Showing posts with label Donnie Harold Harris usa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donnie Harold Harris usa. Show all posts

Saturday, December 6, 2025

Music was once a form of sex.

  Music was once a form of sex. Dance became its byproduct. Gold became money. Its heaviness created paper money, so no Joshinsin.


 Allowed.  In the beginning, sex was not yet linked to virility. Raw sexual energy made the world we now live in. WE are dominated by two leading causes. Animals and emotions are paired together with logic. We created a reactive mind to handle all the perversion of others' unknown qualities. First, we became aware of a flow, then the stream consumed us into a tribe. We are to change once again. In the future, there will be no self-will but group sanity. The order of things. First, there is Race, then religion, and ways to be oneself.  Then the female was noted to be paired with a man. Stories became the beginning of the dissolution of man.  There is a self that can totally know itself. Then there is a weakness in the pairing with the female. Right from the start. If they see weakness, it becomes the starting point. Then, somehow, a child would pop out at a later time. 

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Unity Party: Forging a Path to Unified Humanity and Cosmic Preservation

 The content delves into various complex topics, but it lacks clarity and coherence. To improve it, consider organizing the ideas into distinct sections, each focusing on a specific theme. Use clear and concise language to ensure the message is easily understood. Additionally, cite reliable sources to support the scientific and historical assertions made in the post. Lastly, consider refining the grammar and structure for improved readability. The content covers a wide range of topics, from prehistory to the ethical conduct of humanity. However, there are some issues with grammar and coherence which make the ideas difficult to follow. Here are some actions to improve it:

1. Clarify the main message or theme of the content to make it easier for readers to follow.

2. Review and correct grammatical errors and sentence structure to enhance readability.

3. Consider breaking the content into smaller, more focused sections to improve clarity and organization.The taking apart of what is known to the levels below that to what is not known. The making bigger and maby add some of this or that. We do not know the science behind lots of our prehistory. Some rock is so hard and heavy we still cannot meet the needs of science to understand how and what made or moved them. When it comes to teh science of people we are lost in the confusion of religion and lack of tools and weights and means. The science behind the stars is so vast and long we only can speculate it. Yet we have pepper for our fish and salt for or pork. We allow hate so bad history is filled with the smartest people telling us why we should never cross that road again yet we do. Jewish destruction of Palistine is to go down in the historty book as the great gamble of modern humanity in it quest to reset the world. Never has there beeen a single story in history all of it that we agreed that killing others child the right thing to do. Never! As Jimmy Hendrex said; there must be some kindia way out of here. Death seems to be that boat. Yet without the working togther of a single organizism to draw lines put up barriers and fortifiy its lines of self defense can the colon stay out of the kidney and the heart stay out of the mind. Is DNA a ethical devide. orgastrated by a billion years of use. What is cancer but the effects of lack of collilition. What happens if you take Ethical conduct out of a mind out of a Religion out of the spine of humanity? Cancer is the break down of ethics of structure. What is etics but the survivial of co-existence. The stars are ethical yet the cosmos is filled with randiom coments that can hit destroy damage or wipe out all life on our dirt ball. Is that not cancer? What will the future hold for mankind? unless we can agree to agree that some thing must be a no- no. We will always walk with a limp and a fear of each other. Only threw total Unity no hidden parts all open for veiw by anyone can mankind move threw the time flows of the past present and future. Unified humanity must be our next endeveir and Religious goal of humanity. The toe has a part and place in the body and care not that the finger also is getting its needed air and blood and nutrishion. If the finger wilts away does not the toe soon will follow along with the whole body tailing behind? Unity party is the Party of Humanity The childrens Party the Party of the future of Humanity. Not separarted by anything except itself. The toe can not demand the finger become ass toe as well. We would be back to swinging in the trees grabbing at the fruit of other creations until they change to change us. This is a group project, a place and not a me me me but not you place. No banna can demand a apple becomes a pear or a grissly bear. We must put away hate for a higher self a higher place to arrive at. A home for all.                                         The taking apart of what is known to the levels below that to what is not known. The making bigger and maby add some of this or that. We do not know the science behind lots of our prehistory. Some rock is so hard and heavy. We still cannot meet the needs of science to understand how and what made or moved them. When it comes to tech and the science of people we are lost in the confusion of religion. Lack of tools of weights and means to devide it. The science behind the stars is so vast and long we only can speculate it. Yet we have pepper for our fish and salt for or pork. We allow hate so bad. History is filled with the smartest people telling us why we should never cross that road again. Yet we do. The destruction of Palestine by Jewish people will be recorded in history books. It will be remembered as the great gamble of modern humanity in its quest to reset the world. Never has there been a single story in history. None of us agreed that killing another's child was ever the right thing to do. Never! As Jimmy Hendrex said; there must be some kindia way out of here. Death seems to be that boat. Without a single organism drawing lines, putting up barriers. Fortifying its lines of self-defense is crucial. The colon cannot stay out of the kidney. Similarly, the heart cannot stay out of the mind. Is DNA a ethical devide. orgastrated by a billion years of use. What happens if you take Ethical conduct out of a mind? What happens if you take it out of a Religion? What happens if you take it out of the spine of humanity? Cancer is the break down of ethics of structure. What is etics but the survivial of co-existence. The stars are ethical yet the cosmos is filled with randiom comets. They can hit destroy damage or wipe out all life on our dirt ball. Is that not cancer? What will the future hold for mankind? unless we can agree to agree that some thing must be a no- no. We will always walk with a limp and a fear of each other. Only through total unity can mankind move through the time flows of the past. There should be no hidden parts. Everything must be open for view by anyone. Unified humanity must be our next endeveir and Religious goal of humanity. The toe has a part and place in the body. It does not care that the finger also is getting its needed air, blood, and nutrition. If the finger wilts away does not the toe soon will follow along with the whole body tailing behind? Unity party is the Party of Humanity The childrens Party the Party of the future of Humanity. Not separarted by anything except itself. The toe can not demand the finger become ass toe as well. We would be back to swinging in the trees. We would grab at the fruit of other creations until they change to change us. This is a group project, a place and not a me me me but not you place. No banna can demand a apple becomes a pear or a grissly bear. We must put away hate for a higher self a higher place to arrive at. A home for all. The late great Rodney King stated as the world crumbled; “Can't we all just get along."

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

The state of Humanity 001-Can the galaxy Para-medics arrive in time?

       Seventy years into the current game, all is becoming more focused, clear, and urgent. Humanity is about to expire without needed intervention. I have advised the Unadvisable of my findings. I have asked for more meaning and time. We have a represses and a limited amount of time left. It is becoming real that The Jewish people have never been a chosen people but the dagger of Humanity's destruction. Like a disease, a single human is born with a cleft mouth, affecting this unit's communication for its entire existence. They will speak with a forked tongue. The internal thought and belief process is destroying all of Humanity. We can fix the individual, not the larger unit. Why not? They insist on world destruction, with false tails of total destruction for millenniums, as a way of salvation. Group suicide. Tell me what they have not promoted or caused? Now, we are on the Eve of Destruction. They do not seek natural catastrophic events, like Noah's flood myth or the slave ordeal, as they built the world. But a man-made one. A two hundred million-man army was no small thing; it must be big enough to last a millennium; it will look good in the history books of time as the 6,000,000 loss served them to justify as the earlier Egyptian campaign did. It is a pattern of a psychiatric nature. Just as the individual has. The considerable amount of death, destruction, and time dedicated to their cause is eventful. We can fix a child and their cleft mouth; we leave a scar to remind us of their origin. The Dad of God may stop by. But it may not be pretty. This state of existence is at a higher state than a physical one. Some require existing circumstances. It is "I."


          

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

A Short History of Jamestown - National Park Service

Lady Joane Ellen Adria Burrows

BIRTH 28 JANUARY 1597  Little Hadham, Hertfordshire, England

DEATH 11 SEP 1670  Jamestown, James, Virginia Colony

 

Add MyTreeTags™ In 1607, 104 English men and boys arrived in North America to start a settlement. On May 13, they picked Jamestown, Virginia, for their settlement, named after their King, James I. The settlement became the first permanent English settlement in North America. 

In May of 1607, a hearty group of Englishmen arrived on the muddy shores of modern-day Virginia under orders from King James I to establish an English colony. But despite their efforts, the Jamestown Colony was immediately plagued by disease, famine, and violent encounters with the native population. "There were never Englishmen left in a foreign country in such misery as we were in this new discovered Virginia," one colonist recalled.

Jamestown Colony

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Although more than a third of the colonists perished in the harsh conditions, the group eventually overcame their disastrous start and founded the first permanent English settlement in the New World. Here are some of the lesser-known facts about the Jamestown Colony. 

1. The original settlers were all men.

Settlers of Jamestown
MPI/GETTY IMAGES
SETTLERS LANDED ON THE SITE OF JAMESTOWN, VIRGINIA, THE FIRST PERMANENT ENGLISH SETTLEMENT IN AMERICA

In December of 1606, the Virginia Company, under charter from King James I, sent an expedition to establish an English settlement in North America. When their ships, the Susan ConstantGodspeed, and Discovery, arrived near the banks of the James River on May 14, 1607, 104 men and boys set foot on what would soon become Jamestown. The initial group contained well-to-do adventurers, a handful of artisans and craftsmen, and laborers eager to forge a new home. Notably absent were members of the opposite sex. It would be another nine months before women arrived at the fledgling colony. 

2. Drinking water likely played a role in the early decimation of the settlement.

While the terrain might have appeared ideal from the deck of a ship—unoccupied and ripe with natural resources—the Virginia Company established its settlement on a swath of swampy land with no source of fresh water. Soon after, the men began to perish. Only 38 of the 104 original settlers were still alive by January 1608. 

As documented in colonial records, many died from disease and famine. Others met their fate in skirmishes with the Powhatans and their tribal allies. Experts also believe that some may have succumbed to an invisible threat: toxic water. Modern-day samples taken from some of the wells used by Jamestown colonists have revealed high levels of salt and varying degrees of arsenic and fecal contamination—a foul and potentially lethal cocktail.

3. Bodies were buried in unmarked graves to conceal the colony's decline in manpower.

Before more colonists arrived from England, the population of Jamestown dwindled. The Virginia Company had predicted that disease would manifest and lives would be lost. Concerned about prying eyes and an ambush on a weakened colony, they had stressed "above all things" that the colonists hide the sick and bury the dead in unmarked graves. The men followed orders, burying their deceased behind the fort wall. When the death toll spiked between May and September of 1607, they also made use of double burials, with two men laid to rest in the same shaft.

4. The settlers resorted to cannibalism during the 'starving time.'

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Jamestown Settlers Ate The Dead to Survive

Between January 1608 and August 1609, 470 new settlers arrived at Jamestown. Although their circumstances looked promising, the tide soon turned against them. Captain John Smith, who had negotiated favorable relations with the Powhatans and whose leadership bolstered the strength of the settlement, suffered gunpowder injuries and had to return to England in the fall of 1609. When Chief Powhatan called for a siege of Jamestown, Smith's ship had barely vanished from the horizon.

Surrounded by Powhatan's warriors and trapped inside the fort, the settlers eventually ran out of food. They were forced to eat whatever they could find: horses, dogs, rats, snakes, leather shoes, and, according to forensic evidence, even each other. Marked by survivalist cannibalism, Jamestown reached one of its lowest points during the winter of 1609-1610—a period now known as the "starving time," in which at least one deceased colonist was consumed as food.

5. Mail-order brides helped populate (and save) Jamestown.

Jamestown Brides
BETTMANN ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES
WIVES OF SETTLERS ARRIVING AT JAMESTOWN

Back in England, women had heard horror stories about the conditions at Jamestown. They were not exactly jumping at the opportunity to join the men across the pond. This gender imbalance boded ill for the colony's future, as men left in droves to seek out wives. Edwin Sandys, the Virginia Company treasurer, convinced his fellow board members that they advertise for women to immigrate to Jamestown and marry the colonists. The Virginia Company offered attractive incentives for would-be wives: accessible transportation, a plot of land, and a dowry of clothing and furnishings. After entertaining the eager suitors, they also allowed the women to choose their husbands. The tactic succeeded; theoretically, the women became America's first mail-order brides.

6. Climate change threatened the survival of Jamestown.

Jamestown
MPI/GETTY IMAGES
AFTER A WINTER OF FAMINE AND DISEASE, THE INHABITANTS OF JAMESTOWN IN VIRGINIA ARE RELIEVED TO WITNESS THE ARRIVAL OF SUPPLY SHIPS BRINGING NEW SETTLERS AND PROVISIONS TO THE STRICKEN TOWN.

Before their arrival, European explorers assumed America's climate would match other lands at the same latitude. They soon discovered that the New World was hotter and colder than expected. To make matters worse, the already harsh and unpredictable environment was exacerbated by climate change, namely a "Little Ice Age" that lasted from 1550 to 1800. Wet springs led to flooding, hot summers brought on droughts, and frigid winters covered the landscape in blankets of thick frost.

The colonists arrived in Jamestown during one of the driest seven-year periods (1606-1612) in 770 years. The 17th century was also one of the coldest on record. The dramatic weather patterns in the Virginia colony brought on a cycle of conflict, scarcity, and death, with climate change threatening its survival.

7. The birth of American democracy began in Jamestown.

House of Burgesses in Jamestown
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THE FIRST ASSEMBLY OF THE HOUSE OF BURGESSES, THE FIRST ELECTED LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY IN AMERICA, IN JAMESTOWN.

When the Declaration of Independence was signed in 1776, and the first peaceful transfer of U.S. presidential power occurred between George Washington and John Adams in 1797, Americans had already experienced over 150 years of democracy. The roots can be traced to Jamestown. With the establishment of the House of Burgesses, America's first democratically elected legislative body, a precedent had been set. After that, each new English colony sought its own legislature. Although there were challenges and power struggles, the concept of elections and the creation of laws and power through and by the people began in America's first English settlement.

8. Smuggled tobacco seeds gave Jamestown economic viability.

Tobacco in Jamestown
MPI/GETTY IMAGES
SETTLERS ROLL BARRELS OF TOBACCO UP A RAMP AND ONTO A SHIP IN PREPARATION FOR EXPORT.

King James I had a strong and well-known distaste for tobacco. "A customer loathsome to the eye, hateful to the Nose," he once declared. Ironically, this very crop gave Jamestown its economic viability. The settlement had struggled to find a marketable commodity to trade and ship back to England for profit. The colonists dabbled in forestry, silk, and glassmaking with little financial return.

Then, in 1610, John Rolfe arrived in Jamestown with a convoy of 150 new settlers. He brought a sweet and illegal strain of South American tobacco seeds. After some initial trial and error, Rolfe cultivated them into a significant cash crop—one surprisingly granted a monopoly from King James I—making Jamestown economically stable for the first time.

No one knows where or how Rolfe obtained the seeds. Until then, Spain had controlled tobacco on the European markets, and selling seeds to non-Spaniards was a crime punishable by death. Rolfe may have smuggled the seeds from Bermuda, where some fleet was shipwrecked for 10 months before arriving in Jamestown or somewhere in the Caribbean. Either way, the risk paid off.

9. English pirates brought the first African captives to Jamestown.

Slavery in Jamestown
HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES
THE ARRIVAL OF A DUTCH SLAVE SHIP IN JAMESTOWN, VIRGINIA, 1619

John Rolfe documented the arrival of the first African captives to Jamestown in late August 1619. He reported that a Dutch ship had arrived with "20 and odd" Africans who were "bought for victuals." August 1619 is the date that the first enslaved Africans were brought to Virginia, but they didn't arrive on a Dutch ship, as Rolfe mentioned. They were initially captured in modern-day Angola, an area of West Central Africa, and forced to march over 100 miles to board the San Juan Bautista, a Portuguese ship destined for Mexico.

While in the Gulf of Mexico, two English privateers, the White Lion and the Treasurer, attacked the ship and stole 50 to 60 African captives on board. This act of piracy, politely called "privateering" in the 17th century, led to the White Lion bringing the first Africans to Jamestown. Historians believe that Rolfe either falsified his report to conceal what the English had done or that the White Lion swapped flags with a Dutch ship while out at sea, causing Rolfe to record the ship's country of origin incorrectly.

10. To this day, Jamestown remains an active dig site.

JAMESTOWN DISCOVERY
A FULL VIEW OF A NEWLY DISCOVERED SKELETON IN JAMESTOWN, VIRGINIA, 2017.

Active archaeological excavation, research, and analysis have been ongoing since 1994 at the original site of Jamestown. Archaeologists have found parts of the palisade of the original 1607 fort, discovered the site of the second church, and unearthed the remains of a handful of the settlement's early inhabitants. They've debunked the myth that the original Jamestown site had washed into the James River long ago, uncovered evidence of the "starving time" and cannibalism, and learned more about the settlers' daily lives and work habits. Millions of artifacts have been found, and the facts about this defining chapter in American history have been rewritten or brought to light.

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