominant and aggressive man, whose mission is to work and provide the family with sustenance, were observed from their experiences. Throughout history, these roles were considered natural, and they provoked criticism and revulsion towards those people who did not fit into that classification. Margaret found that they are not something natural, but rather a social construction, and that sexual roles and behaviors vary according to sociocultural contexts. It was a novel idea that he captured in his comparative study Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies (1935) Some of the questions Margaret asked herself : Are men inevitably aggressive? Are women inevitably home? The three cultures with which he lived in New Guinea showed that they were not. The Arapesh were peaceful, they did not wage war, neither the men nor the women. The Mundugumor were warlike, both men and women fought. The Tchambuli 18


were different, the men groomed themselves, they groomed themselves and the women worked and they were practical, very different from what happened in America in the 20th century. Contrary to what was thought at the time, it was deduced that the biological differences between both sexes do not determine the social functioning that men and women should have, but that it is upbringing and cultural transmission that produces most of the social differences. Margaret was born in 1901 in Philadelphia and had received her Ph.D. in Anthropology from Columbia University in 1929. Upon her death, in New York on November 15, 1978, the New York Times editorial called her the grandmother of the world. In his words " When we observe the different civilizations and see the very different lifestyles to which the individual has had to conform and to whose development they have had to contribute, we feel our hope in humanity and in its potentialities renewed".


Until the next luminous footprint ! Constanza is a Teacher

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Concepts Deities By Raimundo Collado

In the book Jesus According to the Apocrypha: The Secret Chronicle of the Life of Jesus, by Beatriz Ontaneda Portal and Rose Marie Paz Wells, the authors condense several parallels between the figure of Jesus and the other deities. Among them, the idea of the Holy Trinity, the Egyptian trilogy: Osiris, Isis, Horus; or the Hindu trilogy: Brahma, Vishnu,


Shiva; the conjunction of divine fathers and mortal mothers, and in most cases, virgins. ‌

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In his 1949 book "The Hero with a Thousand Faces", Joseph Campbell theorized that there was only one myth behind the stories of Krishna, Buddha, Apollonius of Tiana, Jesus and other heroes . Later, in "The Masks of God: Western Mythology", Campbell states that "it is clear that, whether or not it is accurate in biographical details, the poignant legend of the crucified and revived Christ was designed to add new warmth, immediacy and humanity to the old tales about the adored Tammuz, Adonis and Osiris. Christianity, along with all other theistic belief systems, is the fraud of the age. It served to separate species from the natural world and equally from each other. Support blind submission to authority. It reduces human responsibility to the effect that "God" controls everything and crimes, in turn terrible, can be justified in the name of divinity. And most importantly, it empowers those who, knowing the truth, use myth to manipulate and control societies. The religious myth is the most powerful device ever created, and it serves as a psychological ground on which other myths can flourish. 26


Deities Horus: God of Egyptian mythology. He was the son of Isis, who because of the way she became pregnant with Osiris (post mortem), could be considered to be "conceived without sin." In the early 20th century, Gerald Massey claimed that there are similarities between the Egyptian god Horus and Jesus. Along the same lines, in the 1940s, Alvin Boyd Kuhn suggested that not only Christianity but also Judaism were based on Egyptian concepts, and more recently Tom Harpur has expressed similar views in his book "The Pagan Christ �. Mitra / Mithra: Persian God. The date on which Christ's nativity is celebrated, December 25, at the winter solstice, coincides with the day on which the birth of the god Mithras was commemorated. Between 1919 the priest, excommunicated Catholic theologian, philosopher and French historian , Alfred Loisy, published his book The Pagan Mysteries and the Christian Mystery, in which he made a


deep and meticulous discussion of the testimonies concerning up to that time on the religions of the mysteries. Pagans and their influence on the historical origins of Christianity: The ritual banquet of the Mithras faithful bore similarities to the Christian Eucharist. Sometimes real bulls were probably sacrificed but bull meat was not eaten, the sacred drink (according to some it was water and according to others it was wine) that represented the bull's blood were the substance of the mystical and divine bull that was Mithras. It was consumed (symbolized in the sacred drink) together with the offering of bread during the supper or metric Eucharist. The substance of the divine bull was in the bread of the supper of the initiates just as the substance of Christ will be in the food of the blessed. Krishna: Hindu God. According to legend, Krishna was not born from the sexual connection between his mother Devaki and his father Vasudeva, but was magically transferred from Vasudeva's heart to Devaki's womb. Legend has it that his uncle, King 28


Kamsa, had a vision in which one of his nephews was going to assassinate him, so he made the decision to kill all of his nephews. But when Krishna was saved, he ordered to kill all the children in the region. Despite this, Krishna managed to survive and even became Kamsa's successor. This is why it is said that Krishna, like Christ, was persecuted by a tyrant who ordered the slaughter of all children of his age. Attis: Phrygian deity (Turkey). According to legend, the deity Agdistis initially had both male and female attributes, but the gods of Olympus, fearful of Agdistis, cut off his male organ and throw him to the ground. In the place where they threw it, an almond tree grew, and when its fruits ripened, Nana, who was the daughter of the river-god Sangarios, picked up a fruit and placed it on her lap. The fruit was absorbed and she became pregnant, and in time Attis was born. This is why it is said that Attis was born to a virgin, Nana, who conceived him by the gods. Joseph Campbell in his book "The Hero with a Thousand Faces" says "In Phrygia, for example, in honor of the crucified and


resurrected Attis, a pine tree was cut down on March 22, which was then transported to the sanctuary of the goddess Cybele ... . March 24 was known as the Day of Blood… ”. This day his resurrection was commemorated, that is, three days later. Dionysus: God of Greek mythology. Not a few scholars argue that the Dionysian religion and Christianity are significantly parallel. In the early 19th century Friedrich Hölderlin published his book Brot und Wein (1800–1801) where he suggested similarities between Christ and the Greek god Dionysus. Later, other modern scholars such as Martin Hengel, Barry Powell and Peter Wick argue that the cult of Dionysus and Christianity show remarkable similarities, among them, they point out the symbolism of wine and the importance it has had in the mythology that surrounds both Dionysus. like Jesus Christ. Furthermore, some experts in comparative mythology claim that both Dionysus and Jesus represent the archetype of the god who dies and rises again. Other similarities have also been suggested , such as 30


the celebration by means of a ritual meal of bread and wine, and specifically Powell affirms that in the cult of Dionysus there are precursors of the Christian notion of transubstantiation. The birth of Jesus Christ is celebrated on the night of December 24 to 25, the precise date on which the Mystery Pagans celebrated in Alexandria (Egypt) the birth of Aion (or Aeon), their version of the Greek god Dionysus. Buddha (Siddharta Gautama): "enlightened" man. Legend has it that Sidarta was conceived one night when his mother, Queen Maya, dreamed that a white elephant with six white tusks entered through her right side. Ten lunar months later, Sidarta was born. This is why it is said that Buddha was born of a virgin. Jerry H. Bentley raises the possibility that "Buddhism influenced the early development of Christendom" and suggests paying "attention to many parallels concerning the births, lives, doctrines and deaths of Buddha and Jesus" in his book "Cross-Cultural Contacts and Exchanges in Pre-Modern Times �.


ZP Thundy studied the similarities and differences between the story of Maya's birth, when she gave birth to Buddha, and that of Mary when Jesus was born. The similarity of their names is also noteworthy. Astronomical references Certain questions in all these cases such as dates, symbols, characters and other details that would seem anecdotal acquire a new meaning when analyzed from the astronomical point of view. Nessa Goodman in her research What do we celebrate on December 25? (based largely on the documentary Zeitgeist) exposes precisely this astronomical perspective: The Eastern Star that announces the birth of Jesus, or of many other deities, corresponds to the star Sirius. On December 24th this star aligns with three other stars known in ancient times as "The Three Kings" in Orion's belt. These three stars follow Sirius in line, pointing directly to the site of sunrise on the morning of December 25. This phenomenon explains the famous story of the Three Wise Men who arrived last at the 32


birth of Jesus, the birth of the sun after the winter solstice. The Virgin Mary, on the other hand, represents the constellation Virgo. During the winter solstice, the constellation Virgo rises above the horizon, giving the impression that the sun, Jesus, is born from this zodiac sign. Virgo also means "virgin" in Latin and in the zodiac it is represented by the letter "M" Hence the name of Mary, and other virgin mothers such as the mother of Horus, Meri, or that of Buddha, Maya. Virgo is also astrologically called "The House of Bread", referring to its iconography, a woman carrying an ear of wheat; and at its time of year, August and September, the harvest period. The Latin translation of the city where Jesus was born, Bethlehem, is "Beth Lehem", literally "The House of Bread." Thus, Bethlehem would not refer to a location on earth, but in the sky, in the constellation Virgo. The date of the birth of Jesus symbolizes the rising of the sun, the beginning of a new season. If we are located in the northern hemisphere it gives the sensation


that from the summer solstice the sun begins to move south, the days get shorter and the light diminishes. On December 22, the sun reaches the lowest point in the sky and stops moving south, it is the winter solstice. For three days, 22, 23 and 24, the sun seems to stop at the Constellation of the South or the Cross, to start moving one degree to the north on the 25th. Image: Zeitgeist, part 1: "The greatest tale of all time" This astronomical event explains why Jesus, among other mythological gods, was crucified, the sun dies in the Constellation of the Cross; he was dead for three days, the sun remains still for three days; and is born or resurrected to ascend to the skies, the sun rises providing longer days, light and warmth. However, the resurrection of Jesus, or the sun, is not celebrated until Easter or Holy Week on the spring equinox. This is the time of year when the sun reaches the middle of the hemisphere and the length of days exceeds that of nights. It is spring, the resurgence, the rising of the sun in the sky. 34


The passage of the sun through the different seasons of the year was illustrated by our pagan ancestors with the zodiacal wheel. The 12 zodiac signs or months are the 12 disciples with whom Jesus, the sun, traveled. Another of the references that are taken as metaphors are the mentions of the era. This is explained through the astronomical phenomenon called Precession of the Equinoxes. Ancient cultures, such as Egypt, noted that every 2,150 years the birth of the sun on the spring equinox occurs in different zodiacal signs. This is due to a gradual and slow change in the angle of the axis of the earth's rotation that travels a full circumference every 25,776 years. In this way, every 2,150 years the sun is projected in different zodiacal signs, which is considered an era: 4,300 BCE / 2,150 BCE Age of Taurus, 2,150 BCE / 1 Age of Aries, 1 / 2,150 Age of Pisces, 2,150 / 4,300 Age of Aquarius. The birth of Jesus coincides with the beginning of the age of Pisces, in which we find ourselves. This explains the numerous


references to fish found in Christian tradition, among others: "We have here only 5 ounces of bread and 2 fish" Matthew 15:17. [The first Christians used the Greek word "icthys", which means fish, as the name of Jesus, and represented their faith with the mystical Pythagorean symbol of the "vesica piscis" (sign of the fish),] made up of two intersecting circles , with which the reign of the sun during the age of Pisces was indicated. [Both the bishops 'miter and the popes' tiara are shaped like a fish's head.] Further, when the disciples asked Jesus what they should do when he was not there, Jesus replied: â€œâ€Ś as you enter the city, a man carrying a jug of water will meet you; follow him home. " Luke, 20:10. The man with the water jug coincides with the iconography of the Aquarius sign, so this quote is seen as a clear allusion to the beginning of a new era after the departure of Jesus or the end of the age of Pisces. Biblical background Beyond the coincidences mentioned with deities of other cultures and religions, 36


there is a prototypical figure of Jesus in the Bible itself: Joseph “the dreamer”, one of the twelve sons of Jacob according to the biblical account of the book of Genesis (Gen. 35:22). In her article "Similarities in the life of José [The Dreamer] and Jesus", Reyna Orozco Meraz presents the following comparative table:

Similarities

Joseph

Firstborn Children

Rachel's firstborn

Beloved of his father

Genesis 37: 3 Israel loved Joseph more than his other sons,

Dreamers

So much so that they called him "the dreamer" Being sold as a slave, he was taken to Egypt. Genesis 37:28 This is how Joseph was taken to Egypt.

They went to Egypt

They had 2 names

Joseph had two names, one Hebrew and one Egyptian Genesis 41:45 And he changed his * name to Joseph,

Jesus The firstborn of Mary Luke 3:22 You are my beloved Son; I am very pleased with you I think he has many dreams and places them in us. Jesus as a child, was taken to Egypt to prevent Herod from killing him (Matthew 2:14 So he got up while it was still night, took the child and his mother, and left for Egypt Jesus had two names, one represented his divinity and the other his humanity. Matthew


and called him Zafenat Panea

They testified against sin and so the hated

Joseph testified against the sin of his brothers and they hated him (Genesis 37: 2 "And Joseph brought complaints to his father about the misconduct of his brothers")

Betrayed

by his brothers, who stripped him of his tunic and threw him into a well. Joseph was sold by Judah for 20 pieces of silver. Genesis 37:28 Genesis 39: 7-12

Sold

Tempted and successfully passed the test Posts in death place along with 2 other criminals One of the criminals died and another lived Being able to kill their attacker,

1:23 and they will call him Immanuel. Luke 2:21 they called him Jesus, a name that the angel had given him before he was conceived. Jesus testified against men and they hated him for it (John 7: 7 "Those who are of the world cannot hate you; but they hate me, because I make it clear that what you do is bad") by a friend who was closer than a brother by Judas for 30 pieces of silver. Matthew 26:15 Matthew 4: 1-11.

Genesis 40: 1-3

Mark 15:27

Genesis 40: 21-22

Luke 23:39

To his brothers

To all of us. Romans 5: 8. But God demonstrates his

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they decided to FORGIVE.

They gave salvation Gave bread Raised from the place of death by the King Liberators of his people

He did not accept payment for the wheat Provided bread in scarcity Clothed by Pharaoh with authority and power Genesis 41:40 Genesis 47:25 "And they answered: You are very kind to us, because you have saved our lives")

love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Gave his blood without condition It is the bread of life She had all the power her Father had given her. Matthew 28:18 (1 Tim 4:10 "That is why we work and struggle, because we have placed our hope in the living God, who is the Savior of all , especially of those who believe").

It is very striking to find so many similarities in the biography of these figures, central to some of the most important religions in the history of mankind. David AS (ReydeKish.com) Source: wikipedia / Jesus Christ in comparative mythology wikipedia / Myth of Jesus


wikipedia / Deity of life, death and resurrection wikipedia / Mithraism Similarities to Christianity wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Loisy wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitra_(Persian_god) wikipedia.org/wiki / Devaki wikipedia.org/wiki/Dionysus wikipedia.org/wiki/Buda_Gautama "Jesus According to the Apocrypha", by Beatriz Ontaneda Portal and R. Marie Paz Wells "Similarities Between Jesus and Other Gods of History", article by Dante Ríos "Those who resurrected", article by Germán Montero Alcalá "The Hidden Truths of the Bible", book by J. Lallemant "What we celebrate on December 25", by Nessa Goodman "Similarities in the life of José [The Dreamer] and Jesus" by Reyna Orozco Meraz "Horus vs Jesus", from Absolum.org "You were Zodiacals, the Sun and the Center of the Galaxy", by Xjm Blog

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Reflections Argentina: The Kingdom of María Elena By an old liberal wolf THE REVERSE KINGDOM When I was little, (long ago) I read that María Elena Walsh had written "THE REVERSE KINGDOM" which began by saying: "They told me that in the Reverse Kingdom the bird swims and the fish flies, that cats don't meow and say yes because they study a lot of English." "They told me that in the Reverse Kingdom nobody dances with their feet, that one thief is vigilant and another is a judge and that two and two are three." I liked this type of fantasy a lot, because the author, displaying great intelligence, amused and taught at the same time “They told me that in the Reverse Kingdom there is room for a bear in a nut, that babies wear beards and mustaches and that a year lasts a month. "


“They told me that in the Reverse Kingdom there is a Pekingese dog that falls up and once could not come down afterwards. " But I was always clear that it was a fantasy, and that there was a very definite border between reality and "The Reverse Kingdom" "They told me that in the Reverse Kingdom a man named Andrés has 1,530 chimpanzees that if you look you don't see them . " “They told me that in the Reverse Kingdom a spider and a centipede ride to the palace of the marquis on chess horses. " When I began to work in my profession, National Public Accountant, I thought that in the fields in which I was going to move there was not much room for "The Kingdom of the Reverse" . If however I was wrong !!! . The vast majority of our legislators and public officials, it seems, did not understand that Maria Elena Walsh wrote a fantasy. 42


Perhaps they thought that "Reverse" was the name of the one who ran the Kingdom. .. And that is how laws, regulations and resolutions were enacted that erased the boundaries between reality and fantasy. From the very famous Credit Invoice, the fiscal controllers, the deferred payment check, the M invoice, the tax withholding systems, the payment of salaries by ATMs, the banking of activities with the check tax included, the information systems, export ban , import difficulties, tax advances, presumed earnings, subsidies, estimates? INDEC, the frozen rates, the partners? strategic abroad, money from a province deposited somewhere in the world, public companies, all kinds of records, proofs of address, inactivity proofs, export withholdings, the FIU and its "systems" against money laundering, etc, etc, I believe that the objective of resembling the Kingdom that the noble "Reverse" ran has been achieved. And also, Kristina wants to show the world how a country is organized !!!


MarĂ­a Elena Walsh concluded her writing with "Let's see what the Reverse Kingdom is like" We can safely say: "Come to Argentina and you will see it, whether you are a public official, legislator or judge and indulge yourself, work as a National Public Accountant , Businessman or Independent Professional and you will be an expert in dealing with the imagination of the nobles of the Kingdom " Without any devastating element involved (wars, epidemics, meteors, etc.), with absolutely favorable natural and population conditions and only with the actions of the majority of our politicians, legislators and judges, we have achieved an Argentina worthy of study in the world, but not because of their successes despite difficulties but because of their failures despite their possibilities.

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Reflexiรณn en imรกgenes.


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Humor A man comes to a Valentine's card sale and asks the grocer: Do you have cards that say for my one true love? The shopkeeper responds: If we have. And the man answers: Give me eight, please. ------------------------------------------------A terribly sorry guy confesses to a priest at church: -'Father, I have sinned. Yesterday I was alone in the house with the babysitter and, you know ... the two of us, the house alone, things worked out ... ' -'But my son, how terrible ....! ' -'No father, that's not all. After the babysitter left and a friend of my sister arrived, but since my sister was not there, you know ...


the two of us, the house alone, things happened ... ' -'But my son, how can it be possible !!!! ' -'But that doesn't end there father. Then the friend left, my girlfriend arrived and, you know ... the two of us alone, the house alone things happened ... ' -'Father, father ...? Is it still there ...? ' The guy looks inside the confessional and doesn't see anyone. The priest is on top of the bell tower, and he yells at him: -'Father! What are you doing up there? Come down I'm not finished .... ' - 'You're crazy ..!! the two alone, the church alone ..... ' ------------------------------------------------At a reception in Canada, Churchill was seated next to an austere Methodist. The waitress came up with a tray of glasses of sherry. WSC grabbed a drink and then the waitress turned to her neighbor, who took 48


offense at the invitation to drink alcohol: "Young lady, I would rather commit adultery than drink an alcoholic drink." Then Churchill beckoned to the young woman: "Come back, miss, I didn't know we had a choice."


Riddles Equation Po ning , a single line the following equation is true: 5 + 5 + 5 = 550 There are two possible solutions Which are? ------------------------------------------------The Rockets Two space rockets are heading towards each other. One travels at a speed of 42,000 km per hour, and the other at 18,000 km per hour. At the beginning of the route, they are separated by a distance of 32,784 kilometers. How far apart are they from each other one minute before impact? Solutions at the end 50


Uni2 The party What is Uni2? Unidos is a political party that intends to recover the ideas that made our country a power and to position freedom again as the fundamental pillar for life in society, economic development and institutional quality. We believe that the key to reversing Argentina's decline is in respect for individual rights, equality before the law, private initiative and the right of each person to seek their own happiness. What sets Uni2 apart from other parties? Internal democracy: the end of the sheet list is one of the fundamental commitments in the creation of Unidos. Any affiliate of the party who so wishes may be a candidate, from an internal election where the Single Transferable Vote (VUT) system will channel the opinions of the members and define those selected for the list and the order in which they will be located. The intolerable


practice of “hand-picking� candidates for elective office is avoided. Openness: solid internal democracy guarantees the possibility that any citizen who shares the principles enshrined by the party can join. The intention is to help the ideological space never be divided into elections. The guarantees for those who wish to enter and participate in the internal elections will be the same as for those who already take part. In this way, the party will consolidate itself as an institution of a lasting nature, a tool for union and a guarantee of representativeness. Antipersonalism : the internal division of powers from which the executive authorities of the party will not be able to run for elective positions guarantees that no personalism acquires a preponderant role, remaining as the central axis the ideas that the party promotes in its declaration of principles and its bases of political action. Innovation: attentive to technological advances and the context in which it arises, those of us who constitute Unidos are aware of the need to adopt technology in their daily 52


operations, and for this we are dedicated to the development of a mobile application. This app will be the vehicle for affiliates to actively participate and decide in internal elections to define pre-candidates. Who is it? We are, quite simply, ordinary people of all ages, who work and study like any other, who enter politics from personal detachment, thinking that Argentina is being changed by a change in Society. We want a change from the roots for Argentina, and we decided to bring the ideas of freedom to the political arena, to allow development and improve the quality of life. What do we want in politics? Our incorporation into the National Congress, the provincial legislatures and the deliberative councils in each municipality will give the space and the entire ideological sector an exponential boost. With a legislative presence, it will be possible to propose real turns in public policy, and give the ideas of freedom a visibility and impact unprecedented in recent years.


We invite you to join this proposal. In the following link you can see all the information. https://unidosargentina.org/index.html .

Something new is needed.

------------------------------------------------A good test if you are interested in knowing your ideological preferences ; https://www.testpolitico.com/ -------------------------------------------------

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Uni2 Santa Fe Contact Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Uni2-ArgentinaSanta-Fe-109998170725956 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/uni2 santafe/ To communicate by articles; WA +54 3492 520854 Facebok https://www.facebook.com/Miguel.A.Morra/


Archive I love freedom Click on the link for the monthly on Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ ls/3TQFMF3EDMMU?type=wishlist&filter=all &sort=default&viewType=list Podcast of some magazine articles: https://anchor.fm/mam4

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Link to read them in e- book https://issuu.com/uni2santafe To download them in pdf Click on the directory Magazines Archive https://drive.google.com/drive/folders /1VBjtldP6oqMyE2CvRwx9dP7y7YVMATCt?us p=sharing


Puzzle solution a) 1) Cross out the =, so that there is a "other than" 2) Add a line to either of the two "plus" signs and form a 4, then 545 + 5 = 550

------------------------------------------------b) One minute before the shock the rockets will be at a distance of 1,000 km. The sum of the speeds is 60,000 km / h, that is, 1,000 km per minute. -----------------------------------

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