Bmyh After a week of terror, Boston exhales
The message flickered into Cindy Fleenor s living room each night: Be faithful in how you
stanley italia live and how you give, the television preachers said, and God will shower you with material riches.And so the 53-year-old accountant from the Tampa, Fla., area pledged $500 a year to Joyce Meyer, the evangelist whose frank talk about recovering from childhood sexual abuse was so inspirational. She wrote checks to flamboyant faith healer Benny Hinn and a local preacher-made-good, Paula White.Only the blessings didn t come. Fleenor ended up borrowing money from friends and payday loan companies just to buy groceries. At first she believed the explanation given on television: Her faith wasn t strong enough. I wanted to believe God wanted to do something great with me like he was doing with them, she said. I m angry and bitter about it. Right now, I don t watch anyone on TV hardly.
stanley quencher All three of the groups Fleenor supported are among six major Christian television mini
stanley deutschland stries under scrutiny by a senator who is asking questions about the evangelists lavish spending and possible abuses of their tax-exempt status. The probe by Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, has brought new scrutiny to the underlying belief that brings in millions of dollars and fills churches from Atlanta to Los Angeles - the Gospel of Prosperity, or the notion that God wants to bless the faithful with earthly riches.All six ministries under investigation preach Lyuv Republican leaders seek to simplify presidential nominating process
A few weeks ago, we wrote about a tiny micro-bot designed to be injected into a patients eye and controlled via magnet鈥攁 speck-sized eye surgeon. This week, a group of Berkeley researchers published a study positing a similar concept, except the bots are inside your brain. And theyre the size of dust particles. Its called neural dust. Of cour
stanley water bottle se. Published on July 8, Neur
stanley cup al Dust: An Ultrasonic, Low Power Solution for Chronic Brain-Machine Interfaces is the research equivalent of a think piece. But as think pieces go, its pretty compelling. It assesses the plausibility of a brain-machine interface composed of three parts: First, thousands of microbe-sized sensor nodes the neural dust that detect signals within your grey matter鈥攕pecifically, within your cortex. Second, an ultrasound transceiver installed between your cranium and skin鈥攖he thing that monitors the dust. The particles would be powered piezoelectrically, meaning that they would transform sound waves from the ultrasound transceiver into electrical signals. Finally, a larger node on the surface of your head supplies the battery power, data-processing, and the ability to transmit data to a nearby receiver. Scientists have been experimenting with brain-embedded sensors for decades. But the idea of a whole fleet of micro-sensors that can be injected or snorted! inside the ol brain box is a new d
stanley sverige evelopment. In one way, its ominous, hinting at the idea of a kind of surveillance technology so tiny, you wouldnt even