Friday, May 13, 2011

Pokemon Walk Through Walls

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, BRUNI


(In the picture, Brunilda receive your gift, if not the largest, at least heavier)

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Daiwa Exceler Z (new 2011)

Caloca - La Taha (2011)

Hand in hand with our peas journalist Maite Moreno have the great chance to know, of first-hand, Caloca , a group formed by musicians from the rock, jazz, classical and ska, Quine, together with a flamenco singer, will hit hard from now on, going far beyond the topics of the merger, and mestizaje, which limit the genre to the party and the "buenrollismo." Caloca are much more than that ... Sure! Are able to show its many faces in a range of emotions made song, with flag of its own contradictions. Eight in total are the components: Samuel Castela (vocals, English guitar), Marchu Lorente (vocals), Alfonso Acosta (English guitar), Gorka Laherrán (guitar), Natxo Higes (bass), Sergio Peña (Saxo), Gerardo Casado (drums) and Jorge Gonzalez (percussion), who translated into Castilian letters, where the lead singer with a surprising outcome that any comparisons would be odious.


His debut album titled 'Caloca!', Was produced entirely by the band self-released in March 2008 after two years of concerts and promotion were sold 1000 copies published. The album featured the participation of many partners, some of which definitively joined the group, leading to the current lineup of 8 musicians. On May 2nd saw the light 'La Taha' (pronounced 'La Tajá'), entirely self recorded in the rehearsal room and mixed and mastered by Manuel Colmenero in Sonobox. In addition, they cite is the first album released by vandalism, with a cover of his own design. The album will be presented to the Board El Sol (Madrid) on 9 June with the anticipation of UNIQUE, which you can not miss.


I leave you with clarity , one of the tracks from the band, recorded live, courtesy of Bandalismo.net ...

Caloca in concert - "Clarity" / / / Exclusive from Bandalismo.net Bandalismo.net on Vimeo .

Monday, May 9, 2011

Does Th Touch Warranty Cover Water Damage

HISTORY OF JAPAN (9): GEKOKUJÔ

So far we have dealt with the most colorful history, the samurai , the highest caste of society. At the other extreme were the peasants. Traditionally, politics and war had been the exclusive domain of the former, while the peasants, also exclusively engaged in farming. This social model was a beautiful symmetry, at least for samurai : they were at the top of society and could prove it by force of arms, which constituted a kind of cosmic endorsement to the system. But over time between different groups began to emerge a gray area. On one side was samurai with few resources, called ji-samurai, who, since not even have money to keep servants, were forced to reconcile war with the personal cultivation of their lands. And, secondly, had more or less wealthy farmers, much more than some of its neighbors ji-samurai, who sometimes engaged in acting as lenders, and soon needed to hire people to arm themselves for protection.

farmers were limited to passively attend to the endless struggles between samurai. They completely ignored them, so that wars were frequent massacres or rapes. What they really feared the peasants were hunger and disease resulting from destruction of crops. That, and the tax collector: During the Ashikaga bakufu, the ranch had no less than 70% of all that the peasants produced. Until the end of XIV century peasants remained perfectly docile, but since then things began to change. Among other things because the impoverished ji-samurai suffered with the same intensity the brunt of the revenue, and its nature was less patient. In the early fifteenth century began to form organizations called Ikki dedicated to making complaints to the rulers when their taxes exceeded any restrictions. Soon, the indifference of the authorities and their growing financial needs, began to explode riots organized by ikki , and in 1441 one of them, motivated by the enactment of certain tax edicts, was extended to Kyoto. Were taken some strategic buildings, and the mob blocked all access to the city until the bakufu was forced to revoke the edict. Simultaneously

ikki revolts the peasants began to find opportunities to improve their situation entering the armies of the shugo daimyo increasingly in need of personnel. These provide a brief military training, and endowed them a shield with the emblem of their lord and light weapons. It also gave them a conical helmet, when not in combat, served them to cook the rice as if it were a wok. They were called ashigaru (literally, light-footed), and its inclusion in the military meant a social revolution because, as we have seen, the samurai saw the war as a matter of exclusive negotiation. However, from a pragmatic point of view, was much faster and cheaper for shugo daimyo form a body of infantry or archers ashigaru, which were also easily replaceable, which samurai.


And these were not the only turmoil within the rigid Japanese society. For example, a ji-samurai decided could progress dramatically depending on its successes warriors. The paradigmatic case is that of Hojo Soun, who in 1491, commanded a shugo daimyo , won the governor of the province of Izu. As a reward was placed in front of her, and from there expanded by conquering adjacent territories. Hojo Soun is considered the first daimyo of the Sengoku era, which we'll talk later.

insurrections of peasants began to sink the capital, laborers making war (and cooked in their shells), upstart ji-samurai who reached the pinnacle of power ... The proud samurai watched the events with the nose in the air and enough concern . And, for lack of anything better, at least invented a word for it: gekokujô , the lower triumphing over the higher. __________



Images 1. Three ashigaru a bullying samurai, he reflects on the gekokujô

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Denise Milani Trys Bras

WHILE KEEPING DIGNITY PANTS

The publisher of the Courier made a painful effort in this direction:

" Acceptance responsible for the final word of the Constitution represents the best argument for the nationalist left warn that yesterday was not a victory for their reluctance to bluntly cut with ETA and its own past, but a sign of the strength of the democratic system and society will not tolerate the fundamentalists scoff freedom. "

're at it, I propose this other version:

" The fact that we now stooped to pick up the soap is the best argument to warn the offender upright which is armed behind us that this is not a victory for his unwillingness to let go of teasing with his attentions, but a sample of our integrity and our dignity, that the fundamentalists will not tolerate our freedom scoff. And now, for the soap . "

Friday, May 6, 2011

Giardia Vaccination Reviews

we got TC ALLOW THE ETA IS THIS ELECTION

At one point, around 2000, when it appeared that the patient was in great improvement. From Ermua, the nationalist fever had fallen sharply, and began to apply the appropriate therapy in the form of two drugs: Agreement for Freedom and Political Parties Law. Then came Zapatero (and Rubalcaba, who is listísimo). Both have returned to the English democracy to where it seems intended. That is, the UCI. _____________


To analyze the disaster should realize that not one but two. 1) English democracy recognizes that a terrorist group may stand for election *. 2) In Spain the rule of law, understood as the need for the laws are above political power, and the impossibility of justice is involved in, has vanished.

* Or, put another way, crime is accepted as a political argument.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

What Words Describe Aphrodite

A HISTORY OF JAPAN (9): the Muromachi period


Takauji Ashikaga bakufu introduced its in Kyoto in the Muromachi district, and this is called the time lag between 1338 and 1573. Also known as bakufu Ashikaga shogun as successive were descendants of Takauji. And in all those who have access to power reveals one of the most powerful (and absurd) human instincts: the desire for immortality. In this case tries to conquer death by establishing a dynasty, as his descendants rule, their ancestors are perpetuated on them. Therefore, not only the title of Emperor was hereditary, but this condition before winning positions and shogun shikken . The emotional impulse is therefore the first, and only then come rationalizations to sustain the legitimacy of each dynasty. But, interestingly, they often end up crystallizing these rationalizations. For example, as the descendants of the Minamoto, Ashikaga, which claimed the title of legitimacy to occupy the shogunate, and eventually the accreditation of kinship with this family was becoming a requirement for access to the office.

Meanwhile, entertaining in their struggle for central power, successive shoguns were losing power in the provinces on behalf of the governors of them. These were the shugo large samurai that, at least nominally exercised on behalf of provincial power central authority. Over time, the centrifugal tendency to cause the disintegration of small Taifa kingdoms. Shugo then, already be absolute rulers in their respective territories, will be called daimyo , and dedicated to war with each other with enthusiasm. This period is called sengoku jidai, period of warring states, culminating in a reverse centripetal process in which, through the action of three successive unifying all the power scattered back to regroup in the person of a shogun. But not anticipate events.


The third Ashikaga shogun , Yoshimitsu, was a great character. Great warrior, great politician, and suffering from artistic and cultural concerns, in 1395, with only 36, left the shogunate and went to live in the palace he had built north of Kyoto. It was a wonderful place whose most famous building was the "Golden Pavilion", a three-storey building, each with a different style, coated with gold leaf and surrounded by ponds that stimulate reflection. During the rule of Ashikaga Yoshimitsu the Southern Court recognized the futility of their resistance and dropped their claims. The current Emperor Japan falls, therefore, the northern branch. ____________________


Images:
1. Ashikaga Yoshimitsu.
2. The Golden Pavilion.