Most excellent responses, my friends. And now I pose yet another question: If you could talk to any person in history: (1) who would it be? (2) why did you choose this person? (3) what would you say to this person? (4) what sort of questions would you ask?
Well, this is a great question. I have to think about it!
My first answer would be, Jesus.....though of course we can talk to Him right now, I would love to talk to Him face to face! One day we shall!
When I was a kid, I always wanted to talk to Paul Revere. I just thought he was so interesting.
I will probably be back later after I think about this more.
__________________ "All that concerns Him is infinite, and what we first discern is but the surface of that which begins and ends in eternity..." Cardinal Newman You're the wind that fills my sail, You're the hand that lifts my veil~~You're the moon that moves my tides, the sun coming up in my eyes~~I love you Yeshua (-lyric by keith urban)
Well, this is a great question. I have to think about it!
My first answer would be, Jesus.....though of course we can talk to Him right now, I would love to talk to Him face to face! One day we shall!
When I was a kid, I always wanted to talk to Paul Revere. I just thought he was so interesting.
I will probably be back later after I think about this more.
and to answer your question, right now i have no idea
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On second though, either J.R.R. Tolkien or C.S. Lewis, they were friends could I talk to both?
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great minds and wonderful authors, I want to know where/how they came up with their works
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Oh. That is a good answer. Is there anyone else you would like to meet?
probably. but i would have to think more
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Bush administration on Tuesday threatened to veto Senate legislation designed to improve health care on American Indian reservations, objecting to expanded labor provisions in the bill.
The legislation would boost screening and mental health programs at the Indian Health Service, increase tribal access to Medicare and Medicaid and prompt new construction and modernization of health clinics on reservations. The Senate began consideration of the legislation Tuesday.
The bill would also expand the Davis Bacon Act, which requires contractors and subcontractors to pay workers locally prevailing wages and fringe benefits, to apply to some of the new American Indian projects. The Bush administration said in a statement that the labor provision would violate long-standing administration policy.
Senate Indian Affairs Committee Chairman Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., said the bill is a first step in addressing the "crisis" in American Indian health care. The system is underfunded and inefficient, he said.
Rates of most leading causes of death for American Indians are much higher than the rates for the rest of the country. Rates of alcoholism, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and suicide are especially high.
"Today it is likely somewhere on an Indian reservation someone is dying who shouldn't have to die," Dorgan said on the Senate floor.