Monday, January 27, 2020

Monday News.



This work will deal with Part 2 of the Hair series. Hair is all around us. It is found in our culture, in our history, and in our civilizations. Also, there are those who are bald. Those, who are bald and with thinning hair, are entitled with the same dignity and respect as those will a large amount of hair. Hair’s dynamics are amazing, and we should investigate many facets of hair in order to get a greater appreciation of human diversity. Diversity is good, especially when it is applied to build up the world’s societal institutions positively. When you see people of diverse personalities, sexes, and backgrounds, they represent the greatness of the human race. Fashion shows, barber shops, and hair salons always lead us to see how hair culture has great importance in our daily lives. Also, we have a very long way to go. You have evil people trying to cut the dreadlocks of kids in order to graduate high school or to be educated in schools. That is disgraceful as a person’s hair should be expressed in many ways. People with dreadlocks should be respected as equal human beings regardless of a person’s color or race. We witness wars, malice, hatreds, poverty, racism, sexism, and neo-colonialism. Yet, we will carry onward with the work in making sure that the dream lives on. There are differences in the lengths of hair, in hair texture, and in other components of human hair. Learning about hair is also learning about hair curl patterns. Hair experts have known about this for thousands of years. One woman, who has a northern accent, told me much information about the diversity of hair types. The shape of the follicle that your hair grows from your scalp determines the curl type. They can be 1s, 2s, 3s, and 4s. The sub classifications of A to C are based on the width of diameter of your wave. We live in the 2020s now. It is very important to not know about the complexities of hair. People’s views on different forms of hair differ on social position, ethnicity, sex, religion, age, and culture. It is also vital to allow folks to realize that someone with hair and someone without has the same human value (and we will show compassion to all people who reside in the Universe).

There are many parts of the human hair that people should comprehend. To know hair is to know that hair is a protein filament that grows from the follicles of the dermis. Hair is found on all mammals. All of the human body, apart from areas of glabrous skin is covered in follicles. These follicles produce thick terminal and fine vellus hair. There has been research increased over the years on hair growth, hair types, and hair care. Hair is a vital biomaterial. It’s an entity made up of mostly alpha-keratin and protein. Hair is part of the integumentary system. Each strand of hair is made up of the medulla, cortex, and cuticle. The medulla is the innermost region of the hair. It is not always present and is an open, unstructured region. The highly structural and organized cortex or the second of the three layers of the hair is the primary source of mechanical strength plus water uptake. The cortex has the melanin, which colors the fibers based on the number, distribution, and types of melanin granules. The shape of the follicle determines the shape of the cortex and the shape of the fiber is related to how straight or curly the hair is. People with straight hair have round hair fibers. Oval and other shaped fibers are generally more wavy or curly. The cuticle is the outer covering. Their complexes structures slides as the hair cells and is covered with a single molecular layer of lipid that makes the hair repel water. The diameter of human hair varies from 0.017 to 0.18 millimeters (0.00067 to 0.00709 in.). There are two million small, tubular glands and sweat glands that produce watery fluids that cool the body by evaporation. The glands at the opening of the hair produce a fatty secretion that lubricates the hair. Hair growth starts inside the hair follicle. In the follicle is found the living part of the hair. The hair that is visible is the hair shaft, which exhibits no biochemical activity and is considered “dead.” The base of a hair’s root or the bulb has the cells that produce the hair shaft. Other structures of the hair follicle include the oil producing sebaceous gland which lubricates the hair and the arrector pili muscles, which are responsible for causing hairs to stand up. In humans with little body hair, the effect results in goose bumps. The root of the hair is the hair bulb. It is whiter in color and softer in texture than the shaft. It is found in a follicular involution of the epidermis called the hair follicle. The bulb of hair consists of fibrous connective tissue, glassy membrane, external root sheath, internal root sheath composed of epithelium stratum (Henle's layer) and granular stratum (Huxley's layer), cuticle, cortex and medulla. All natural hair colors are the result of two types of hair pigments. Both of these pigments are melanin types, produced inside the hair follicle and packed into granules found in the fibers. Eumelanin is the dominant pigment in brown hair and black hair, while pheomelanin is dominant in red hair. Blond hair is the result of having little pigmentation in the hair strand. Gray hair occurs when melanin production decreases or stops, while poliosis is hair (and often the skin to which the hair is attached), typically in spots, that never possessed melanin at all in the first place, or ceased for natural genetic reasons, generally, in the first years of life. Hair grows everywhere on the external body except for mucus membranes and glabrous skin, such as that found on the palms of the hands, soles of the feet, and lips.  Hair follows a specific growth cycle with three distinct and concurrent phases: anagen, catagen, and telogen phases; all three occur simultaneously - while one strand of hair may be in the anagen phase, another may be in the telogen phase. Each has specific characteristics that determine the length of the hair.

The body has different types of hair, including vellus hair and androgenic hair, each with its own type of cellular construction. The different construction gives the hair unique characteristics, serving specific purposes, mainly, warmth and protection. Hair promotes thermal regulation among human beings. The eyebrows help protect the eyes from dirt, sweat, and rain.

There are many rules to boxing. Modern boxing rules relate to the Marquess of Queensberry. These rules were published since 1867. Each boxing match can have a number of three minute rounds with a total up to 9 to 12 rounds. During each round’s break, it usually lasts for one minute. The boxers are given advice and attention from their coach and staff during each break. The referee controls the fight. He or she has the right to judge and control the actions of the fighter. He or she can rule to end a fight for safety reasons or because of a knock down count. He or she can rule on rounds. There are up to three judges that are present at ringside to score the bout, give points to boxers, and give a winner. The points are based on punches connecting; each fighter has an assigned corner of the ring, where his or her coach, as well as one or more "seconds" may administer to the fighter at the beginning of the fight and between rounds. Each boxer enters into the ring from their assigned corners at the beginning of each round and must cease fighting and return to their corner at the signaled end of each round.

A bout in which the predetermined number of rounds passes is decided by the judges, and is said to "go the distance". The fighter with the higher score at the end of the fight is ruled the winner. With three judges, unanimous and split decisions are possible, as are draws. A boxer may win the bout before a decision is reached through a knock-out; such bouts are said to have ended "inside the distance". If a fighter is knocked down during the fight, determined by whether the boxer touches the canvas floor of the ring with any part of their body other than the feet as a result of the opponent's punch and not a slip, as determined by the referee, the referee begins counting until the fighter returns to his or her feet and can continue. Some jurisdictions require the referee to count to eight regardless of if the fighter gets up before. If a boxer fails to get up by the 10 count, then the boxer loses by KO or knockout. A technical knockout or a TKO is ruled by the referee fight doctor or a fighter’s corner. A TKO is when a fighter is unable to safely continue to fight, based upon injuries or being judged unable to effectively defend themselves. Many jurisdictions and sanctioning agencies also have a "three-knockdown rule", in which three knockdowns in a given round result in a TKO. A TKO is considered a knockout in a fighter's record. A "standing eight" count rule may also be in effect. This gives the referee the right to step in and administer a count of eight to a fighter that he or she feels may be in danger, even if no knockdown has taken place. After counting the referee will observe the fighter, and decide if he or she is fit to continue. For scoring purposes, a standing eight count is treated as a knockdown. In general, boxers are prohibited from hitting below the belt, holding, tripping, pushing, biting, or spitting. The boxer's shorts are raised so the opponent is not allowed to hit to the groin area with intent to cause pain or injury. Failure to abide by the former may result in a foul. They also are prohibited from kicking, head-butting, or hitting with any part of the arm other than the knuckles of a closed fist (including hitting with the elbow, shoulder or forearm, as well as with open gloves, the wrist, the inside, back or side of the hand). They are prohibited as well from hitting the back, back of the head or neck (called a "rabbit-punch") or the kidneys. They are prohibited from holding the ropes for support when punching, holding an opponent while punching, or ducking below the belt of their opponent (dropping below the waist of your opponent, no matter the distance between). A referee can end the clinch. Back in the day, some newspapers had no decision rules.

Boxing history goes back thousands of years. A Sumerian relief in Iraq showed boxing. By the 2nd millennium B.C. have reliefs in Assyria and Babylonia of boxing actions. Boxing existed in the Hittite area too. There was a relief sculpture from Egyptian Thebes (in ca. 1350 B.C.) showed both boxers and spectators. In those places, the boxing contests had fighters being bare fisted or using a band on the wrist. Minoan Crete in ca. 1500-1400 B.C. used gloves in boxing. Various types of boxing existed in ancient India. The earliest references to musti-yuddha come from classical Vedic epics such as the Ramayana and Rig Veda. The Mahabharata describes two combatants boxing with clenched fists and fighting with kicks, finger strikes, knee strikes and headbutts. Duels (niyuddham) were often fought to the death. During the period of the Western Satraps, the ruler Rudradaman - in addition to being well-versed in "the great sciences" which included Indian classical music, Sanskrit grammar, and logic - was said to be an excellent horseman, charioteer, elephant rider, swordsman and boxer. The Gurbilas Shemi, an 18th-century Sikh text, gives numerous references to musti-yuddha. Boxing was in ancient Greece. It was very popular. In the ancient Olympics, it was first introduced in the 23rd Olympiad, 688 BC. The boxers would wind leather thongs around their hands in order to protect them. There were no rounds and boxers fought until one of them acknowledged defeat or could not continue. Weight categories were not used, which meant heavyweights had a tendency to dominate. The style of boxing practiced typically featured an advanced left leg stance, with the left arm semi-extended as a guard, in addition to being used for striking, and with the right arm drawn back ready to strike. It was the head of the opponent which was primarily targeted, and there is little evidence to suggest that targeting the body was common.


Kenneth Copeland is one of the most prominent prosperity gospel leaders in the world. He promotes the World Faith movement too. He has been a leader of his television show for years. Many of his programming has been shown on Trinity Broadcasting Network. He wrote many books and articles. His show was Believers’ Voice of Victory. He created his Believer’s Voice of Victory magazine. Many people have known of his doctrinal errors. He once said that, “It would have been impossible for Jesus to have been poor!" (9/90, Charisma). (Reported in the 2/15/93, Calvary Contender.). We know that Jesus Christ was poor. He lived under the occupation and oppression of the Roman Empire. The World Faith movement means that faith is a matter of what we say more than whom we place trust or what truths we embrace. In other words, it teaches the words have creative power. Its followers believe that positive confessions can make things happen. Copeland believes in the errors that every Christian is guaranteed physical healing and financial prosperity. The deal is that God has not promised health and prosperity to His people in the present world. There are many people who are sick, but they are very righteous people. Sickness comes from biological reasons not spiritual faith.  He also has a New Age view that humans are little gods: "You're all God. You don't have a God living in you; you are one! ... When I read in the Bible where God tells Moses, 'I AM,' I say, 'Yah, I am too!'" ("The Force of Love," Tape BBC-56). The reality is that man is not God and man can’t become a god or God. Copeland said that Adam was a god with an authority of a god. He said that Adam was not subordinate to God, which is blasphemy. Copeland made the other blasphemous statement that Jesus Christ was tortured by Satan in hell for three days to have people to have a chance for redemption. Before He died, Jesus cried in triumph, "It is finished" (Jn. 19:30), indicating that our redemption has been accomplished on the Cross. Christ told the thief on the cross who believed in Him, "Today shalt thou be with me in paradise" (Lk. 23:43), not in hell! He said, "Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit" (Lk. 23:46).  Copeland in his audiotape from 1989 called, Following the Faith of Abraham said that Adam was God manifested in the flesh, which is overt blasphemy again. Kenneth Copeland said God lives on a mother planet, God is a failure, and the death of Jesus on the cross didn’t pay the price for our sins. This sounds like another religion not Christianity. The core of the Christian faith is that Jesus Christ died and rose from the dead for the sins of the whole world. In that sense, all living people now have a chance to be saved. Romans 5:8-10 is clear that we are justified by the blood of Jesus Christ. The same thing is taught in Colossians 1:19-22, Ephesians 1:7, and in 1 John 1:7. There are many rumors that Kenneth Copeland is a Freemason. Regardless if that it is true or not, Copeland embraces many false doctrines.

Anyone has the right to learn about car exterior parts. The windshield wiper helps with protecting the vehicle against rain and other weather events. The bumper is in the front of the car. The fender is in the side of the car. The hood hides the engine and the battery of the vehicle. The grille is found in front in between the headlights. The front fascia is found below the headlights. There is the door handle, the antenna, the sunroof, the trunk, the fuel door, the tire, the wheel cover, the mud flap, the windows, the quarter windows, the cowl, and the washer nozzle.

By Timothy




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