Mason Moore Mulani The Nurses Know

🛑 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻
Mason Moore Mulani The Nurses Know
Возможно, сайт временно недоступен или перегружен запросами. Подождите некоторое время и попробуйте снова.
Если вы не можете загрузить ни одну страницу – проверьте настройки соединения с Интернетом.
Если ваш компьютер или сеть защищены межсетевым экраном или прокси-сервером – убедитесь, что Firefox разрешён выход в Интернет.
Firefox не может установить соединение с сервером www.gmu.edu.
Отправка сообщений о подобных ошибках поможет Mozilla обнаружить и заблокировать вредоносные сайты
Сообщить
Попробовать снова
Отправка сообщения
Сообщение отправлено
использует защитную технологию, которая является устаревшей и уязвимой для атаки. Злоумышленник может легко выявить информацию, которая, как вы думали, находится в безопасности.
#Arkhaven INFOGALACTIC #Castalia House
That’s why they’re not getting vaccinated , even at the price of losing their jobs:
Minnesota State Representative Erik Mortensen recently conducted a Town Hall meeting in his district due to the number of healthcare workers who were contacting him about COVID-19 vaccine mandates, where most of them were about to lose their jobs for refusing to receive a COVID-19 shot.
He also heard a lot of things from these nurses that were not being repeated in the corporate media, so the Town Hall meeting was recorded and published on AlphaNews recently.
Some of these nurses reported that they have been in their field for over 20 years, were treated as heroes last year as frontline workers in COVID wards, but were now being ridiculed and ostracized for not wanting to take a COVID-19 vaccine.
One of the reasons they do not want to take the shots is because they have seen first hand how these shots have killed and injured people, including family members.
One nurse explained how the media is actually lying by stating that most of the healthcare workers are now fully vaccinated for COVID-19. She said this wasn’t true, and that she knew of departments that were only about 20% vaccinated, and that ER workers had an especially low percentage of workers who were fully vaccinated for COVID-19.
“Why aren’t people asking the nurses why they don’t want to take the shots?” she asked.
She said she ran an ER department, and that it was tragic that they were seeing so many heart attacks and strokes, and that it is obvious that they are related to the COVID-19 shots.
At this point, you’d have to be literally retarded to get vaccinated, or get a booster to stay vaccinated, or even to permit anyone to get anywhere near you with a needle unless it’s absolutely necessary.
Clipboard, Search History, and several other advanced features are temporarily unavailable.
Dashboard
Publications
Account settings
Log out
Advanced
Clipboard
Format
Abstract
PubMed
PMID
Format:
Summary (text)
PubMed
PMID
Abstract (text)
CSV
Subject:
1 selected item: 21143575 - PubMed
Format:
Summary
Summary (text)
Abstract
Abstract (text)
Create a new collection
Add to an existing collection
Name must be less than 100 characters
Unable to load your collection due to an error
Please try again
Unable to load your delegates due to an error
Please try again
Would you like email updates of new search results?
Saved Search Alert Radio Buttons
Yes
No
Frequency:
Monthly
Weekly
Daily
Which day?
The first Sunday
The first Monday
The first Tuesday
The first Wednesday
The first Thursday
The first Friday
The first Saturday
The first day
The first weekday
Which day?
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Report format:
Summary
Summary (text)
Abstract
Abstract (text)
PubMed
Send at most:
1 item
5 items
10 items
20 items
50 items
100 items
200 items
Send even when there aren't any new results
Number of items displayed:
5
10
15
20
50
100
Page navigation
Title & authors
Abstract
Similar articles
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Affiliation
1 Department of Philosophy, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK. michael.luntley@warwick.ac.uk
Michael Luntley .
Nurs Philos .
2011 Jan .
Format
Abstract
PubMed
PMID
Affiliation
1 Department of Philosophy, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK. michael.luntley@warwick.ac.uk
Billay D, Myrick F, Luhanga F, Yonge O.
Billay D, et al.
Nurs Forum. 2007 Jul-Sep;42(3):147-55. doi: 10.1111/j.1744-6198.2007.00079.x.
Nurs Forum. 2007.
PMID: 17661807
Review.
Gobet F, Chassy P.
Gobet F, et al.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2008 Jan;45(1):129-39. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2007.01.005. Epub 2007 Mar 2.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2008.
PMID: 17337269
Review.
Purkis ME, Bjornsdottir K.
Purkis ME, et al.
Nurs Philos. 2006 Oct;7(4):247-56. doi: 10.1111/j.1466-769X.2006.00283.x.
Nurs Philos. 2006.
PMID: 16965306
Review.
Smith AJ.
Smith AJ.
Ala Nurse. 2007 Sep-Nov;34(3):16-7.
Ala Nurse. 2007.
PMID: 17970294
Review.
No abstract available.
Stockhausen L.
Stockhausen L.
Nurse Educ Today. 2006 Jan;26(1):54-62. doi: 10.1016/j.nedt.2005.07.005. Epub 2005 Aug 31.
Nurse Educ Today. 2006.
PMID: 16137800
Format:
AMA
APA
MLA
NLM
Send To
Clipboard
Email
Save
My Bibliography
Collections
Citation Manager
[x]
NLM
NIH
HHS
USA.gov
An official website of the United States government
The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before
sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal
government site.
The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the
official website and that any information you provide is encrypted
and transmitted securely.
This paper defends an epistemic conservatism - propositional knowing-that suffices for capturing all the fine details of the knowledge of experienced nurses that depends on the complex ways in which they are embedded in shared fields of activity. I argue against the proliferation of different ways of knowing associated with the work of Dreyfus and Benner. I show how propositional knowledge can capture the detail of the phenomenology that motivates the Dreyfus/Benner proliferation.
MeSH
PMC
Bookshelf
Disclaimer
Help
Accessibility
Careers
This article was published in New Dawn 86.
If you appreciate this article, please consider a contribution to help maintain this website.
Change Currency
🇺🇸 $ USD 🇦🇺 $ AUD 🇪🇺 € EUR 🇳🇿 $ NZD 🇬🇧 £ GBP
Recent Issues
New Dawn Special Issue Vol.16 No.5
$ 5.95 – $ 15.00
New Dawn 194
$ 5.95 – $ 15.00
New Dawn Special Issue Vol.16 No.4
$ 5.95 – $ 15.00
New Dawn 193
$ 5.95 – $ 15.00
Shop Back Issues Regular Issues (105)
Special Issues (83)
© New Gnosis Communications Int. Pty Ltd
The origins of Freemasonry – as would be expected of such a “venerable secret society” – are shrouded in myth, legend and almost impenetrable obscurity. Since at least the late 18th century Masonic writers have sought to establish a link between the Knights Templar and the Freemasons. Freemasonic lore and symbols have been traced to ancient Egypt and Phoenicia. Yet, despite all the books and articles exploring Freemasonry published over the last hundred years, there is one area that has not received attention. It concerns Freemasonry’s debt to Islamic mysticism and a shadowy tradition connecting the Masons with the Moors of North Africa.
The involvement of Freemasons in the establishment of the United States of America is well documented. In fact Masons featured so prominently in drafting the American Declaration of Independence that many people believed it a thoroughly ‘Masonic project’. Not only George Washington but also the US founding fathers Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were high-degree Masons. Masonry had a profound influence on the formation of American society, but there was also another secret power which has gone completely unnoticed.
The Kingdom of Morocco under the leadership of Sidi Mohammed Ben Abdullah, known as King Mohammed III, was the first country in the world to recognise the United States of America as an independent nation in 1777. This historic act by the North African Muslim kingdom highlights the relationship then existing between America’s Masonic leaders and the Moors. Before exploring this strange connection further we need to understand the part played by the Moors in the transmission of knowledge to Europe.
Moor is the classical name in Europe of the Muslim people of North Africa. In Spain, where Muslims ruled for over five hundred years, Arabs are still called Moros. The term “Moor” came to be synonymous with “Muslim” in many contexts, for example the Muslim communities in the Philippines are known to this day as Moros. The Supreme Wisdom of the Moors, much of it derived from ancient Egypt, has come to be known as “Moorish Science”.
The Moors provided the vital link between ancient and modern civilisation. The light of knowledge which illuminated the Moorish lands of Spain and Sicily was instrumental in dispelling the gloom of ignorance that enveloped mediaeval Europe.
“It was under the influence of Arabian and Moorish revival of culture,” writes Robert Briffault in The Making of Humanity, “and not in the 15th century, that the real renaissance took place. Spain and not Italy, was the cradle of the rebirth of Europe. After sinking lower and lower in barbarism, it had reached the darkest depths of ignorance and degradation when the cities of the Saracenic world Baghdad, Cairo, Cordova, Toledo, were growing centres of civilisation and intellectual activity. It was there that the new life arose which was to grow into a new phase of human evolution. From the time when the influence of their culture made itself felt, began the stirring of a new life.”
The Orientalist Stanley Lane-Poole acknowledged the great impact Moorish civilisation had on Europe when he wrote:
For nearly eight centuries under her Muslim rulers Spain set to all Europe a shining example of a civilized and enlightened state. Art, literature and science prospered as they then prospered nowhere else in Europe. Students flocked from France and Germany and England to drink from the fountains of learning which flowed only in the cities of the Moors. The surgeons and doctors of Andalusia were in the vanguard of science; women were encouraged to devote themselves to serious study, and a lady doctor was not unknown among the people of Cordova.1
The 19th century French writer on the esoteric sciences, Gerard Encausse, known as “Papus”, noted how “the Gnostic sects, the Arabs, Alchemists, Templars” form a chain transmitting ancient wisdom to the West. This explains why within the Ritual of Freemasonry there is the admission “we came from the East and proceeded to the West.” A Masonic author Bernard H. Springett says:
The plain fact that much of what we now look upon almost entirely as Freemasonry has been practised as part and parcel of the religions of the Middle East for many thousands of years, lies open for anyone who cares to stop and read, instead of running by. But it is frequently and scornfully rejected by the average Masonic student…2
So we find that just as Europe borrowed considerably from the learning of the Moors, European Freemasonry took its “secret wisdom” from the Muslim East.
With the end of Moorish rule in Spain, the Europeans began to colonise Africa, Asia and the Americas. In time European Christians conquered Muslim territories and the great debt Western civilisation owed to the Moors was quickly forgotten. By the 18th century European Christians saw themselves as the predestined rulers of the world with a divine mission to “civilise” the heathen. Western historians conveniently ignored the immense contribution of the brilliant and energetic Moorish civilisation in delivering Europe from mediaeval barbarism. We can only conclude this is a result of the pride and presumption of Westerners, which prevent them from recognising the truth or importance of their debts to the East.
The founders of the American republic, as high-degree Freemasons, were aware of the importance of Moorish wisdom and culture to the birth of Western civilisation. This may explain why Morocco was the first nation in history to recognise the United States, and what’s really behind the story of George Washington being presented with a Moorish flag. Some researchers believe this flag consisted of a red background with a green five-pointed star in the centre of it. The star or pentagram, which the Moors called the Seal of Sulaiyman and coloured green to honour Islam, also figures prominently in Masonic art and architecture. The layout of the city of Washington D.C. – designed by Freemasons – incorporates the pentagram.
When Freemasons travelling in the Moorish lands encountered Sufis, the mystics of Islam, they soon recognised a common bond. “Sufi-ism,” said Sir Richard Burton, was “the Eastern parent of Freemasonry.” John Porter Brown, an American diplomat in Turkey in the mid 1800s, was a Freemason who wrote sympathetically of the Sufi path. In The Darvishes, he admits finding it “rather strange that the Dervishes of the Bektashi Order consider themselves quite the same as the Freemasons, and are disposed to fraternize with them.” Brown commented how in Turkey Freemasonry had come to be generally regarded as “atheism of the most condemnable character.” A position not unlike the one held by Papus, the celebrated French occultist and Gnostic bishop, who tried to counter the Masonic lodges which, he believed, were in the service of British imperialism and the international financial syndicates. Papus also viewed Freemasonry as a diabolical perversion of the ancient secret tradition and atheistic at heart.
When Madame Blavatsky (1831-1891) set out in search of hidden wisdom it was to the Moorish land of Egypt that she journeyed. Blavatsky claimed to be a disciple of the Masters Morya and Koot Hoomi. The researcher K. Paul Johnson convincingly shows her tales of the “Masters” to be modelled on real people, many genuine occult adepts. Prominent among them Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani, a Sufi scholar, tireless political intriguer, and the leader of radical movements throughout the Muslim world, whose travels enigmatically paralleled those of Madame Blavatsky for more than thirty years. Best remembered for co-founding the Theosophical Society and helping to popularise Buddhism and Hinduism in the West, Blavatsky also proudly wrote of “living with the whirling dervishes, with the Druze of Mount Lebanon, with the Bedouin Arabs and the marabouts of Damascus.”
Madame Blavatsky’s “Masters” are very close to the Sufi tradition of Khwajagan (Persian: “Masters”). Ernest Scott states “the Khwajagan teachers are entirely corporeal and literal, having been physically located in the Hindu Kush area since the 10th century. The Hindu Kush range is in Afghanistan: geographically, it forms the Western extreme of the Himalayas.”3 Scott quotes from a paper by a Turkish writer who describes how members of the Khwajagan:
…intervene from time to time in human affairs. They do this, not as leaders or teachers of mankind, but unobtrusively by introducing certain ideas and techniques. This intervention works in such a way as to rectify deviations from the predestined course of human history. This inner circle, it is claimed, concentrates its activities in those areas and at those times when the situation is critical for mankind.”4
Certainly Madame Blavatsky’s teacher Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani, who was raised in Afghanistan, fits the description of a Master Adept. His
2022 Porno New Hd
Shemale Mistress Vk
Xxx New Shemale Tube