Fiannan

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Posts posted by Fiannan

  1. Oh, and while we're at it, drink coffee to help prevent skin cancer. ;)

    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/08/26/...ain519822.shtml

    The aticle seems to say that caffeine if in sun protection lotion (applied to the skin) seems to be effective in getting rid of cancers in the skin -- doesn't seem to imply that you get protection from drinking coffee. Also in the article...

    Caffeine, heavily consumed in coffee, tea and some cola drinks, has been shown in other studies to prompt mental alertness in many people. Some studies have suggested caffeine aggravates symptoms of menopause or intensifies the side effects of some antibiotics. Heavy caffeine use has been linked to miscarriage. Some studies also have suggested that some people can become addicted to caffeine and can experience headaches and other symptoms when deprived of their morning coffee or cola.

    The aticles I originally mentioned (except perhaps the one on vra use and cancer) indicate proven methods of reducing the risk of cancer. The most obvious, for women, is having children. For each and every child you have (and better if you breastfeed) you reduce your risk of breast and uterine cancer. The reason white career women with high status jobs, lesbians and nuns have high rates of cancer is due to lack of childbearing. Exercise is a great way to reduce the risk of a host of cancers in men and women and sunlight (while too much can cause basel cell carcenoma) has been increasingly shown to reduce cancers and degenerative bone disorders.

    As for some people getting all freaky about the bra thing I have to say that I see a lot of women in bras and for the ones with ample endowments I still have to wonder about the circulatory effects.

  2. Ah ha, a discussion about hopw to avoid breast cancer turns into a discussion about nudity. Interesting. Then again, if sun exposure reduces the risk of breast cancer (and I have read that it also is associated with the reduction of certain skin cancers and colon cancer) then I suppose as long as you are naked and in the sun...

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    However, one wonders if having something pinching your skin all the time can really be all that good for you.

    Where do you get your crazy ideas anyway? Pinching the skin!!! As long as the woman wears the correct size there is no pinching. Sheeeesh. :estaloco:

    Finnian has this inane notion that he knows all about women, including their sexuality, and now even their underwear. Sheesh!

    Elphaba

    Yeah, whatever! :rolleyes:

    Most women I have ever had association with actually have complained about how bras constrict circulation. Of course you can read anything you want into that. :sparklygrin:

  4. I also have thought that there could be other variables. For instance, women who generally don't wear bras tend to be more "earth motherish" from where I was raised -- more likely to spend a lot of time outdoors, aren't overwieght, and more natural in all respects. So maybe the bra thing isn't totally connected. However, one wonders if having something pinching your skin all the time can really be all that good for you.

  5. While nothing is 100% effective in health -- hey, even non-smokers occasionally die of lung cancer -- here are some things that can help women avoid developing breast cancer. Too bad this information doesn't get out to the public on a massive scale.

    1) Get exposure of your body to sunlight.

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/h...icle2195614.ece

    2) Try to minimize, or elliminate, the use of bras.

    http://www.all-natural.com/bras.html

    3) Having a lot of kids.

    http://www.imaginis.com/breasthealth/news/news10.24.02.asp

    4) Exercise regularly.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3093838.stm

  6. During my mission, the government of France had a big media campaign encouraging people to have babies. Oddly, at the same time, they had government officials campaigning against nudity in public advertising! Makes 'em sound almost Mormon! (Ok, maybe not... ;)) At least they didn't have creepy youth camps with uniforms and electronic monitoring devices.

    Dror

    Hey, don't give our stake president any ideas!:)

    Seriously though, a female politician for the Christian party in Sweden a couple of years ago was worried about the low birthrate in Sweden. She got a lot of attention for proposing that the state TV stations should be made to play nothing but porn movies all day on Saturdays so Swedes (who may have a reputation for being all sexual but in reality generally score very low on surveys of frequency of...well, you know when comparred to other countries) would have more interest in sex and therefore start making more babies.

    Proposal never went further than this however.

  7. Remember the mammoths, say the clean-cut organisers at the youth camp's mass wedding. "They became extinct because they did not have enough sex. That must not happen to Russia".

    Obediently, couples move to a special section of dormitory tents arranged in a heart-shape and called the Love Oasis, where they can start procreating for the motherland.

    With its relentlessly upbeat tone, bizarre ideas and tight control, it sounds like a weird indoctrination session for a phoney religious cult.

    But this organisation - known as "Nashi", meaning "Ours" - is youth movement run by Vladimir Putin's Kremlin that has become a central part of Russian political life.

    Nashi's annual camp, 200 miles outside Moscow, is attended by 10,000 uniformed youngsters and involves two weeks of lectures and physical fitness.

    Attendance is monitored via compulsory electronic badges and anyone who misses three events is expelled. So are drinkers; alcohol is banned. But sex is encouraged, and condoms are nowhere on sale.

    Hey, as long as the Russians promote sex and babies within marriage more power to them. It is encouraging to see one nation take an agressive role in trying to preserve its culture. I would not expect this sort of thing in the USA since leaders in both political parties care for nothing but power and money and if the birthrate is too low the solution is just to open up the borders. And most Christian leaders (except Catholics loyal to The Vatican and LDS leaders) seem to have the same philosophical outlook on marriage, divorce and birth control as the people who were labled humanistic materialists by Christian leaders just a couple of generations ago.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/arti...in_page_id=1770

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  8. Brigham Young taught that people should listen to his sermons and then pray, read the scriptures and essentially test the things he was teaching to see if they seemed to conform to the Gospel message. In my experience in the Church, and this is a gross generalization to be sure, there are different types of Mormons.

    1) Everything that the leaders say in the Church is absolute truth and even if it did (hypothetically) totally contradict precident and the message of the scriptures these people would accept it.

    2) People who believe the scriptures and the leaders of the Church and follow BY's above mentioned advice.

    3) People who try to find something wrong with anything Church leaders say -- and even question the scriptures if they disagree with the person's personal ideology.

    I would hope we could all be in the second category. True, we all have problems with something in our lives and know we have to improve them but attacking the teachings of the leaders is not a good idea. I've pointed out before that while the Book of Ester is not necessarily scripture it does bring up a mindset that the early Hebrews seemed to hold to. When the Persian King wanted his wife to come to his official party and parade nude for the guests she refused (hey, the Persians were known for long, drunken parties that would make college kids on spring break seem docile). The message was that she set a bad precident that should not go out to the empire because it questioned the wife's duty to listen to the husband. We can assume Ester had no problem with being naked at Persian parties. David's wife criticized him for public nudity and was punished with infertility. Miriam condemned Moses for taking an Ethiopian wife and was punished for a week with leporesy.

    Yes, this may come across as promoting an authoritarian mindset but I am far from a conformist. I can question things the Church does or what an individual says in a high position but I will not go to the point of attack. That is a dangerous path that can lead to apostasy.

    When I joined the Church I was against the stands the leadership took on ERA, abortion, birth control and a few other issues. After a while I did humble myself and study these issues carefully and that caused a shift in my opinion. Conversion is never overnight and takes effort. However, we have to have a mindset that leaves open the possibility that we might be wrong on any issue and then leave open the idea that LDS Church leaders may have an edge on inspiration or interpretation of issues and they at least deserve the benefit of our examining their teachings.

  9. Elphaba, nobody has said that larger women cannot be beautiful. In fact, there are men who prefer larger women and traditionaly men from countries like Mexico found that a light complected and overweight woman was very high up on the beauty scale (I have talked to many tourists to Latin America who were surprised that the women who got hit on the most were those those who were heavy). That may have changed due to the globalization of TV culture in recent years.

    However, it is not healthy to be overweight.

    Are you a fan of Leonard Nimoy? He has a photography website that tries to capture beauty of women of all sizes but I cannot link it due to, well, you know how many professional photographers kinda...you know.

  10. Sad to say but Sono_Hito does bring up some interesting and relevant points. Why do I say that? Well...

    The problem is that if you sanitize "so to speak" history then the danger is that the people who want to tear you down will be the ones who are bringing the "truth" to light -- but they will do it in such a way as to try to destroy one's faith in leaders. Then they will be the ones who will then call what the leaders taught or said or lived bad or evil. Danger is, if you hide things from members then it may destroy people's faith if it is revealed by those with a negative agenda.

    Look at discussions we have had here about birth control or polygamy. Fifty years ago if someone said having a large family was ideal few people would have questioned that opinion -- they might not have agreed with it but it would have been mainstream enough to be considered a polite view to have and express in mixed company.

    In today's "modern" world if you express this view you risk being called an anti-feminist, a Neandertal, or even a racist. Maybe this is why the Church tip toes around the issue of birth control. Danger is, that if young people have not heard the Church doctrine expressed and discussed there are many who will react quite negatively and even hostile if they look at a quote from a church leader from the past condemning birth control.

    Same with polygamy. Live it, or don't live it...look forward to its return or shudder at the thought, but it was not and is not immoral if we use the Bible as our compass. However, if we try to erase 26 out of Brigham Young's 27 wives the same way the Chinese will take official photoes from encyclopedias and photoshop out someone who feel into disfavor with the party line then we do our history and people's testimonies a disservice.