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Friday, October 10, 2008

The Show Must Go On!



Link
Scroll down for today's pictures & links.

The Show Must Go On!

"Don't Panic!" seems to be the prevailing sentiment these days - from the stock markets, to the financial collapse of entire countries (Iceland). Well, learn total self-control from this radio dj who stays on air, no matter what:


url

Today's pictures & links:

The Other Grand Canyon

Thomas Moran painting of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone (1872):


(image via)

It is one of the works of art that opened the eyes of the American public to the geologic wonders of the West. See more paintings by Moran here.

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Our Sun in a Groovy Light


(image via Solar and Heliospheric Observatory)

This is a composite image from three wavelengths (171Å, 195Å and 284Å) - revealing solar features unique to each wavelength. (corresponding to temperatures from 1 to 10 million degrees C).

See other video highlights of observation of the Sun on this page (including gigantic explosions, coronal mass ejections and a comet almost plunging into the Sun).

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E.T. is in your garden


(original unknown)

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Cool Shot of the Day
(in cooperation with National Geographic magazine)

Jumping Dolphins!


(image credit: Andrew Wong, National Geographic)

Photo by Andrew Wong -
This pod of bottlenose dolphins was leisurely surfing in the waves as the offshore wind blew against the incoming waves, creating an atmosphere that was most unique and magical. At a place called Waterfall Bluff in the Transkei, South Africa.

A Church in Iceland


(image credit: Alex Jagendorf, National Geographic)

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Mixed fresh links for today:

"Deepest ever" living fish filmed - at almost 8 km - [wow nature]
Best ways to use Twitter... or not - [thought-provoking]
Awesome High-Speed Photography - [gallery]
Robot Toys, Robot Helpers, Mobility Robots - [robot tech]
6 Insane Ways to Destroy Your Credit Card - [weird]
Neat-looking 150mpg concept car - [auto]
Fly a spaceship: ultimate simulator software, example - [geek tech]
Newspaper Delivery in India - [wow video]
The Anvil Chorus!!! - [fun video]

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The Octocube!

Actually, the radical radiator shape - inspired by the Peano mathematical space filling curve... Designer: Vivien Muller, France. More info.


(image via designboom)

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A fish at its limit: The Bloodless Icefish

This fish does not have blood, and pretty much ditched the skeletal system in order to float. Read more about it here


(photo by Bill Detrich)

"A brittle skeleton... A complete lack of red blood cells... Yet an ability to survive and thrive in a subfreezing marine environment. Antarctic icefish would seem to serve as odd specimens for study, a family of fish that probably couldn’t survive anywhere else after spending millions of years adapting and evolving in a freezer-like environment where the salty surface water is about minus 1.8 degrees centigrade. But this fish might help researchers in their quest to understand and eventually cure some bone and blood diseases because of the vertebrates’ unique characteristics." Its larva stage is pretty ghastly, too:


(photos by Wikipedia Commons and Kevin Bilyk)

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Meaningless Frog Pictures

Just what it says...


(image credit: Zhaba)


(image credit: dBond)

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Loneliness

"This tower stands in a cleared area of El Salaam's Internally Displaced Persons camp in Omdurman, just outside Khartoum, Sudan. The land was put aside in expectation of an influx of Palestinian refugees coming to Sudan. They never arrived."


(image credit: Aubrey Fagon, National Geographic)

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The Director's Chair

Favorite on-location chair of the Wachowski brothers.... Well, actually, an art installation by James Gulliver Hancock



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Why would anyone do this?



It does not look like a prank. My guess is, they just delivered the car - time to unwrap the present.

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Mystery Sign



...Mushrooms?

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Catch up on your espresso consumption:


(photo via Bernd M.)

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COMMENTS:

4 Comments:

Blogger Lamberto said...

Why would anyone do this?

I would suggest because of an incoming hailstorm: that car is a big target and definitely not cheap to repair.

By the way, First.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The frog! So touching! Was he shot? Just sick?

___  
Anonymous Marilyn Terrell said...

Another way to use Tweet: to offer and accept a marriage proposal:

http://www.boingboing.net/2008/10/10/tweethearts-blogger.html

Not sure if this falls into the good or the bad category.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The frog probably ate a piece of that icefish.

___  

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  • interesting...
    Read more

  • think there was a bbc documentary on this. called to mars by abomb. they had footage from a small scale model test. it does work.

    interesting because it takes the worry of weight out of the equation. instead of saving weight you build massive ocean liner level stuff because it no longer matters much.

    it was canceled because the fall out is unacceptable amoung the other risks...
    Read more

  • You'd think this project would immediately be called off instead of going as long as it did just by the fact that you'd severely pollute the atmosphere.
    Read more

  • With a clean fusion bomb fallout wouldn't be a problem but yeah with dirty nukes, Quote: "Freeman Dyson, group leader on the project, estimated back in the '60s that with conventional nuclear weapons, that each launch would cause on average between 0.1 and 1 fatal cancers from the fallout."
    Read more

  • Anonymous, as far as I know a H bomb is only "clean" because its fallout is small in relation to its destructive power. You still produce more than enough fallout simply because a fission bomb is needed as a detonator for the fusion. There is no clean nuclear weapon. The term "dirty nuke" can either refer to a fission bomb with relatively high fallout due to low efficiency or to a conventional chemical explosive with radioactive material around it. The latter thing does not cause a nuclear explosion, but scatters radioactive debris around. It is in no way suitable to power a spaceship.
    Read more

  • You have to remember the TIME this was invented in.... people seriously thought this planet was going to be obliterated by nuclear war in the 1950s-60s.

    And if there is a killer asteroid or extraterrestrial threat of any kind, it would be a last-ditch, everyone left behind is dead anyway, "When Worlds Collide" type of project.
    Read more

  • The interwebs have been absolutely abuzz with talk about this project. I've seen it in a few documentaries and more than a few posts. I did love that TED talk tho.

    We still need to solve the 'ol problem of traveling distances that would take tens of thousands of years however...

    Thanks for the comprehensive post!

    Austin
    www.sosauce.com
    Read more

  • There is no reason why we simply couldn't assemble such a device in Orbit and let fly from that vantage point.
    Read more

  • Project Orion and NERVA should be group projects for graduate Nuclear Engineering students. There should be ways to vastly improve performance and lover costs on both of theose systems.

    Launch from Earth? Of course not. However, as anyone who has ever read SF knows, space ships are most easily built in space.

    The cuts in time to Mars and beyond will prevent a lot of radiation problems.

    Oh yes, exploding atomic bombs in space will pollute it. How could I overlook something like that. Darn!
    Read more

  • Remember, the Sun is a natural nuclear fusion explosion that's been going on for about 4.5 billion years. Aside from that, all matter emits some miniscule amounts of radiation. Getting a sun tan is in fact a radiation dosage. And burning coal puts a lot of uranium in the air, since it's a trace element in coal. So an Orion ship's radiation should be kept in perspective.

    Building it in space removes most of the risk to earth. And Orion or a Nerva type nuclear rocket (much different) open the whole solar system to human exploration. Instead of trips lasting years one can get around between planets in weeks.

    Eventually we're going to have to accept that politically.
    Read more

  • Project 'Daedalus' from Great Britain was similar to this one.
    Read more

  • Read Footfall! Great read too!
    Read more

  • I've been a fan of Orion for decades. It's one of those Big Engineering concepts many engineers (and I am an engineer) are fascinated with. Adding to the attraction, the only thing keeping it from working is an international treaty.

    Project Pluto isn't nearly as big, but has the advantage of being dead simple overall. One person working on it described the vehicle as being "...about as complicated as a bucket of rocks."

    A ramjet is a very simple heat engine: cold air in, hot air out. For Pluto, the heat source was a nuclear reactor made from advanced ceramics, glowing bright yellow.

    The sonic boom from this thing making a low pass would collapse most buildings. The radiation it emitted would sterilize the ground under its path. (Maybe a slight exaggeration there.)

    They ground tested a developmental version of the engine, and seriously discussed building a test vehicle. That would have been dumped in the ocean after the flight. The realization that if they lost control of the thing it could fly over an inhabited area killed the idea.

    Still, you have to wonder if maybe we could use it to explore the atmosphere of Venus, or one of the gas giants...
    Read more

  • Stickmaker, really enjoyed your comment - told in plain terms, great overview
    Read more

  • It's not a bad idea once you get off-planet. Someday, one of the export products spent up the space elevator will be nuclear bombs to propel enormous interplanetary vehicles.
    Read more

  • this kinda thing is also a significant plot point in neal stephenson's anathem! that's where i first heard about it.
    Read more

  • It's not a bad idea once you get off-planet. Someday, one of the export products spent up the space elevator will be nuclear bombs to propel enormous interplanetary vehicles..
    Read more

  • The idea that Orion is inherently unclean is untrue. The reason a bomb can be dirty is the stuff that gets sucked into an explosion (including bomb casings) and then spread around. That is why normal ground-level detonations (where dust and soil gets sucked in) produce vastly more fallout than airborne ones.

    In the late 50s, the calculation was 1 to 10 premature deaths per ground launch of Orion. That isn't 10 specific people die - but that 10 people would statistically die earlier than they otherwise would have.

    I personally do not think that risk is unacceptable. Many thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, perhaps even millions, of people die prematurely every single year because of industrial pollution from cars, factories, industry etc. Likewise hundreds of thousands of peoples are killed or injured in road accidents, every single year. While these are tragic, nobody says the risk is unacceptable and we better give up cars/industry/technology and return to living in caves.

    Anyway, another point is the risk can be further reduced today. A modern Orion would use a ground-based pusher plate to reduce fallout, and would use better/lighter bombs so less casings to be sucked in too.

    The two remaining problems are EMP (electro magentic pulse), legal and political. The EMP problem can be solved by a sea launch say near the South pole. The legal issue is that it is illegal to take nuclear weapons in space or explode them - but this could be resolved by renegotiating international treaties if there was political will. The political problem is the biggest problem - many people, often regardless of how little they know about nuclear technology and nuclear science, are against anything nuclear, because it sounds bad to them or believing too much bad late night scifi.

    The reason we need Orion is its the only way we can get a substantial presence in space. One Orion is equivalent to hundreds, even thousands, of conventional rocks. If we don't start using energy and resources from space (the first step of which is a large presence beyond the Earth), we are going to wreck this planet before too long.
    Read more

  • huh?

    1. materials don't BECOME radioactive do they? the dust and stuff from a ground explosion doesn't contribute to the "dirtyness" of the bomb does it?

    2. why on earth would you LAUNCH with nukes? just use conventional rockets to get the thing into orbit (or just build it there) and then you can nuke away in space.
    Read more

  • That 01-1-10 deaths figure would presumably have been calculated on the LNT (linear no threshold) theory of radiation damage. While that is still politically accepted the hormesis theory that at a low level radiation is actually beneficial has the evidence going for it.

    http://www.jerrypournelle.com/archives2/archives2mail/mail311.html#hormesis
    Read more

  • Did a speech in 80's including this method as alternative to STS. Also included matter/antimatter propulsion. Only problem I foresee is NASA's history of accidents! That would be huge..
    Read more

  • those monkey waiters are cute but you better tip them good or they might throw their sh*t at you.
    Read more

  • The pic of the nuclear explosion reminds me of the metamorph from the movie Lightyears
    Read more

  • Rain which does each the ground is called verga.
    Read more

  • Sorry. Rain which evaporates before it reaches the ground is verga. We have a lot of it in the Colorado mountains.
    Read more

  • BE CAREFUL BECAUSE THE WORD VERGA IN SPANISH IS A REALLY BAD WORD.
    D.I.C.K.
    Read more

  • It's actually called virga.
    Read more

  • too bad there's no chtulhu comic :(
    Read more

  • Hi fist of all love your blog I've checking it for years. Second thing, my wife makes notepads and stationary with lots of these prints you can see them at http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=5858020 keep up the great posts
    Read more

  • Thanks for the very interesting selection. Speaking of italian sci-fi covers... be sure to check out the work of Karel Thole! His eerie covers got me interested in sci-fi literature when I was a little boy!

    http://www.mondourania.com/urania/u301-320/urania301-320.htm
    Read more

  • Wow, gorgeous, amazing stuff. Artist buddy of mine, Jason Chalker, does a lot of pulp inspired paintings - well worth checking out http://www.manlyart.com/
    Read more

  • Man, I need to go to space, that's where all the lusty, well-endowed woman have been hiding themselves all these years!
    Read more

  • FREDRIC BROWN
    not
    FREDRICK
    the typo is on the cover too
    Read more

  • WOW, incredible stuff!!

    THX & best wishes
    Read more

  • What, no Ed Emshwiller? No Edd Cartier? No Jack Gaughan?
    Read more

  • Son geniales las ilustraciones de las revistas de ciencia ficción futurista, sobretodo las que continenen tentáculos y robots.
    Read more

  • Great art & artist...

    But... no Richard M. Powers!

    http://home.earthlink.net/~cjk5/
    Read more

  • Have you guys heard about Alex Ross? Check this link:

    http://www.wildsvillegallery.com/catalog/index.php/artist/alex-ross
    Read more

  • Richard Powers... Ed Emshwiller... Edd Cartier... Jack Gaughan - wow, we definitely need part two!
    Mind you most of these artists were famous for their paperback covers.
    Wildman, thank you, Alex Ross is one the best artists for comic heroes.
    Read more

  • Absolutely impressive precis of a long neglected field of art.
    Would be rendered more perfecter if only the awful neologism 'scifi' was replaced by the true shorthand phrase, SF or if you prefer sf.
    Scifi is a ghastly term.
    SF is soooooooooooooooooooooo much more sophisticated
    Read more

  • Badger42 - I would agree with you, but there is a very respectable site Sci-Fi.com, so the tide of using this word is turning...
    Read more

  • Really very nice space..on day i have to show you my vision's of future... huts, and confratulations for the work!!

    Do you know Mas Yendo? Search for it, you will be happy
    Read more

  • I believe that there is only one golden age of every art form. Perhaps visit me sometime at:
    http://picasaweb.google.com/silverghost1951/ThePerilsOfKarenMorrow#


    SG51
    Read more

  • Thank you Silverghost, this link has made my day... what a treasure trove of cool pulp art, fantastic.
    Read more

  • The pic of the baby deer is from www.cuteoverload.com.
    Read more

  • I think that the mystery pic is something from WarHammer 40000 or Warhammer online...
    Read more

  • The mystery pic is indeed something to do with that gaming stuff...

    It's the exterior of the Games Workshop building in Lenton, Nottingham. More pics and info here:

    http://www.lentontimes.co.uk/streets/willow_road.htm
    Read more

  • The clouds over the city are most definitely noctilucent clouds
    Read more

  • The clouds looks like the logo of Hi3G "3".
    http://www.three.co.uk/personal/index.omp
    Read more

  • That tank is an American Stuart. Not a Soviet tank
    Read more

  • The clouds could likely be conical residue from a missile launch. Seen fairly commonly in Los Angeles from Vandenberg AFB launches.
    Read more

  • The mystery plant is Hydnora africana, a parasitic plant from Africa.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnora_africana
    Read more

  • The jumping tank is an American Stuart model, showing a white star typical of the USA army camo scheme of the time.

    The mistery place is Games Workshop's central office, makers of the Warhammer 40.000 strategic game (that's a Space Marine statue).
    Read more

  • I'm pretty sure the Warhammer stuff is out in front of their main offices in Memphis TN
    Read more

  • Thank you guys - post updated.
    Read more

  • The "Nortilucent clouds" appear to be instead the after affect of an early morning launch at the White Sands Missile Range, as seen from the Phoenix Metro area. The residue rocket fuel in the atmosphere is "lit up" by the rising sun. I at least THINK that is Superstition Mountain on the horizon.
    Read more

  • Why is the fan on the Lego V8 going backwards?
    Read more

  • Love this site.

    "Rocket trails"

    "Atmospheric Optics" is another good site that has some great stuff on atmospheric phenomena. Looks like they have another shot of the very same cloud:

    http://www.atoptics.co.uk/highsky/rktr1j.htm
    Read more

  • ...by the way those rocket trails look a lot more like nacreous clouds.

    http://www.atoptics.co.uk/highsky/nacr1.htm
    Read more

  • Here are some pix from Switzerland. This is a private park dubbed the "car graveyard" :
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/32819147@N00/tags/carcemetery/
    Read more

  • Julie, what an interesting article. they're all look beautiful.
    Read more

  • I think we really feel the soul of the abandonned place in her photography.

    She had a good sense of composition and light too : )
    Read more

  • Check out www.opacity.us
    its the best collection of urban decay photos I've found
    Read more

  • I really love these. Julie, you do AMAZING work, I am really drawn to the staircases and the dryad image particularly! :) All of your artwork is so textural and really brings out the interestingly beautiful features of these abandoned places. Great interview, I enjoyed reading it!!
    Read more

  • great profile of a great photographer! Wonderful work, Julie!

    -- flashframe
    Read more

  • Julie's work is amazing, so glad you featured it here - it deserves to be noticed by the world. Way to go, Julie.
    Read more

  • Check out Tarkovskiy's "Stalker". It's full of this.
    Read more

  • That church reminds me of the chapel at which I used to dump all my gold in the original Diablo. Weird!
    Read more

  • Wonderful pictures...I fell in love with the orange house =)
    Read more

  • These are just incredible. What's even more unbelievable is that you found them and take such exquisite photos and capture their energy and tragic beauty.
    Read more

  • Check out these pics from abandoned Detroit including the Heidelberg Project

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/funkytreetown/sets/72157604938972817/
    Read more

  • Ouch @ 7:50 ramp guy landing on his face...

    But man, that must've been such a fascinating age.
    Read more

  • >> "maybe we're just out of touch
    >> with Japanese school girl culture."

    If you turn your back for 5 minutes, you'll get out of touch with Japanese school girl culture!
    Read more

  • Avi, it would be great if you did a piece on Yorkshire's beauty it's self, it would go quite nicely with the other beautiful parts of the world you've covered.
    Read more

  • I actually got to see some of Yayoi's work at the Phoenix Art Museum. It was absolutely stunning. You walk into the room and, well, it lives up to it's name "You Who Are Getting Obliterated in the Dancing Swarm of Fireflies” I could have stayed in there for hours.

    A short blog about it can be found here: http://www.theelementsite.com/blog/?p=66
    Read more

  • The singing-while-smoking guy is some indian actor, not Sultan Rahi. BTW, IIRC Sultan Rahi (dead now) once held the world record for making the most killings in movies.
    Read more

  • What are those buildings behind "Train your cat to watch LOL-cats"?
    Read more

  • Hmm.. my understanding is that the bathing machines weren't for nude bathing. (See the wikipedia article that was linked, as well as this page.) The 'naked bathing' quote seems to be talking about the time before the bathing machines on the National Maritime Museum description on the image.
    Read more

  • Tometheus - "...enabled the bather to enter the water, sometimes naked, without being seen" source

    Not everybody used this possibility, though.
    Read more

  • Absolutely beautiful! I'd love to travel there someday, as well as Turkey and Jordan... if only the political atmosphere was a little more confidence-inspiring.
    Read more

  • Avi, your posts on the beauty of Middle Eastern countries has been very inspirational, I am all ready to do a full tour.
    Has anyone had any experience traveling to these parts? Would it be a very bad idea at the moment? I really want to go! Stupid wars...
    Read more

  • Fantastic pictures. Thanks
    Read more

  • I love it. I have been to the cedars. Absolutely Amazing

    http://www.bucketbeats.com
    Read more

  • Thank you, I'm from Lebanon and these pictures brought tears to my eyes. The people of Lebanon are Beautiful as well. It's a tragedy what that the world has decided to use it as a battleground for Israel and Syria related conflicts.
    Read more

  • Just stunning. What a magnificent place.
    Read more

  • Wow, those are some absolutely stunning photos! Amazing!

    Jlff
    Read more

  • By far the most beautiful place in the middle east. Great People and Food as well.
    Read more

  • Thanks for sharing! Gorgeous! I've been there before the war (70's) and I always wanted to go back. Amazing, fun, open-minded people.
    Read more

  • Marvelous! I been to Lebanon, and I think it's even more magical when you're there!!
    Read more

  • I was just in Lebanon this past August, and I spent a year there from 2004-2005. I figured it was time to get the hell out when the ex-prime minister was assassinated. During the summer, Lebanon seemed stable enough to visit. I don't think it would be bad at this very moment to visit, but because it's so unstable, there's no way of really knowing. Ugh... indeed, stupid wards.
    Read more

  • Thank you all - glad you like the article.

    Leila, these are "wards" (creatures like goblins) who wage wars, correct.
    Read more

  • Thank you. It is refreshing to find a positive article and photos from Lebanon. As usually, people in the Media are always covering and portraying the negative aspect of the country.Please keep up the good honest work.
    We look forward to seeing more good coverage from you on this beautiful country. Thanks again.
    Gladys M. Wehbe
    Read more

  • I am from Turkey and I had the luxury of seeing most of these beautiful countries, the security is not an issue, the government takes care of security unlike USA military is very active which is not scary but comforting so don't let ifs and buts stand in your way of seeing these beautiful places.
    Read more

  • A truly awesome place, a damn shame it been used as a pawn in whatever geo-political, religious struggle that might be going on that day, week, month, or year.
    Read more

  • Gracias por esas preciosas fotos del paraiso terrenal destruido por el odio , las guerras injustas y el fanatismo.
    ya era hora de hacer justicia y enseñar el verdadero Líbano, antigua Fenicia, cuna de la civilizacion, inventora del alfabeto, la moneda, la purpura y transmisora de las culturas de oriente para el mundo entero. allí se encuentran las ciudades de Biblos, Baalbeck, Sidon y Tiro. fundaron Cartago (actual Tunez), Cadiz, Cartagena y Sagunto entre otras muchas ciudades a las orillas del Mediterraneo. de Tiro viene el nombre de Europa ( hija del rey Ahiram. Carece de petroleo pero por su suelo fluyen 14 rios principales ademas de sus afluentes y regatos.
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  • thanks for sharing. it was a piece of heaven...
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  • Thanks for these pictures. They are very beautiful and only make me dream of being in Lebanon all the more. :)
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  • Thank you for these pictures, my late father was of lebanese ascendence and told me stories about the land, it saddens me to see how the wars are affecting such a beautiful country
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  • I really want to travel there, and Syria too. I'm a little daunted by the language barrier, and how a Brit would be seen in the region. I wonder if we're seen as supporters of Israel, or aggressors in Iraq. Both are totally understandable, thanks to Tony Blair!
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  • thx 4 these amazing pic. im lebanese i adore lebanon itis a peace of paradise god bless lebanon and keep it always beautiful
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  • Thank you for posting some of my images.
    A.Saleh
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  • So in all these pictures, not one mosque ? You show the church in Beirut which is less then 30 meters away from the blue mosque.

    You had to choose the angle to make sure that the mosque does not show !!!!!

    67% muslims who live there, are they slave?
    Or they have underground pagan temple where they worship !!!!!
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  • I have never had the desire to visit Switzerland, but I look forward to travelling to Lebanon sometime soon.

    All those amazing pictures have opened my eyes to the many wonders of Lebanon.
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