XPost: nl.politiek, nl.taal, nl.gezondheid.psychiatrie   
   XPost: uk.legal   
   From: dolfboek@hotmail.com   
      
   -- MY TULIP 🌷KINGDOM --   
   [#225 / #1771]   
      
   "SHALL THEE   
   IN HELL DWELL   
   NEVER FREE.   
   TULIPS TO SELL.   
      
   NATURE'S SYSTEM   
   CROWNING GLORY   
   SANS CONTEMN.   
   IT'S OUR STORY."   
      
   {@9: Sup: 45 - GREATNESS: TA (#258); Ego: 31 - PACKING: CHUANG (#322)}   
      
   ONTIC TOTAL: #478   
   DEME TOTAL: #155   
      
   #723 - MALE TOTAL: #258 as [#5, #2, #10, #300, #6, #400] = bĂ»wsh (H954):   
   {UMBRA: #308 % #41 = #21}1) to put to shame, be ashamed, be disconcerted,   
   be disappointed; 1a) (Qal); 1a1) to feel shame; 1a2) to be ashamed,   
   disconcerted, disappointed (by reason of); 1b) (Piel) to delay (in shame);   
   1c) (Hiphil); 1c1) to put to shame; 1c2) to act shamefully; 1c3) to be   
   ashamed; 1d) (Hithpolel) to be ashamed before one another;   
      
   #1051 - FEME TOTAL: #322 as [#50, #1, #100, #20, #10, #200, #200, #70,   
   #400] = Nárkissos(G3488): {UMBRA: #851 % #41 = #31} 0) Narcissus =   
   'stupidity'; 1) a dweller at Rome mentioned by Paul in Rom. 16:11;   
      
   #1372 - ONTIC TOTAL: #478 as [#5, #500, #10, #40, #800, #9, #8] = phimóŠ  
      
   (G5392): {UMBRA: #1420 % #41 = #26} 1) to close the mouth with a muzzle, to   
   muzzle; 2) metaph.; 2a) to stop the mouth, make speechless, reduce to   
   silence; 2b) to become speechless; 3) to be kept in check;   
      
   #682 - DEME TOTAL: #155 as [#6, #10, #400, #40, #20, #200, #6] = mâkar   
   (H4376): {UMBRA: #260 % #41 = #14} 1) to sell; 1a) (Qal); 1a1) to sell;   
   1a2) seller (participle); 1b) (Niphal); 1b1) to be sold; 1b2) to sell   
   oneself; 1b3) to be given over to death; 1c) (Hithpael) to sell oneself;   
      
   dolf wrote:   
   > That chapter yesterday went to the   
   >   
   > American National Center for Constitutional Studies   
   >   
   > It is a matter of historical record that Thomas Jefferson the primary   
   > author of the Declaration of Independence had an affection for Chinese   
   > literature.   
   >   
   > Jefferson was the nation's first U.S. secretary of state under George   
   > Washington and then the nation's second vice president under John Adams.   
   > Jefferson was a leading proponent of democracy,   
   >   
   > The American Revolution had a significant impact on the Dutch Republic. The   
   > end of the eighteenth century was marked by a spirited exchange of ideas on   
   > liberty, political rights and state-building between the two Republics. But   
   > it was not merely ideas which travelled freely. People from both sides of   
   > the Atlantic sailed across the ocean for professional, political, and   
   > personal reasons, and testified to the great revolutionary events that were   
   > unfolding at the time. This led to numerous exchanges between American and   
   > Dutch politicians. In this blog Lauren Lauret focuses on Gijsbert Karel van   
   > Hogendorp and Thomas Jefferson.   
   >   
   > Pancho Sanza wrote:   
   >> dolf wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> CORRECTION:   
   >>>   
   >>> The problem is that this dynamic [... #194 ... #239 ... #459] which   
   >>> intersects to 29 AUGUST is an identified schema (ie. #71 --> #34) mapping   
   >>> ROMAN HETEROS PROTOTYPE #TWO --> LUO SHU (the pattern is precise) BY   
   >>> HITLER's TABLE TALK 1941 / 1944 as #225 / #1771 - REICH EMPIRE ACTION.   
   >>>   
   >>> Europe has a guilt for horrendous sins and that DEPRAVITY is no more   
   >>> manifest than in the conduct of Kees van den Doel   
   >>>    
   >>   
   >> Only if you paint Kees van den Doel in a   
   >> different shade of red than your garden fence.   
   >>   
   >   
   > The American Revolution had a significant impact on the Dutch Republic. The   
   > end of the eighteenth century was marked by a spirited exchange of ideas on   
   > liberty, political rights and state-building between the two Republics. But   
   > it was not merely ideas which travelled freely. People from both sides of   
   > the Atlantic sailed across the ocean for professional, political, and   
   > personal reasons, and testified to the great revolutionary events that were   
   > unfolding at the time. This led to numerous exchanges between American and   
   > Dutch politicians. In this blog Lauren Lauret focuses on Gijsbert Karel van   
   > Hogendorp and Thomas Jefferson.   
   >   
   > The Dutch Republic was the first country to acknowledge the independence of   
   > the United States in 1782. An official delegation set sail to Philadelphia   
   > the following year and Van Hogendorp joined them in a military capacity.   
   > His journey was a transatlantic and revolutionary version of the   
   > traditional Grand Tour: the Old World visiting the New. During the trip he   
   > wrote an extensive number of thematic and philosophical letters, now kept   
   > by the National Archives of the Netherlands in The Hague. He would later   
   > draw on this material when working on the new constitution of the Dutch   
   > Restoration government in the 1810s. In the process, Van Hogendorp retained   
   > the institutions of the Batavian Revolution, while providing them with   
   > their traditional, prerevolutionary names. A transatlantic perspective   
   > helps us to better understand the pivotal contributions of both Jefferson   
   > and Van Hogendorp to the American and Dutch constitutions respectively.   
   >   
   > “The best-informed man of his age I have ever seen”   
   > After meeting Van Hogendorp in Annapolis, where Congress had assembled,   
   > Jefferson recommended him to George Washington “as the best-informed man of   
   > his age I have ever seen.” Of course, Jefferson could not foresee that Van   
   > Hogendorp would later become the main author of the Dutch constitution,   
   > but, as he wrote to the young man, he was much impressed with his   
   > abilities:   
   >   
   > “Your thirst after knowledge, your capacity to acquire it, your   
   > dispositions to apply it to the good of mankind [..] give your country much   
   > to hope from the continuance of your life.”   
   >   
   > Such praise no doubt boosted the intellectual ambitions of the twenty-year   
   > old youth who relished the exchange of ideas on government with Jefferson   
   > from the moment they met. At first glance, Jefferson and Van Hogendorp   
   > would appear to be unlikely friends. They occupied opposite ends of the   
   > spectrum as far as fundamental questions were concerned. Jefferson   
   > championed popular sovereignty and individual state power. In contrast, Van   
   > Hogendorp believed that the people should be firmly kept in check and that   
   > the limitations on the powers of Congress were detrimental to the American   
   > Republic. Nevertheless, the exchange of letters set Van Hogendorp’s mind on   
   > fire and he bombarded Jefferson with questions. On reading a draft of   
   > Jefferson’s Notes of the State of Virginia in 1784, he asked a poignant   
   > question:   
   >   
   > “Give me leave to put You in mind of the articles of Your description of   
   > Virginia, which You granted me to have copied. I should wish to know   
   > whether Your Negroes marry, or what proportion do. One Evening in the   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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