Arts and Entertainment
Page: 1, 2 Sub-Categories: Architecture | Artists and Galleries | Dance | Events | Libraries | Music | Photography | TheaterDirectory and schedule of area events, arts, music, and cultural happenings.
Arts to Zoo ColoradoEvents and information regarding over 350 cultural arts organizations in the Denver metro area and Colorado. Links to Colorado and national websites and cultural resources.
Artslynx ColoradoLinks to Colorado arts resources: music, theater, dance, film and visual arts.
Colorado artists register onlineColorado artists online register
Colorado Authors LeagueNonprofit group for professional writers that fosters the craft of writing, promotes the interests and recognition of its members, and tracks publishing trends and events.
Colorado Council on the ArtsProvides resources for artists, organizations and communities, plus CoVisions newsletter and information on heritage tourism.
Colorado Council on the ArtsHere you will find descriptions of the many programs and services that CCA offers.
Colorado Country ConnectionMonthly publication listing Colorado's country music scene, clubs, bands, and dances. News articles and upcoming events.
Colorado Endowment for the HumanitiesSponsors and provides support for humanities programming throughout the state.
Colorado Film and Video AssociationTrade association for film, video and multimedia production in Colorado. Site includes a production resource guide, searchable directory of people, services, equipment and other production resources.
nnalyd@yahoo.com wrote:
> I have cut and pasted stuff here and made the mistake of not
> specifying which was mine and which is borrowed. It is apointless
> distraction to make an ssue out of it.
Maybe in JW morality, but everyone else sees plagiarism as a sin.
(Presenting someone else's work as your own is _lying_.) Then
again, I've not been very impressed with the ethics of the
JW's I've known.
Further, since you made such a big deal about everyone
else's typos, it's NOT so pointless to observe that the
way to tell your work from the stuff you shameless plagiarize
is that the plagiarized material is (relatively) typo-free.
One of the big points several of us are trying to make is
how blind you are to your double standard. And here is yet
another example. (And you called it "pointless".)
> but really is
> ANYTHING we say not borrowed from somewhere?
Yeah, one of my students tried that. "Since the alphabet
is public domain, nothing can be plagiarized." He got
an F anyway.
> Perhaps I overestimated your
> intelligence in thinking you would deduce that all posts with "so and
> so Did Not Believe The Trinity" were of like kind.
Funny. We _called_ you on your plagiarism, and here you
say that we weren't able to tell the difference? We deduced
it just fine. We further deduced something (more) about how
far your hypocracy stretched.
> you have flushed your credibility down
> the drain with yet another ad hominem.
So you still don't know what "ad hominem" means. I thought
for sure you'd have looked it up by now.
> What amazes me is how you could
> not be ashamed for writing something like this.
And, in turn, we're amazed that someone could so blatantly
plagiarize so much material and, likewise, not be ashamed.
But that's the way double standards work.
Bart
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Christian Zionism and the Myth of America
__________________________________________________________________________________
America, in part, owes its national identity to the prevalence of powerful myths which arose out of
its early history.
Many are attached to founding "fathers", others to the experience of nation building.
Perhaps the most powerful myth is that which developed out of the frontier experience of an
emerging nation.
Manifest destiny is how historians label it, the belief that the settlement and taming of this vast
largely uninhabited land