Friday, December 24, 2010

Why Does My Cervical Mu

Merry Christmas - Volume 2

Hello the boyz n 'girlz!

H-12 before the binge triggered by Christmas. H-12 before the fateful answer "Are we going to hit the road in the snow?!". H-12 before you can watch "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Special Christmas"! Yeah, Yippee!
Ok I stop being cynical!

H-15 before reading the joy on the faces of children and adults to open their gifts, have a good time with family and friends, sharing time, friendliness, forgiveness and joy!

Joy for the Saviour is born to deliver us from sin. We believe in it or not but here is the original meaning of this holiday! So sing this joy with Mariah!

Do not be fooled by her half-social duvet '94, it sings well inside!!

Good selection not glamorous chic christmas thing! You are, undoubtedly, everyone ready for the holidays! We still have the 24/12. If this is not the case, well, well ... You are the mega wad!
No, fashionista sighted I am, I'm already thinking about the after party. The period of good intentions, the plan for detoxifying get rid of the fat ingested and to tone all!

JumpStart!! So where it coarseness?!


To fill you with happiness and help you use all this equipment, you, Fring'Halles reader of the blog, the association Agape offers you a dance workshop a preferential rate that PLUS:
  • How? Presale: € 5 instead of 10 € on site: € 10 instead of 20 €
  • Where? Andre Guillaumie Gymnasium - Via A. Guillaume - Le Plessis-Bouchard (95130)
  • When? January 15, 2011 from 17:30 to 19h
  • What? exotic cocktail cardio (ragga, hip-hop, salsa)
  • Who? All levels

For more information, thank you to contact the teacher at the following address: agapedanse@gmail.com or 06 24 80 51 53 .

Find internships in 2010 and the various activities of the association's blog Agape Dance .

Christmas welfare is on Fring'Halles it happens!

With that, it remains for me to wish you a Happy New Year! As the slogan of the association, Keep on smiling *!!!!!

Fring'hallounnette "mode Mother Christmas" at your service!

* Mouse!

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Does Temazepam Calm You

Response to post 13 December

I reproduce below in its entirety and without any comment from me, send me the answer that Mr. Jean-Claude Koeune the article posted on December 13 last. Once is not custom, usually, the comments are posting in the section provided for this purpose at the bottom of each article. But as Mr. Koeune was very fortunate to be a personal post, controversial and long enough, it seems logical that appears here as exceptionally "contributor" in itself.

*

Dear Colleague,

I finally took the time to read your responses to the comment I made in your paper. I also read with interest the text of your conference on November 20 last Altercité [click here - CA] , which unfortunately I had heard while the peroration, given a change program which I had not been warned.

I begin with a focus that matters to me. You seem to blame me - or rather: have a negative perception of the fact that I worked as an economist in the banking sector, "industry which unfortunately " - my emphasis - "you have been involved" you write below, and your blog:

1. "Jean-Claude Koeune has long worked in (the) core banking and finance (capital), as chief economist
in a large commercial bank - to a level of responsibility, where no doubt, the 'welfare to work' prevailed (helped by the level of pay) on ill-being ".

2." The quotation from Voltaire can certainly raise a smile between two small furnaces in the cocktail lounge a large bank.

3. "It is true that on your side, long economist in a bank, you may not be a 'hate' against the system that your favors."

4 ". ... commitments sincere but very problematic for economists to straddle the large bank, high finance and economics education.

5 ". ... that human beings should live under the yoke of monetary and financial logic that you worked your whole life to build.

I fear that in doing so, you may insinuate into the minds of your readers - though perhaps no was not your intention - the idea that this experience would make me unfit to discuss objectively the vices and virtues of society that is ours. If this is what you think, let me disagree with you strongly. Those who heard me in the workshop on financial regulation at the same symposium, 20 November Altercité can testify that they had no case to a spokesman banking system.


Without charge you the story of my life, I want you to know this:

- After 11 years in research and teaching economics at several universities abroad, I am returned to Belgium in 1977, hoping to find a job in a Belgian university, but probably had I been gone too long ... Anyway, I took a few months after the first job they offered me, very badly paid, in a cabinet: having a family to feed, having moreover not entitled to unemployment compensation , I did not have to be choosy. I finally spent 10 good years with a series of Belgian governments and I think the general interest in positions inherently unstable (like those governments) rather poorly paid, and where weekly hours of work commonly exceeded 60, even 70 hours. Unhappiness at work? Certainly not average, because it was very interesting and it taught me a lot.


- In May 1988, I voluntarily left the cabinet ministers to seek more stable employment, as I pointed unemployed for a few months, and I am forever grateful to the Banque Bruxelles Lambert for having committed at the age of 50 years as chief economist
, September 88. Again I could not afford to be choosy, but frankly I'd never thought about it, because I was very pleased to have the opportunity to work in a private company - which, after University and public service, was missing from my experience - and, more importantly, to work in a bank, "the banking and financial heart of capitalism" as you so well, I dreamed long as that the economist, because that is where a good factory Part of the money supply.

This biographical point brings me to an important point of our disagreement: you deplore in your message below the "little secret arrangements" of the banking sector with what you call "counterfeiting" and the "logic of dispossession of money creation by private agents, which would you consider" anti-democratic. " Other comments on your blog are from the same barrel, and the fifth section of your conference on 20 November when you plead for a "radical reform of money creation" and you rebel against "the logic of debt-money - Reminiscent of the counterfeiter and the casino player.

noted first that "small agreements" you are talking about are not secret: it is a fact known to all the world - in any case it should be, and it would be if all aspiring citizens received at school correct information on the economy and the currency - that banks (whether they are of private or public does not alter the case) are behind the creation of a significant portion of the money, and it occurs spontaneously through the mechanism of credit, which in itself does not create money - - it simply transfers liquidity - but is originally a creation of additional money from the moment the IOUs of individuals or institutions are accepted as payment and begin to circulate in parallel with the economy fiat money. Suppose a monetary alternatives that you recommend in your project of "radical reform" means the day: "Governments may by order remove all commercial banks a monopoly of money creation, and be inspired, as close democratic control. " Never mind that encounter considerable difficulties this "narrow democratic control" to arbitrate between the competing interests of depositors, borrowers, and bank employees. But do you honestly believe that this reform will eliminate you money creation that comes from debt ... unless of course you dispose of it and the credit mechanism by banning it altogether. But this is not what you want, or I'm wrong?

Another important point of disagreement between us regarding the "internalities anthropo-environmental." Forgive me for accusing him of having "invented" this concept, and I pay gladly to Ivan Illich his due, without further certifies the concept to me: the only book I read was Illich A society without school in years 70, and I was not encouraged to read other works by the same author, his thoughts seemed to me inspired generous bill but confused. But never mind.

The substance of the matter is this. I accept that there are indeed "internalities anthropo-environmental" work-related: for if I take your definition of internalities ("a result of activity for some economic actors who participate in internal and goes against the rationale of the activity in question "), I quickly concluded that most human activities (not just economic) include such internalities, and they are positive or negative, and often one and the other for the same individual at different times. A concept as commonplace, and difficult to measure such generality does not seem very useful for reflection and analysis. pompously called the deal a "internalities anthropo-environmental" is, in my view, the pseudo-science. In this meaning that I wrote previously that such a concept does not "was not the road."

For the rest I do not deny nor denies the suffering at work, whatever you pretend, and you do not believe me maybe if I tell you I have known something, but simply I deny that it is in our society more than in other industrial societies (we are not in Arcadia), "a phenomenon profound, widespread, almost Epidemiological order" and there is no as a "welfare to work" that must also be considered. I accept that suffering is at work on average increased recent decades, at least in the West (as if that were hard working conditions in Chinese production, I think they are less bad than those of working the land in rural China, unless one considers that hundreds of million Chinese have become masochists), this increase has resulted from globalization, the downward pressure it generated on the remuneration of unskilled labor in the West, and threats of relocation or insecurity of a series of jobs. I still believe we can reduce that suffering by trade union action by the national governments, for better cooperation between them, particularly within the ILO and WTO, and, finally, by adopting global standards (I agree on this point with the first "front" you propose to open in your conference, 20 November) whatever the difficulty of that task. "In its largest effort," Camus wrote, "man can only propose to diminish the pain of the world arithmetically" ( The Rebel, p. 374).

About quotes, I regret that you have found "distasteful" my quote Voltaire on the suffering at work. I should rather quote Oscar Wilde: " Work Is the Curse of the drinking classes ! But seriously, if your ethics and that of the new society that tolerates birth you want as little humor, no thank you!

Last point: in About what I wrote on the company town and company dormitories you write: "JCK we therefore suggest that it is really urgent - and probably good for the growth imperative of the global economy - that every Chinese has a car so that he, too, exercise the 'freedom to choose their place of residence'. The implication for the relocation of economic activities, a return extended towards smaller and rhythms, it is preferred the rule of 'freedom'. "You will see a sign" of the inability of many alleged progressives to understand contemporary issues. "I want to clarify this, for you and those of your readers:

- I do not consider myself "progressive", calling it too often this term in contemporary language people incredibly backward-looking to my eyes;


- I have absolutely no suggestion that it was urgent that every Chinese has a car, if you reread my comment, you will find that I have not once used the word car can move otherwise. Personally, I am a long time supporter of public transport;


- more fundamentally, for me that at present travel between home and workplace resulting in the most choice freely exercised today or in the past, and there is no need therefore to consider them as "internalities" negative, does any part of my approval of the overall situation created by the free choices, because it This fact produces far too many
negative externalities , I personally find much preferable to a state where roads are less congested, road transport cleaner, and used public transport more, and I think as an economist, that the freedom to choose, I defend, is exercised through individual budget constraints and family, who are themselves largely determined by the price system, which may not accurately reflect the actual costs (including the environmental cost) alternatives available to individual choice. I obviously do not teach you anything, but do not make me say that I have absolutely no say or suggest.

With that, I salute you,

Jean-Claude Koeune

PS. You can put this comment in your blog, provided it is incorporated in its entirety
.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

English Patch Morrowind

The five "fronts" for a genuine transition

I put here online I gave a lecture Saturday, November 20, 2010 at a workshop of the association "Altercité (Brussels) on the theme" Taste of Life: a simpler life, a personal and collective way out of crisis? " I was asked to intervene on issues of economic transition. This text

( downloadable here in PDF ) is entitled "The Five 'fronts' for a genuine transition: global standards, new political structures, individual awareness, revenue of economic transition, radical reform of money creation" . It is freely available and can - as my previous text of 12 February 2010 on "Economic transition and environmental transition" - to be printed, forwarded, reviewed, etc.., Provided that reference is made clear in its origin and its author. It updates some of the issues discussed in the older text. It can certainly complement it useful as a tool to extend and deepen the reflection. Aspects of political structure here is a little less dominant, even if I add to my previous tracks the proposal to create a World of Transition, or OMT. The most economical aspects related income (guaranteed) economic transition and - even more - with the indispensable banking reform and monetary are more in the foreground.

I take this opportunity to sincerely thank my colleagues Bernard Lietaer and Marek Hudon, specialists on monetary and currency known as "complementary" for the inspiration they gave me during these past months, and has been instrumental in putting forward here, the "fifth face."

The text can be downloaded in PDF format by clicking here . Like its predecessor, you can print it, pass it around freely, share, comment, etc.. But, again, I would appreciate a clear reference to its origin and its author.

Good reading, good thinking, good activism ... and thank you in advance!

Ch A.

Monday, December 13, 2010

The Layout Of An Orchestr

JCK and "hatred of capitalism"

Most recently, Jean-Claude Koeune, a fellow economist, I received a comment on my paper "Economic transition and environmental transition" February 2010. He raises interesting questions, at the same time, reveal the depth of the chasm that separates those of us willing to consider a different future and those who, like him, and yet still believe in the "réformabilité" system in place - tenacious dogma, we know, lasts for decades and blithely through all the crises that capitalism requires us to cross ... I copy below the comment of Mr. Koeune (which was kindly allowed to leave and sporting his commentary and his name on this blog) and then I respond. Happy reading. [Note: My next post, do not worry, will return to constructive thinking and advances that await readers of this blog. But it is also important, as in this post and the previous one, to highlight the obstacles that the dominant thinking stands in our way. I know that people like Mr. Koeune are still being heard much more than those of us who are trying to shift the debate and bring on other issues.]

******* **************************

I'll try [to] explain the reasons for which I am, say, reluctant to face analysis Arnsperger [...]. My criticism is about his paper "Economic transition and environmental transition" from last February. [...]


Clearly he does not like our capitalist system, which is obviously the most basic right. The terms he uses to describe the show rather than repulsion system inspires him: he is "directly destructive of human potential" (p.1), he transformed our political systems into "pseudo-capitalist democracies" (p.4 ), where consumers "give free rein to their various compulsions" (p.3), in outlets "where each of us went blindly after work" in which - needless to say - he has been "squeezed like a lemon" (p.9), while the beneficiaries of the system while their "compulsive predatory extraction, appropriation and consumption" (p. 6) have "sensed the need and desirability" (p.3) for a greener capitalism. [...] By Jove!

This language does not bother me in a pamphlet or a PTB of Besancenot's speech, but it surprises me the pen of a teacher and academic researcher, and makes me question his objectivity.

But there is much more a question of form. In fact I suspect Arnsperger this: his hatred of capitalism is such that it would absolutely deny him any opportunity to improve (especially with a better framework of government and civil society) and to regenerate, and it is of course very aware of the extraordinary possibilities of recovery shown by the system with respect to the dispute. So it must nip in the bud the idea of inventing a green capitalism - is the right word - the "internalities anthropo-environmental."


Now this concept, in my opinion does not hold water. The examples given in the box on page 2 are totally unconvincing. "The time (not counted as working time) we'll go to work" but is it not largely a consequence of the fact that we have some freedom to choose our place of residence and, who chose the latter, we are not restricted in our employment opportunities to a limited geographic circle. But what! Would it be better if we lived in company towns or dormitories as business in China? Similarly, "the general impoverishment human (and most often invisible to short term) that accompanies the 'wealth generation' ... More generally, the suffering at work which is recognized ... in any record ...". Certainly I do not deny the suffering at work ("work is not made for man, and the proof is that it tires him" saying, I think, Voltaire) but there is also a well-being at work, which is not recorded. The balance would tip it more in favor of the latter in the new economic system and poorly defined qu'Arnsperger been calling? confess believe more, to decrease the discomfort at work, and for more equitable balance of ill-being and well-being, action association and the government, as part of our system.


Arnsperger I look for it a little more rigorously define the "internalities anthropo-environmental" and especially to demonstrate a little more seriously than those internalities in our system are mainly negative and are sentenced to remain so unless the radical transformation. Because it is a key point of his argument.


JCK


*****************************************
The author of these lines knows in capitalism: Jean-Claude Koeune has long worked in banking and financial center, as chief economist in a large commercial bank - to a level of responsibility which, undoubtedly, the "welfare to work" prevailed (helped by the level of pay) on ill-being.

Note that Mr. Koeune calls "for more equitable balance of ill-being and welfare, trade union action and the government, under our system ( my emphasis). If he had read the previous articles of this blog, he clearly saw what I give the actual latitude of action now, "as part of our system", unions and governments. The recent crisis, still in progress, public debt in the EU demonstrates repeatedly that, "under our system" where private actors to finance and notation make the law, neither unions nor powers public have no choice but to march. The IMF has again reiterated in its latest report on Belgium: to resist the "pressure of financial markets," it is urgent to "streamline" government spending (not to scare off "investors" who are yet very little risk) and dismantle the protections Labour ending, in particular, the automatic indexation of wages (indexing, the IMF said, could "transmit economic shocks across the economy" - the implicit ideology is that it is better than these are the workers who absorb these shocks in the front line, rather than banks and "investors" who sweeten discreetly at the back of the pack).

In the language "rigorous" with which Mr. Koeune would like me to reconnect, it's called "market discipline". Hence, of course, the contradiction in his remarks: probably appear as a progressive above all suspicion, he calls on governments and unions within a logic that was stripped of any real authority and has made them co-managers of private profitability . [Decryption tool for use by the public: look around you, the rhetoric is to appeal to the government, regulation and control in a democratic system which, for decades, methodically erode the flexibility of states and latitudes of democracy. Observe that rhetoric is the preserve of people who, often without realizing it, want to give a polished progressive while accepting the logic place.]

Mr. Koeune indeed can not be accused of naivety: he himself has made clear, a few lines before, be like me, like all of us, "very aware of the possibility of recovery shown by the system respect of the dispute. " Very nice trick, let's face it: although not very interested in social criticism, he uses one of the most popular themes in current social criticism - that of "recovery", including dear to sociologists Luc Boltanski and Eve in their Chiapello New Spirit of Capitalism - to show ... exactly the opposite ! Namely, that capitalism has the capacity "to improve (especially with a better framework of government and civil society) and regenerate." Note the use, once again, the government - and this time the "civil society" in place here, including the need to suppose the unions. In banking and financial turmoil, so budget and pay - in full economic tsunami where states are sinking in debt a loan shark and where workers lose their jobs by the tens of thousands - Mr. Koeune (but it is far from the only one) that we preach States and the unions will be able to "improve" in the better regulation of the system that is currently strangling them. [A factual note: As part of Basel III on banking regulation, banking lobbies are spending huge sums to minimize regulation, including increasing capital ratios. When we see what levels of prudential rate large banks deem "excessive", we quickly convinced that indeed, this is about greed and predation. Let it not, a startled, we speak of "democracy." We are well, thanks to powerful economic actors and their ability nuisance, in a pseudo capitalist democracy . My colleague Fred Lordon wrote things without calling on those aspects of the issue. I advise you to his two books Until when? and The crisis of too .]

What about humor, slightly tinged with bad taste, in respect of the suffering at work? The quotation from Voltaire can certainly raise a smile between two small furnaces in the cocktail lounge of a large bank. But what the hell! Results - rigorous, dear Mr. Koeune, scientific, not sponsored by PTB ... - That sociologists and psychologists bring businesses (large and small) where they encounter employees, these results are conclusive. We believe today that the monetary and financial bottlenecks faced by employees and household simply reflects a kind of natural harshness of the work ("that the fatigue," quipped Voltaire) is a contradiction to the least disastrous. And M. Koeune obviously trying to make us believe that, as he says, he "does not deny the suffering at work." But if, of course, he denies it! He denies , even - for the simple reason that to admit such a profound phenomenon, prevalent, order Epidemiological almost, it would have to accept that "our" system is exhausted. It would have to admit that capitalism has become structurally unable to provide people with something other than debt (collateral reduction of essential public services in the future) and piles of consumer goods - if not widespread poverty. What would possibly Mr. Koeune out of its denial would be to consult clinical research in sociology on the capitalist labor, with authors such as Vincent Gaulejac, Christopher and Thomas Dejours Somersault (to name a few ). It could also read plant Vincent De Raeve, which I mentioned in a previous article. He could finally go and see the remarkable books of Anne Salmon and Isabelle Ferreras . It would become quickly convinced that the negative internalities supplant, indeed, internalities positive, and rethink the status of work today requires a radical democratization, not just another version "green" pseudo-capitalist democracy.

I note in passing that in speaking of "internalities" I invented nothing, contrary to the claims of Mr. Koeune. I simply repeated an expression proposed in years 1970 by Ivan Illich to make spotted the "domestic effects" of the system that we do not recognize as they have no significant impact on the private profitability. And it's partly a question of balance of power. The initial idea of social democracy was, of course, were the wages of workers who had to integrate these internal effects and "compensate" the drudgery. (For this reason, one suspects, both Mr. Koeune myself should receive an hourly wage far below that of a worker at the steel hot or a supermarket cashier. This is or her case, nor mine.) But this beautiful idea wage compensation was shattered long ago; today when financial rents payable (dividend and interest on various bank debt) net wages cut corners but overall net income of households, and where globalization makes a downward pressure on wages no thank you, there is no question of "offset" of suffering at work. Internalities anthropological (that is to say the negative effects, and invisible to the capitalist employment on quality of life) prevail without anyone, and certainly not the States nor the unions can not do much 'thing in the ambient logic system. Everyone is too busy to stampede can. In this context, what a good idea - at least if we want to save the logic of private profitability while providing maximum air "not deny" his misdeeds - to appeal to the regulation by government government and unions!

skepticism of Mr. Koeune against environmental internalities is revealing, in my opinion, the inability of many alleged progressives to understand contemporary issues. Reread the passage on travel by car and on the "company town" and "corporate dormitories" Chinese. Here is the equivalent, in Ecology, the classic opposition between capitalism and communism. You know the old song: do not recognize the virtues of the system in place is the "hate" and he preferred ... Communism (did not there be more than suspicious of Aquaint with TBP or with the NPA of Besancenot?). The refrain here is intensifying, and returns for a ride: do not recognize the virtues of mobility into employment and the geographical expansion of "our job opportunities", that is their preference ... regimentation of Chinese Communism. Mr. Koeune suggests that it is really urgent - and probably good for the growth imperative of the economy world - that every Chinese has a car so that he, too, exercise the "freedom to choose their place of residence." The implication for the relocation of economic activities, a return to extended and rhythms smaller, we must prefer the rule of "freedom." Should it not read the emergency analysis of Illich-cons on productivity and calculations clear and unambiguous (scientists, too, not sponsored by the Chinese Communist Party) Jean Robert and Jean-Pierre Dupuy The betrayal of affluence ? To read them, we get a picture of the human and ecological effects caused by our dependence on consumption, debt and therefore has to paid employment need to get where he is - image, dating from 1970, is still qu'aggravée today.

But never mind: Mr. Koeune has to deconstruct my analysis, diagnosis all encased in this "objectivity" which he says makes me so lacking. You see, in my depths, I would be driven by one thing: my "hatred of capitalism." Anyway, while having been a beneficiary shameless in my life, I feel today and I observe around me too harmful effects to still believe in its "regeneration". Let's say I oppose this system and its logic for ethical reasons ... Call it the "hatred", it involves only you. It is true that, on your side, long economist in a bank, you may not be a "hatred" against the system that your favors. Many "ordinary economists" (to use the beautiful expression of Etienne de Callatay ) have all their lives, having in view the general interest - they are victims of this illusion shared by all the singers of Private Bills, who believe for example that the capitalist banking sector (thus both private and for-profit ) is able to allocate more resources to the most useful purpose in society.

We will therefore time again, we preach a green capitalism financed by a commercial banking sector will "regenerate" the economy and direct it toward what requires "general interest" . And it is strange, in fact, Mr. Koeune, you feel both the need to answer me and point my "hatred" of "your" system - because it's obviously you and people like you that we will listen again for quite some time. Yet you seem a little worried. Nervous. Your rhetoric on the PWB, Besancenot and communism should not fool anyone yet. If I were you, this is not what would scare me. The PTB and Besancenot are harmless, and you know like me. What frightens many more business and economists are good complexion, is that finally a number of citizens are aware of the logic that drives "our" system. This is only the favor of the banking crisis, fiscal crises to come, and the dollar crisis that perhaps we expected a few years, but very sincere commitments problematic economists straddling the large bank, the high finance and economics education, lose their luster in retrospect.

"Our" system and its banking sector have included the requirement growth into our bodies and our souls. To feed the pensions of more affluent and also, increasingly, just to get ourselves a bit of thought correct, we are obliged to contribute daily to this great "wealth generation" who has not, to my knowledge, demonstrated its ability to eradicate inequality while safeguarding the environment. The banking sector lends money it does not force people and for his own benefit, bring him to the principal with interest that have no justification. (Do not tell us especially that pays interest savings - you know it's a lie. The interest pays banks, as a sector, give 17 or 20 times the deposit and the savings they receive. Maurice Allais, Nobel laureate in economics, compared to that of counterfeiting legalized by lobbying hard in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.) It's that logic that "our" system feeds and your fear, worried that voius're a so-called "public interest" may be that citizens are finally waking up. You do, I think, not at all afraid of communism, but of has the democratization of finance and currency, the dispossession of the financial elites of a wrongful monopoly they hold in the shade for a long time - in short, you are afraid of economic democracy, egalitarianism and the awareness of citizens . (Conspiracy theory? It is always easy to fall back on it ... The logic at work, which a majority of blind people and benefits a minority, is not necessarily a conspiracy. The Read on Grip of Death Michael Rowbotham, you may open your eyes.)

Facing the green capitalism that you call your vows as a symbol of the new conversion of "our" system, as a symbol of its remarkable adaptability , the guesswork of small citizens apparently well you seem weaklings. But objectivity, of course, is on your side. The alternatives are that look in your eyes, "poorly defined". And then? Read, pray, Resisting is creating Miguel Benasayag and Florence Aubenas. They will show you with rigor - rigor but very different from yours, I concede - That the future can not be decreed and it is born, it emerges from below (that's the real democracy ...) when citizens are aware of the cruel limitations that the current logic the faces.

It is these limits then, of course, that you really really want to minimize or even deny. Your attempt is called, in strict philosophical terms, the "naturalization" try to make it appear as natural and inevitable that, in fact, may be reconsidered and passed. And as the best sign of the strange hatred (though muffled, well hidden, well polished and polite) that you seem to live, I invite readers of this blog to read that sentence again for your pen "Certainly I do not deny the suffering at work ('work is not made for man, and the proof is that it's the fatigue 'said, I think, Voltaire), but there is also a well-being at work, which is not recorded. " Specifically, it must be well become the very meaning of work, despite and even through the fatigue. It takes more than human beings should live under the yoke of logical monetary and financial sector where you have worked as chief economist always want to strengthen - not for the common good, but for the constant creation of private pension fnancières. And that is why, you see, that unlike you I believe in alternatives still "poorly defined" in gestation because of citizens' movements in too little awareness of power relations that prevail. They exist, these alternatives, they already think and live in small networks, but the logic implemented by "our" system - the system that you want to "refresh" once again, as the hydra raises his head a crisis of legitimacy has cut - prevent them from deploying.

I therefore urge Mr. Koeune after reading this post it, check out the one I put online in a few days and explain to him, as other readers of this blog, I think what horizons glimpse into a genuine transition.

Friday, December 10, 2010

India Saree Women Boobs

The adventure continues!

Hello!

Already back yes! I wanted to share with you the adventures of my hair journey. I take my time off from time to pamper my hair, give them the care they need and get to know them.

It may seem strange to some of you but the history of black women and their hair is complicated and full of ignorance. From small, to most of us, we have the braided, straightened, denatured, and hated all this excessive ... However at no time, we were taught or even have time to know them, care for and love them just above.

My afro is my braids under 6 years. But now I am more and more attention. After extensive product testing, I stop on the range of "Secrets of Loly" that I use for 2 solid months now.

Very satisfied: loops are extremely well defined (read: the effect farewell straw / horsehair choice after shampooing), the Hair is ventilated and actually look like cotton, the products smell good and your hair as the blow. My hair is duller and much less at all brittle.


My favorite products are the after-shampoo conditioner, hair tonic and serum whipped shea. ;

Secrets Loly is a website or a shop at 56 rue Coriolis - Paris 12th, Metro Dugommier. Okay I'll stop there because some do it much better than I do on sites I have already mentioned here!
I show you my mimine the moment with my test Afro wet effect.

For the wet look all the day, take an African first and apply the wet Pink Design Control Gel Luster's. That's all! I do not recommend this technique on a daily basis because the freeze is still a hit and heavy hair. A few days before the shampoo, it does!

And it looks, Tada Fringhouz aka Corneille's me!


Back to my favorite vanilla next week!

Fring'hallounnette Apple addicted "to your service!
the

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Mirena Spiral Uk Buy Online

Merry Christmas - Volume 1

Hello guyz!!

I am back to you two combined Christmas! Two?? Fringhouz, are mistaken?? That's because I love you with love that I realized these TWO mounts from an old PC leap years for more than three hours!

Most tricks that I propose that concern practically dresses. So I started in the shade, combined pants for the holidays! Coming Soon!

For now, enjoy the combined Xmas - Volume 1!!

Pearl Shine Combines

Purple Deluxe Combines

Fring'hallounnette Windows at your service!