Form: Quote Commentary

  • Cream of Tartar for MSG Sensitivity?

    —“I’ve got MSG sensitivity too, as well as artificial sweeteners. Sounds like artificial sweetener because MSG is used for savory foods. An MSG antidote some swear by is a spoonful of cream of tartar dissolved in water.”—

    lol… Let me try the cream of tartar next time. thanks. 😉

    —“When a teaspoon is mixed with 8 oz of water, cream of tartar neutralizes the toxic effects of MSG. Cream of tartar is traditionally used in food preparation to stabilize egg whites and sugary syrups and chocolates. In the same manner, cream of tartar stabilizes your body by forming an alkaline environment and raising your pH, thus mitigating MSG headaches, allergies, and the like.”— Thanks!

    Found that. Well, we’re gonna give that a try. thx.

  • Cream of Tartar for MSG Sensitivity?

    —“I’ve got MSG sensitivity too, as well as artificial sweeteners. Sounds like artificial sweetener because MSG is used for savory foods. An MSG antidote some swear by is a spoonful of cream of tartar dissolved in water.”—

    lol… Let me try the cream of tartar next time. thanks. 😉

    —“When a teaspoon is mixed with 8 oz of water, cream of tartar neutralizes the toxic effects of MSG. Cream of tartar is traditionally used in food preparation to stabilize egg whites and sugary syrups and chocolates. In the same manner, cream of tartar stabilizes your body by forming an alkaline environment and raising your pH, thus mitigating MSG headaches, allergies, and the like.”— Thanks!

    Found that. Well, we’re gonna give that a try. thx.

  • The Secularization Debate

    Apr 26, 2020, 9:37 AM Read this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secularization And This Philip S. Gorski (2000) “Historicizing the Secularization Debate: Church, State, and Society in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, ca. 1300 to 1700” American Sociological Review (65:1) Special Issue: “Looking Forward, Looking Back: Continuity and Change at the Turn of the Millenium” pp. 138-167 http://www.jstor.org/stable/2657295 The Disciplinary Revolution In his 2003 book, The Disciplinary Revolution: Calvinism and the Rise of the State in Early Modern Europe,[5] Gorski offers a new explanation for the rise of a strong, centralized nation-state in certain areas of Europe in early Modernity, when other areas were not as successful.[citation needed] Gorski rejects[citation needed] two of the dominant explanations, which are the bellicist explanation, which sees military growth as key to the emergence of strong states, and the neo-Marxist explanation, which sees economic factors as key to the explanation. Instead, Gorski points to the strong influence of religion in the formation of strong states. Specifically, Gorski sees Calvinism as crucial to the emergence of the Netherlands and Prussia as strong, centralized states, because of its emphasis on discipline and public order. The effects of Calvinism could be seen in crime rates, in education, in military effectiveness, in financial responsibility, and many other parts of Dutch and Prussian social life, all of which increased their ability to form bureaucratic states.[citation needed] Where in the Netherlands the effect of Calvinism was from the ground upwards, as most of its population was indeed Calvinist, in Prussia—where most of the population was Lutheran and only the royal house was Calvinist—the effect was from the rulers downwards (to some extent through the Pietist Lutheran movement, which was influenced by Calvinism).[citation needed]

  • The Secularization Debate

    Apr 26, 2020, 9:37 AM Read this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secularization And This Philip S. Gorski (2000) “Historicizing the Secularization Debate: Church, State, and Society in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, ca. 1300 to 1700” American Sociological Review (65:1) Special Issue: “Looking Forward, Looking Back: Continuity and Change at the Turn of the Millenium” pp. 138-167 http://www.jstor.org/stable/2657295 The Disciplinary Revolution In his 2003 book, The Disciplinary Revolution: Calvinism and the Rise of the State in Early Modern Europe,[5] Gorski offers a new explanation for the rise of a strong, centralized nation-state in certain areas of Europe in early Modernity, when other areas were not as successful.[citation needed] Gorski rejects[citation needed] two of the dominant explanations, which are the bellicist explanation, which sees military growth as key to the emergence of strong states, and the neo-Marxist explanation, which sees economic factors as key to the explanation. Instead, Gorski points to the strong influence of religion in the formation of strong states. Specifically, Gorski sees Calvinism as crucial to the emergence of the Netherlands and Prussia as strong, centralized states, because of its emphasis on discipline and public order. The effects of Calvinism could be seen in crime rates, in education, in military effectiveness, in financial responsibility, and many other parts of Dutch and Prussian social life, all of which increased their ability to form bureaucratic states.[citation needed] Where in the Netherlands the effect of Calvinism was from the ground upwards, as most of its population was indeed Calvinist, in Prussia—where most of the population was Lutheran and only the royal house was Calvinist—the effect was from the rulers downwards (to some extent through the Pietist Lutheran movement, which was influenced by Calvinism).[citation needed]

  • Confronting the Comforting Lies

    Apr 26, 2020, 1:35 PM by Noah J Revoy Messed up people have a hard time applying P because it forces them to confront the comforting lies they tell themselves. I’m working on applications that are digestible and move people closer to truth. In a world where people were raised right and taught Agency as a natural course of growing up it would be easy to apply P as a tool to prevent parasitism and lies from taking root.

  • Confronting the Comforting Lies

    Apr 26, 2020, 1:35 PM by Noah J Revoy Messed up people have a hard time applying P because it forces them to confront the comforting lies they tell themselves. I’m working on applications that are digestible and move people closer to truth. In a world where people were raised right and taught Agency as a natural course of growing up it would be easy to apply P as a tool to prevent parasitism and lies from taking root.

  • Hayek’s Warning

    Apr 26, 2020, 9:37 PM via John John Stephens

    —“The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.”— Friedrich August von Hayek, The Fatal Conceit

    CD: That’s really the lesson of the 20th. Hubris via pseudoscience, sophistry, and denial.

  • Hayek’s Warning

    Apr 26, 2020, 9:37 PM via John John Stephens

    —“The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.”— Friedrich August von Hayek, The Fatal Conceit

    CD: That’s really the lesson of the 20th. Hubris via pseudoscience, sophistry, and denial.

  • Testimony

    Apr 28, 2020, 10:25 AM

    —“No one has made me think/study more deeply (and clearly) about various subjects in the last 5 years than Curt Doolittle…”—Christopher Tomasulo

  • Testimony

    Apr 28, 2020, 10:25 AM

    —“No one has made me think/study more deeply (and clearly) about various subjects in the last 5 years than Curt Doolittle…”—Christopher Tomasulo