In what can at best be described as Weird or the height of imagination, a woman claimed to have had Inter course and achieved Orgasm with an Alien!
Sex with Alien!
I landed on this story while following a story by Alien Group on UFO where I received an email that Aliens were watching the appointment of the Pope at the Vatican.
I am posting this video as well here.
The problem with UFO News is that when credible footage,News comes in some things which are so unbelievable also creep in , thus sowing the seeds of doubt.
Stephany Cohen is a British psychic with a mass of rainbow dreads and a very exciting sex life. She appeared today on the U.K. TV network ITV1′s program This Morning, where she discussed the various sexual encounters she frequently has with alien species–both of the cat and reptile variety!
Ms. Cohen said that as she is falling asleep, her consciousness frequently travels to a spaceship where she flies through the galaxy to other worlds. She has a “spirit boyfriend” named Ian the Octopus Man who “stays quite close” to her and gives her mind-blowing orgasms that no mere human mortal could even come close to replicating. “All of them indulge in sex, but particularly the cat people are extremely, highly charged sexually and it’s part of the cat people culture,” she told the show’s host.
Oh, those cat people: always looking for strange.
The professor This Morning brought on as a foil was pretty skeptical of Ms. Cohen’s claims. He suggested she has Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder but for some reason has convinced herself it’s just aliens getting all up on her body. He also asked her to use her psychic powers to look inside a briefcase that they were holding in another room, but Ms. Cohen snapped that her powers don’t really work on-demand like that.
Possible static UFO seen over St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City. Recorded live by the BBC who where covering the announcement of the new Pope, Cardinal Bergoglio of Argentina. Its not the moon, a helicopter or a blimp so whatever it is, its unidentified. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
There has been no woman Pope in the History of The Catholic Church.
Christianity is touted to be a religion which treats every one equally, it is its USP.
But no woman?
Pope Joan.
There is also the controversy that Jesus Christ had left Christianity in the hands of Mary Magdalene.
Why are women not allowed and what is so unique in Men ?
In Hinduism, right from the Vedic Ages, there have been many Rishis, like Gargi to Modern ‘Amma(Ma Anandmayi)’
” There has never been a female pope. There is a myth about a Pope Joan that in recent times has been revived, but which has been clearly rebutted by scholars.
Wikipedia has a good outline of the Pope Joan myth here:
– Roman Catholic Answer
The Pope is the Bishop of Rome, if he is not a Bishop when elected to the Papacy, he is tonsured, ordained a lector, then an acolyte, then a deacon, then a priest, and finally consecrated a bishop. Up until the ninth century, bishops were never elected popes as bishops never moved out of their diocese. Regardless, he is always a bishop, and only a man can be consecrated a bishop, so, no, there has never been a female pope.
– In the legend she was supposed to have been very talented, and, disguised as a man, to have risen through the church hierarchy to become pope, sometime in the Middle Ages.
It has been a popular story since the thirteenth century, but no one has ever found any reason to believe it actually happened.
Since there have always been women who felt they were really men, it is most likely that one was unmasked trying to become a priest. This would have started a rash of ‘what if she hadn’t been discovered’ stories, culminating in the Pope Joan myth.(wiki answers)
Ordaining of Woman in Catholic Church.
As more Protestant denominations, including the Church of England, have begun ordaining women, the Catholic Church’s teaching on the all-male priesthood has come under attack, with some claiming that the ordination of women is simply a matter of justice, and the lack of such ordination is proof that the Catholic Church does not value women. The Church’s teaching on this matter, however, cannot change. Why can’t women be priests?
Answer:
In the Person of Christ the Head
At the most basic level, the answer to the question is simple: The New Testament priesthood is the priesthood of Christ Himself. All men who, through the Sacrament of Holy Orders, have become priests (or bishops) participate in Christ’s priesthood. And they participate in it in a very special way: They actin persona Christi Capitis, in the person of Christ, the Head of His Body, the Church.
Christ Was a Man
Christ, of course, was a man; but some who argue for the ordination of women insist that His sex is irrelevant, that a woman can act in the person of Christ as well as a man can. This is a misunderstanding of Catholic teaching on the differences between men and women, which the Church insists are irreducible; men and women, by their natures, are suited to different, yet complementary, roles and functions.
The Tradition Established by Christ Himself
Yet even if we disregard the differences between the sexes, as many advocates of women’s ordination do, we have to face the fact that the ordination of men is an unbroken tradition that goes back not only to the Apostles but to Christ Himself. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church (para. 1577) states:
“Only a baptized man (vir) validly receives sacred ordination.” The Lord Jesus chose men (viri) to form the college of the twelve apostles, and the apostles did the same when they chose collaborators to succeed them in their ministry. The college of bishops, with whom the priests are united in the priesthood, makes the college of the twelve an ever-present and ever-active reality until Christ’s return. The Church recognizes herself to be bound by this choice made by the Lord himself. For this reason the ordination of women is not possible.
Priesthood Not a Function But an Indelible Spiritual Character
Still, the argument continues, some traditions are made to be broken. But again, that misunderstands the nature of the priesthood. Ordination does not simply give a man permission to perform the functions of a priest; it imparts to him an indelible (permanent) spiritual character that makes him a priest, and since Christ and His Apostles chose only men to be priests, only men can validly become priests.
The Impossibility of Women’s Ordination
In other words, it’s not simply that the Catholic Church does not allow women to be ordained. If a validly ordained bishop were to perform the rite of the Sacrament of Holy Orders exactly, but the person supposedly being ordained were a woman rather than a man, the woman would no more be a priest at the end of the rite than she was before it began. The bishop’s action in attempting the ordination of a woman would be both illicit (against the laws and regulations of the Church) and invalid (ineffective, and hence null and void).
The movement for women’s ordination in the Catholic Church, therefore, will never get anywhere. Other Christian denominations, to justify ordaining women, have had to change their understanding of the nature of the priesthood from one which conveys an indelible spiritual character on the man who is ordained to one in which the priesthood is treated as a mere function. But to abandon the 2,000-year-old understanding of the nature of the priesthood would be a doctrinal change. The Catholic Church could not do so and remain the Catholic Church.
He urged people “not to forget those who had fallen during the war” as they had “shed their blood on Argentine soil”
Pope Francis has been a vocal and passionate supporter of his country’s claim on the Falkland Islands, known as Las Malvinas to Argentinians.
In April last year, at a memorial mass in Buenos Aires 30 years on from the Falklands conflict, he said: “We come to pray for all who have fallen, sons of the homeland who went out to defend their mother, the homeland, and to reclaim what is theirs, that is of the homeland, and it was usurped.”
And a year earlier, he urged people “not to forget those who had fallen during the war” as they had “shed their blood on Argentine soil”
Not that his relation with the present Argentinian is cozy..far from it.
He is against Gay marriage.
When the Cardinal urged parishioners to join a campaign he called “God’s war” against gay marriage, Ms.Kirchner , Argentinian President,,compared his tone to the Middle Ages and the Inquisition.
Previously, in a snipe at Cardinal Bergoglio, Mr Kirchner reportedly said: “Our God is everyone’s, but careful because the Devil also reaches everyone – those who wear trousers and those who wear cassocks.”
Despite their differences, the Cardinal called for the Argentine people to pray for Mr Kirchner when he died in October 2010.
Now this statement on Falklands, where a referendum has taken place about 4 days ago on its status.
Britain, though outwardly cool awaits the result of the Referendum.
Hope it has not manipulated the Referendum process.
Britain formed a new sect of Christianity because the Catholic pope did not allow a king to marry when his wife was alive.
Let’s see if the Pope creates a new Britain. outside Britain.
Anyway, we can find Britain squirming in the coming years.
People living in the Falkland Islands are voting in a referendum on their political status on Sunday and Monday at a time of heightened tensions between Argentina and Britain over their sovereignty.
The two countries went to war over the territory, known to the Argentinians as Las Malvinas, in 1982 after the then-military government in Argentina landed troops on the islands.
According to the Falklands legislative assembly, the vote is intended to affirm islanders’ desire to remain a self-governing territory of the United Kingdom and to reject claims of ownership by Argentina.
I received a colorful comment for this post and there are two ratings “Poor’.
(that the post received 18 Likes is a different matter-Obviously from the colonized!)
Obviously from the British.
They asked me to Study History.
This is Britain’s History.
“Everybody knew that the British loved to conquer lots of countries for their precious empire. It’s not until somebody sits down and actually counts all of them that we realize just how many. Historian Stuart Laycock was happy to volunteer for the job and presents his findings in a new book All the Countries We’ve Ever Invaded: And the Few We Never Got Round To. The book stays true to its title and finds in a survey of 200 of the world’s countries through that, in one shape or form, Great Britain has invaded all but 22 of them. That amounts to about 90 percent of the world’s countries.”
Now the process of selecting Pope by a Conclave of Cardinals(115 in number this time) to select a successor to Pope Benedict XV who resigned.
The Conclave is in progress and watch Live the Conclave.
Black Smoke Vatican, Indicates Pope is yet to be chosen.
Here’s a summary of today’s events.
The Conclave to Elect The Pope.
• Some 115 cardinals have begun their conclave to choose the next pope. A puff of black smoke from the chimney above the Sistine Chapel this evening signalled that the cardinals had not yet come to a decision. They will now retire to the isolation of St Martha’s House, within the Vatican walls, and reconvene tomorrow morning at 8.30am GMT for more deliberations. They are expected to choose a new pope within the next couple of days.
• The favourite remains CardinalAngelo Scola of Milan, with Cardinal Odilo Pedro Scherer in second place. But in truth no figure goes into the conclave with the kind of strong prospects Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger had when he became Pope Benedict XVI in 2005.
This along with the metal pressures being built up by the scams of Pedophile Priests and Gay Issues hastened his decision to abdicate as a Pope in Seven Centuries .
“One cannot fail to be moved by the 85-year-old leader’s recognition that he no longer possesses sufficient “strength of mind and body,” leaving him unable “to adequately fulfill the ministry entrusted to me.”
He made the announcement on February 11. He will leave his post on February 28. Shortly thereafter, a conclave of cardinals, the top leaders of the Church, will meet to select a new pope from among themselves.
Benedict XVI’s resignation is a witness to aging and human mortality.
Pope Benedict XVI.
No matter what our beliefs about religion, this simple but profound action gives us pause to reflect on how we can accept our own human limitations.
For the Huntington’s disease community, it also provides an opportunity to recall the ethical, social, and spiritual dimensions of our collective struggle.”
Huntington’s disease is caused by a genetic defect on chromosome 4. The defect causes a part of DNA, called a CAG repeat, to occur many more times than it is supposed to. Normally, this section of DNA is repeated 10 to 28 times. But in persons with Huntington’s disease, it is repeated 36 to 120 times.
As the gene is passed down through families, the number of repeats tend to get larger. The larger the number of repeats, the greater your chance of developing symptoms at an earlier age. Therefore, as the disease is passed along in families, symptoms develop at younger and younger ages.
There are two forms of Huntington’s disease.
The most common is adult-onset Huntington’s disease. Persons with this form usually develop symptoms in their mid 30s and 40s.
An early-onset form of Huntington’s disease accounts for a small number of cases and begins in childhood or adolescence.
If one of your parents has Huntington’s disease, you have a 50% chance of getting the gene for the disease. If you get the gene from your parents, you will develop the disease at some point in your life, and can pass it onto your children. If you do not get the gene from your parents, you cannot pass the gene onto your children.
Symptoms
Behavior changes may occur before movement problems, and can include:
Behavioral disturbances
Hallucinations
Irritability
Moodiness
Restlessness or fidgeting
Paranoia
Psychosis
Abnormal and unusual movements include:
Facial movements, including grimaces
Head turning to shift eye position
Quick, sudden, sometimes wild jerking movements of the arms, legs, face, and other body parts
There is no cure for Huntington’s disease, and there is no known way to stop the disease from getting worse. The goal of treatment is to slow down the symptoms and help the person function for as long and as comfortably as possible.
Medications vary depending on the symptoms.
Dopamine blockers may help reduce abnormal behaviors and movements.
Drugs such as amantadine and tetrabenazine are used to try to control extra movements.
There has been some evidence to suggest that co-enzyme Q10 may also help slow down the course of the disease, but it is not conclusive.
Depression and suicide are common among persons with Huntington’s disease. It is important for all those who care for a person with Huntington’s disease to monitor for symptoms and treat accordingly.
As the disease progresses, the person will need assistance and supervision, and may eventually need 24-hour care.
You must be logged in to post a comment.