Thursday, September 29, 2011

MrElvilia Potatoes : India Natyu


Bonjour, voici la map plus ou moins attendue “Elvilia Potatoes” Chaine de MrElvilia : www.youtube.com Chaine du précédent ( Elarcis ) : www.youtube.com Chaine de la suivante ( Biloulette ) : www.youtube.com


how can I get a detailed map of India online free of charge?


Have you heard about the Indian Youth Climate Network which is travelling across 15 Indian Cities?


South India Travel Doc - Part 02


South India is the area encompassing India’s states of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu as well as the union territories of Lakshadweep and Pondicherry, occupying 19.31% of area. South India lies in the peninsular Deccan Plateau and is bounded by the Arabian Sea, Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal in the west, south and east respectively. The geography of the region is diverse, encompassing two mountain ranges — the Western Ghats and Eastern Ghats and a plateau heartland. Godavari, Krishna, Tungabhadra and Kaveri rivers are important non-perennial sources of water. Inhabitants of South India are referred to as South Indians. A majority of South Indians speak one of the five Dravidian languages — Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil, Telugu and Tulu. During its history, a number of dynastic kingdoms ruled over parts of South India whose invasions across southern and southeastern Asia impacted the history and cultures of modern nation-states such as Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia. The region was colonised by Britain and gradually incorporated into the British Empire. After experiencing fluctuations in the decades immediately after Indian independence, the economies of South Indian states have registered higher than national average decadal growth over the past three decades. While South Indian states have improved in some socio-economic metrices, economic disparity, illiteracy and poverty continue to affect the region much like the rest of the country


how do i summarize this article in 6-8 sentences?

In the standard U.S. history course in high schools and universities, students are usually taught that until the Spanish-American War, the United States had followed for the most part the advice of Washington and Jefferson to steer clear of foreign entanglements. Americans had devoted themselves overwhelmingly to building their civilization here at home, whereas from 1898 onward, they began to "look outward" and to embrace the "large policy" of national greatness and foreign empire favored by such leading figures as Henry Cabot Lodge, John Hay, and Theodore Roosevelt. This way of dividing U.S. history into two epochs–before and after the onset of overseas imperialism–is fundamentally misleading.

Americans were empire builders from the get-go. From the moment the British colonists set foot on the North American continent, they resolved to engage in what the historians rather romantically and unreflectively call "westward movement," which some nineteenth-century Americans characterized as the realization of their "manifest destiny." This movement was itself an expression of imperialism, and some Americans, such as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, were not ashamed to speak forthrightly of an American empire that would develop naturally as the (white) population grew and moved across the continent.

As my parenthetical qualification in the preceding sentence suggests, however, this vision disregarded one rather large fact: the continent across which these white people longed to expand was already inhabited by native Americans whose forebears had settled it more or less thickly over the previous millennia. The whites dealt with this difficulty by hook and by crook, doing whatever seemed expedient at the time–killing the Indians, driving them farther and farther to the west, buying their land, stealing their land, making treaties subsequently to be broken—to get the land they imagined to be theirs by divine design.

At the end of the American War of Independence, the Treaty of Paris established a western boundary for the new nation at the Mississippi River. Little by little, the Americans added huge chunks to the U.S. territory by means of an unconstitutional purchase of French claims to Louisiana (Jefferson conveniently set aside his belief in strict construction of the Constitution), an offer that Spain dared not refuse (for Florida), a settlement of disputed claims with Great Britain (to get the Oregon Country), and wars of aggression against Mexico (to snatch the southwest). By this continental imperialism, the United States pushed its western edge to the Pacific Ocean and its northern and southern boundaries deep in areas previously claimed by Mexico and Great Britain, as the map shows.

Imagine, however, that history had taken a different turn; in particular, that each of the major territories incorporated into the United States (not counting Alaska and Hawaii) had become instead an independent country. Each of them, except perhaps Florida, would have been fairly large as nation-states go. Each would have contained a vast diversity of natural resources, fertile lands for agricultural development, and long coastlines from which they could have engaged in cheap, waterborne international commerce. In short, each of these territories would have been completely viable as an independent country.

If history had taken this shape, how might the six nations of central North America have developed? Would they have gone to war with one another, perhaps shifting or blotting out their original borders, or might their leaders have seen the advantage of embracing continental free trade and friendly relations, perhaps even unobstructed flows of labor along the lines of the modern European Union? We can only conjecture answers to these questions.

One thing seems fairly sure, however: no one of these nations would have been as likely to develop into the global hegemon that the United States of America is today. And this outcome, one may well suppose, would have been a godsend for the people of other parts of the world because, however much today's Americans enjoy whooping it up about being Number 1 and about "kicking ass" around the world with their far-flung military forces, those on the receiving end of this kicking do not appreciate it any more than the native Americans appreciated it back in the days when American imperialism was confined for the most part to North America.

Also,do you thinks his theorys right?is it realistic given what we know and what he states?
how would life be different?

thnxs in advance


Map of India before Independence or during 18th century??

does anyone know a website that shows the map of india before its independence or during the 18th century.?


Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Why dont we hear more about Canadas ONGOING Genocide of Natives?

Canada seems to slip under the radar often when it comes to stuff like this and the baby seal slaughter they have every year…

Playground bones force Canada to face genocide of Indian children

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IN OVERGROWN deserted school playgrounds across Canada lie the bones of thousands of native Indian children who were stolen from their families.
Historian John Milloy is helping to uncover their stories in official research on burial sites. “We know that children were buried in unmarked graves, children who disappeared and were never heard from again,” he said. The research is part of Canad
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a’s attempts to face up to a disturbing legacy of its residential school system, an attempt to “assimilate” native children that resulted in thousands of deaths and ruined lives.

From the late 19th century right up to the 1970s, an estimated 150,000 native children – First Nations, Inuit and Métis – were packed off to the schools, funded by the state and run by the Catholic, Anglican and United churches.

The story has taken a more sinister turn, with allegations about death by torture, fatal medical experiments, forced sterilisation and secret burials in mass graves filtering into the public domain.

These allegations have been gathered and disseminated by Kevin Annett, a defrocked minister who was thrown out of the United Church in 1996 for his part in exposing the schools scandal and the clergy’s sale of entrusted native lands to a logging company.

Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, apologised last year on behalf of the religious authorities. “We failed them, we failed ourselves, we failed God. We failed because of our racism and because of the belief that white ways were superior to aboriginal ways,” he said.

Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) has responded to the claims over Mr Annett’s allegations by ordering maps to be drawn up of possible burial sites and research into numbers and causes of death.

Mr Milloy and his team plan to track down the death certificates and records of maintenance payments sent to schools. Much of the proof will have been lost in routine government purges of official documentation in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, he fears.

Michael Pollesel, general secretary of the Anglican Church of Canada, says that many schools would also have lost track of children.

Roland Chrisjohn, a professor of native studies St Thomas University in Fredericton, New Brunswick, is sick of what he perceives as Canada tip-toeing around the issue.

“I want someone with the power to subpoena witnesses and documents and go all kinds of places this commission can’t go at all,” he said.

Describing the residential schools as “genocide”, he said: “Perpetrators are still living. People should be held to account.”

Mike Cachagee, the chairman of the National Residential Schools Survivors’ Society, has his own theory about the TRC. “It is an opportunity for churches to receive absolution,” he said.

“For us, there are no words of reconciliation, you have to make amends. Just listening for ten minutes doesn’t work.”

Thousands abused in regime built to crush native cultures

LAST June, the Canadian prime minister, Stephen Harper, rose in parliament to apologise to aboriginal people on behalf of all Canadians for a system of Indian residential schools he called a “sad chapter in our history”.

From the 1870s to the 1970s, some 150,000 native Indian children were forcibly removed from their parents and sent to distant residential schools. Many survivors said they were abused mentally, physically and sexually. In 2006, a class-action lawsuit resulted in a court settlement that awarded them close to $2 billion (£1.5 billion).

There are about 80,000 survivors of a practice that ripped an estimated 150,000 children from their communities and sent them off to be relieved of their “Indian-ness”.

In decades past the aim was to assimilate aboriginal peoples and crush their cultures. Duncan Campbell Scott, a senior government bureaucrat dealing with aboriginal matters, declared in 1920: “I want to get rid of the Indian problem.” He went on: “Our objective is to continue until there is not a single Indian in Canada that has not been absorbed into the body politic.”

Children were called pigs and dogs. Teachers beat them if they used their own languages and told


can someone get me a map of india wit wildlife reserves in it?

wildlife reserve include wildlife sanctuaries, bird ssanctuaries & national parks.


Stronghold 2 India Map Part 4: Returning the Favor


After I am attacked by my enemy in a siege, I counter attack in this video


Which part of us cities Indian stays in max population?

I want to know which part of US city most of the Indian stays, To clear most which is the most populated US city with Indian people staying there, I want a exact name of place with pin code where Indian people stays,
Which Indian Radio station Indian people hear in USA
Which social networking website Indian people Use in USA.
Is there any US channel For Indian people ,If not then which channel they watch.

People answer those people who really have personal experience staying in USA


Pink Flowers

indian states

Image taken on 2011-05-28 19:20:13 by zaui.


Why do people south of the border feel they were the first to inhabit the south west?

Why do they forget that the land was occupied by American Indians?

Why do illegal aliens feel this is their land to come back to and make bogus claims of it belonging to them?
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

As we have seen American Indians were the first people and first westerners of the American West. When Europeans came to what they called the 'New World', they saw it as their right or 'Manifest Destiny', conquer the land and disposes the American Indian. To help justify conquest, Europeans perceived indigenous peoples, including American Indians and their culture unequal (even non-human), and unworthy; often mentally rendering them invisible. American Indian discovery of America was also ignored so as to put into effect the 'Doctrine of Discovery'. Thus you will see false statements like 'Columbus discovered America', even though it is not clear he new where he was. So as immigrants, some by choice and others forced, made their way to America and the American West, the American Indians were a barrier to be removed or simply invisible, especially if already removed to reservations. These immigrants were from Europe, Africa, Asia and Pacific Islands. Most policy and influence came from Europeans and a dominant English influence. American language, measurement, science, technology were derived from English influences. Most Western States were surveyed with an English system while only Texas and Louisiana retained French or Spanish survey systems. However, the natural environment was often the greatest barrier to settlement in the American West as we have noted with Prescott's thesis.

The Spanish, English, French and Russians were the first foreigners to invade the American West and they came from all directions. Early probes were for quick discovery of fame and wealth. Often navigation and mapping was all that was accomplished. Some took the wealth and left, while others stayed to settle.

The Spanish were the first to expand into 'New Spain' from Mexico to the Southwest (New Mexico) and Lower (Baja) and Alta California as early as 1519. The Spanish initiated the ideas of 'Manifest Destiny' and 'Doctrine of Discovery', since they felt that their god had given them dominion over all living things, including newly discovered infidels. The 'New World' was given by the Spanish Pope Alexander VI to the Crown of Castile in 1493. Spanish conquest and colonization was under the jurisdiction of the Council of the Indies.


inda Map War India Pakistan in.flv


india inda


i want to highlight some particular state on map of india which site will help me?


Saturday, September 24, 2011

i want the map of india which has the different states?

i want the map of India which has the states only like hyderabad, shrilanka….plz help meee….send me the picture in sweety_princess@ yahoo.com


How can i make free calls to indian cities.?

I want any site to make free calls to indian cities without any cost or any software to make free calls with no charge.free and UNLIMITED calls to indian mobile phones.

Give me the name of the site or software name with link to make free PC to MOBILE calls


Name the Indian states where English is the only official first language?


Friday, September 23, 2011

Is The West Racis?

Is the West but an embodyment of white racism in our time? Recently we have seen the tossing around of terms like “the west” to describe America and other allies. This West is an idealogiy. A world set a apart from all others based on its superiority. This is nothing new, whites have come up with terms for 100′s of years to separate them from the rest of US in the world. On one hand the West is all that is pure, full of justice, and intelligence. All else is fanatical, radical, and backwards. Ironically this is the way whites deemed themselves during slavery, they were purer, more righteous, and more intelligent than those under them. Thus they could subjugate the blacks and indians because they were always in the “right” and could do no wrong. Racism based on ethnicicity has merely transformed into racism based on culture and civilization. The “West” does not even exist, we are one world. For instance Israel would be consider the Western World, yet look on a map. Why is there no non white country apart of this west? The West is a mere state of mind of white superiority, and white power at the expense of others. I have even seen people on television deeming the conflict of the Middle East as a war between the west and “them”. Them so lowly that they do not have a name, but whites are so holy that they can devote an actual term to describe themselves. Thus the West, no one has heard of the east, south, or north because apparently they simply are not worth enough to be called anything at all! Then other times they will describe the conflicts as civilization vs the uncivilized. Pure racism, whites have always felt that they wer emore cilivized than the rest of us, and this is nothing new. Yet they fail to even realize that people in that part of the world are just like everyone else, but because they dont fall into the white view of things they are inferior! Even posters on this site have described people outside of the “west” like they were animals! One man on here said that the Arabs have nothing of their own and they steal everything from Europe. This sounds like white supremacy, that nobody outside of Europe has any brains what so ever and everything revolves around Europe. He went as far as to say that Arabs had nothing. If he feels this way about Arabs what does he think of Africa and the rest of Asia? Pure ignorance, and it is not one man it is all of you. And the sad is that you don’t even realize it.


Map of India and Africa? Please help! I need to know certain things....?

Ok I have a few questons… First,were the Kalahari Desert is (Africa) and what two bodys of water are on the side of India are…..The nI should get what I need from those maps or what ever…. Please help…


Jaipur, the Amazing Capital City of Rajasthan.


Terry Hodgkinson aka “wandering ninja” shows clips of amazing sites in the magnificent capital city of Jaipur. “Wow so much to see and do in this well laid out city. I learned so much being here and the ambience of this city was quite different than any of the other cities we stayed at in Rajasthan” – Terry www.InnerOuterYou.com Background: Jaipur , also popularly known as the Pink City, which once had been the capital of the royalty now is the capital city of Rajasthan. It is the largest city of the Indian state of Rajasthan. Founded on 18 November 1727 by Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II, the ruler of Amber. Jaipur is one of the finest planned cities of India, located in the semi-desert lands of Rajasthan. The very structure of Jaipur resembles the taste of the Rajputs and the Royal families. At present, Jaipur is a major business centre with all requisites of a metropolitan city. The city is remarkable among pre-modern Indian cities for the width and regularity of its streets which are laid out into six sectors separated by broad streets 111 ft (34 m) wide. The urban quarters are further divided by networks of gridded streets. Five quarters wrap around the east, south, and west sides of a central palace quarter, with a sixth quarter immediately to the east. The Palace quarter encloses a sprawling palace complex, (Hawa Mahal), formal gardens, and a small lake. Nahargarh Fort, which was the residence of the King Sawai Jai Singh II, crowns the hill in the northwest corner of


map of dutch east india company routes?

can anyone find a map of the routes of the dutch trading company in the 16-1700s?
what about the british east india company?


Rock Climbing

indian states

Image taken on 2011-05-30 10:17:40 by zaui.


History Study Questions. HELP! 10 Points?

Here are some study questions I’m working on. Let’s compare answers.

17.Which statement about the Sedition Act is NOT true?

a. It was designed to silence protests against the government.
b. Federalist judges were biased in enforcing the act.
c. No one was actually imprisoned under its statutes.
d. It was opposed by Democratic-Republican Societies.

18.Thomas Jefferson was elected in 1800 for all of the following reasons EXCEPT:

a. he enjoyed great electoral success with the common man.
b. the Republicans began to assume many of Hamilton’s domestic policies.
c. the Federalist Party was fragmented and weakened.
d. he had a solid base in agrarian America.

19.Alexander Hamilton's financial plan for addressing the public debt stated that,

a. The federal government should assume the war debt of the state governments.
b. An excise tax was necessary to raise revenue and establish the government's authority to levy internal taxes on its citizens.
c. The creation of a national bank would provide the nation with a stable currency.
d. None of the above.
e. A, B, and C.

20.The Whiskey Rebellion occurred because Alexander Hamilton insisted on the collection of a whiskey tax to assert the supremacy of national laws. 13,000 Federal troops met no opposition and the rebellion was put down without bloodshed. However, it proved that the national government would use military force to compel obedience.

TrueFalse

21.Jay's Treaty forced Americans to give up the right to discriminate against British shipping and merchandise and reconfirmed the American commitment to repay its pre-Revolutionary debts owed to the British. In the United States, news of the treaty caused___________

a. celebration among all Americans because they wanted to trade exclusively with England.
b. uproar by both southerners and northerners in the United States.
c. all people named Jay to become upset.
d. women to proclaim John Jay a hero and insist that he be promoted.

22.Although it was known for its scientific discoveries, some of the goals for the Lewis and Clark expedition were to:

a. Spread the Catholic religion among the peoples of the interior.
b. Befriend as many Indian nations as possible.
c. Find the mythical waterway known as the Northwest Passage that allegedly connected. the east and west coasts.
d. All of the above
e. B and C only

23.Thomas Jefferson was interested in securing the Louisiana territory from France because:

a. He liked the name Louisiana and wanted to live there.
b. He did not want Americans to be hemmed in and deprived of their empire of liberty.
c. He had an interest in the sugar business and wanted to create a monopoly by controlling the best land for cultivating sugar.
d. He was concerned that Napoleon would turn it into a sanctuary for Catholics.

24.The Lewis and Clark expedition did not meet all of its goals. However, it can still be considered a successful expedition because

a. It opened up the lands of the West to future generations by providing maps and descriptions of the best hunting and farming areas.
b. It made contact with many Native-American tribes, including some who had never seen a white person before.
c. People now saw Oregon as a possible place to settle.
d. All of these reasons.

25.Alexander Hamilton's economic policy included which of the following?

a. Banks should be created only by the states.
b. He argued against taxes on liquor.
c. He believed the United States should focus on commerce because it would never become a great power if it remained a nation of farmers.
d. He believed a small federal government was best.

26.Alexander Hamilton was killed by vice-president of the United States, Aaron Burr during a duel at Weehawken, New Jersey.

TrueFalse

27.In an attempt to create a united Indian movement, the Native-American prophet, Tenkswatawa, told fellow Indians to

a. Assimilate into white culture.
b. Leave their native lands and sail to a new land that would be free of whites.
c. Write a letter to the president demanding that all whites stay east of the Mississippi River.
d. Set aside tribal and clan divisions, return to native rituals, and reject white material culture.

28.The War of 1812 between Britain and the United States, which began as an attempt by "War Hawks" to takeover British Canada and Spanish Florida, ended in a territorial victory for:

a. Britain
b. Native Americans
c. The United States
d. Neither Britain nor The United States, it was a wash.

29.Successes of Jefferson’s first term included all of the following EXCEPT:

a. a reduction in the size of the federal government.
b. getting rid of the Alien and Sedition Acts.
c. purchasing the Louisiana Territory.
d. a successful embargo on foreign trade.


Looking for India Map site (Street level)?

Like we have in Google or Yhaoo maps I am looking web site which has the ability to display maps for India cities in street level (prefered for Pune)


Where can I find a Map of India That has?

That has a
Title
Scale
Legend/Key
Capital City
At least 3 other cities
All physical features including: major rivers, lakes, mountains, bodies of water(seas, oceans,bays)
Labels all bordering countries

Thank you


Thursday, September 8, 2011

where can i find a map that shows places where petroleum and natural gas are found in india?

pls tel fast i have a skl map to submit!


p1010383

maps of india

Image taken on 2008-11-03 00:04:36 by ksbuehler.


Omgomgomgomgogmogmgomgogm?

When Greek colonists set out from mainland Greece, evicted by the Dorians and the Heracleidae (the descendants of Hercules), perhaps, many wound up in Ionia, in Asia Minor. Eventually the Ionian Greeks came under the rule of the Lydians, and particularly King Croesus (560-546 B.C.). In 546, the Persians took over Ionia. Condensing, and oversimplifying, the Ionian Greeks found the Persian rule oppressive and attempted to revolt with the aid of the mainland Greeks. Mainland Greece then came to the attention of the Persians, and war between them ensued.

The Persian Wars lasted from 492 – 449 B.C.

In 490 B.C. (possibly on August or September 12), perhaps 25,000 Persians, under King Darius’ generals, landed on the Greek Plain of Marathon.

The Spartans were unwilling to provide timely help for the Athenians, so Athens’ army, which was about 1/3 the size of the Persian’s, supplemented by 1,000 Plataeans, and led by Callimachus (polemarch) and Miltiades (former tyrant in the Chersonesus [Map section Ja]), fought the Persians. The Greeks won by encircling the Persian forces.

This was a momentous event since it was the first Greek victory in the Persian Wars. Then the Greeks prevented a surprise Persian attack on Athens by a quick march back to the city to warn the inhabitants.

Origin of the Racing Term Marathon:
Supposedly, a messenger (Pheidippides) ran about 25 miles, from Marathon to Athens, to announce the defeat of the Persians. At the end of the march he died of exhaustion.

For more on this urban legend, see Marathon and Pheidippides and the Marathon.

Print Sources on the Battle of Marathon
The Battle of Marathon: Battles of the Ancient World, by Don Nardo
The Greco-Persian Wars, by Peter Green

Online Battle of Marathon Resources:
World Civilizations – Ancient Greece – The Persian Wars

William Smith – A Smaller History of Greece

Battle of Marathon Quiz

Darius of Persia
Darius [Darayavaush] was the third king of Persia, following Cyrus and Cambyses. He ruled from 521-485 B.C. Darius was the son of Hystaspes.

Peter Green says that Persian nobles called Darius “the huckster” because of his skill and interest in commerce. He standardized weights and measures. He controlled sea trade through the Dardanelles and the grain in the two major areas from which Greece might have imported — South Russia and Egypt. Darius “dug a forerunner of the modern Suez Canal, 150 feet wide, and deep enough to carry large merchantmen” and sent a sea captain to “explore the sea-route to India” through the Persian Gulf.

Green also says Darius adapted the Babylonian law code, improved communication in his provinces, and reorganized the satrapies.


help me find a book i read in middle school. i can't remember the title.?

for a few years now, i’ve been thinking about this great book i read years ago. i don’t remember the title, author, or much about the story. i just remember i really liked it and don’t think i finished it. i’ll try to describe the book as best as i can. i remember in either the front or the back of the book is a map. the story begins with the girl going to her grandma’s house for the summer i believe. there’s a mysterious mountain or raised up lake in the little city her grandma lived. i know it says in the book that people don’t go up the mountain because at the top is fog or clouds and nobody knows what’s in it. planes can’t see what’s inside either, and i think it said something about when planes or helicopters go over it, the instruments go funny. anyways, the girl finds a map and a staff? in her grandma’s house and goes up the mountain. then something about her hiding in a tree because she’s being chased by someone and something with the staff hitting the tree and she ends up going back in time. she meets indians? and learns their way. and this part i’m confused by, i don’t know if i got another book mixed up with it but i think in the end, she gets dragged underwater by alien things and talks to these things underwater? i’m not sure about that part. anyways, i don’t think i finished it and it would be great if anyone could help me find it.
it’s a sci fi teens book i’m guessing. whenever she’s hiding in the tree a powerful storm comes along and there’s thunder and lightning and that’s what knocks her out and when she wakes up she’s inside the mountain/valley thing.


Why helicopters are not used for passengers transport in indian cities?


Flavors of Indian States.mts


All the particiapnts of “Flavors of Indian States” item doing Mile sure mera tumhara.


How do Mormons Defend Themselves Against these Cold Hard Facts?

alright, it explains in the book of Mormon that nephi, his brother Lamon, and a bunch of other Europeans set sail from Europe to the Americas, way back when. And that Lamon and his followers broke off from Nephi and were cursed with darker skin. Eventually The Lamonites took over all the Americas and came to be known as The Native American Indians. Now with the advances in DNA testing and research, scientist have been able to go back and extract DNA from ancient bones and compare the samples with samples of Europeans, Asians, Africans, ext. Then map out DNA patterns revealing the location of where people came from. DNA Mapping has proven that 99.4% of Blood Samples taken from Native American Indians in America matches not with European DNA, but Asian. If the Indians would have been descendants of Europeans, they would have a much higher DNA Match than .06%. This proves that The Native Americans were not once Europeans who had to travel across the sea for 8 years (as stated in the book of morman). But more realistically, Asians who only had to travel 20 miles across water over the Bering strait. Also The Architecture of Native Indians are reminiscent of Asian Architect. So This information completely destroys the teachings of the book of Mormon. In the book of Mormon it also states that Jesus came to the Americas to Teach to the Europeans who lived there (The travelers who came with Nephi). But if there were no Europeans to preach too, and no one to bury the Plates that Joseph Smith "Found", then how is anything the book of Mormon says reliable to be true?
ok so i mistakenly stated European, its Middle East, Israelite is the correct term instead of European, but at any rate this doesnt change the outcome of the fact that they are descendant from Asians and not Middle East Isrealite. Secondly for all you who say that plagues and stuff killed them, dna is still found in the bones, and thats how they get there samples so it doesnt matter if they were dead
Anyone who doesnt Believe me, should check out this site

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2004-07-26-dna-lds_x.htm

Also, it states that when they arrived the land was uninhabited. so Native American Girl, you might want to read up a little more on your own religion.

AND.. thats pathetic guys, reporting and removing answers that are against your belief. your either trying to cover up what is said in those answers or your scared that they are right..


Ramadan Afghans/Pakistanis/Indians what is your view on this?

Demolish the state of Pakistan and restore the land to its historical form (Greater Afghanistan and India)

So Afghanistan annexes Western Pakistan forming historical Greater Afghanistan and India annexes Eastern Pakistan

Approx map of this historical form (note NE Iran not included and eastern areas will be India)

http://bss.sfsu.edu/Behrooz/ph-afghan-Durrani.jpg

The state of Pakistan serves no purpose as Punjabis are ethnic Indians and Pakistan is far from being a muslim state. Not to mention its a puppet of the US.
SaMeer yes your a nuclear powered state that cant even feed its own inhabitants

Punjabis are ethnic Indians lol why are you ashamed of your ethnicity?
Pakistan is a US puppet and it is asinine to deny that
Pakistanis are Muslim but so are a good proportion of Indians. Pakistan as an entity is far deserving the right to be associated with Islam
*far from deserving…*
LOL fought for independence… perhaps Punjabis are reluctant to join India but Khyber doubtless will be annexed, matter of time…


"Bikaner, founded by Raj Bika" Josie_ty's photos around Bikaner, India (rao bika bikaner photo)


Preview of Josie_ty’s blog at TravelPod. Read the full blog here: www.travelpod.com This blog preview was made by TravelPod using the TripAdvisor™ TripWow slideshow creator. Entry from: Bikaner, India Entry Title: “Bikaner, founded by Raj Bika” Entry: “Fast Facts In the northern part of the state of Rajasthan Population = 530000 Bikaner is a vibrant, dust-swirling desert town with a fabulous fort and a growing tourist trade. It was founded by Rao Bika, a descendent of Jodha, Jodhpur’s founder and was an important staging post on the caravan trade routes. When the British arrived centuries later, the state (at that time, it was a state) of Bikaner exchanged its finest camels for its freedom. Day 1 Sights that we saw: Junagarh Fort Lalgarh Palace” Read and see more at: www.travelpod.com Photos from this trip: 1. “The entrance to the Bikaner fort” 2. “A balcony for the maharaja” 3. “The ceiling of one of the maharaja’s rooms” 4. “Another courtyard” 5. “Ilnay work of stones and gold on walls” 6. “The gardens of the palace” 7. “One of the Bikaner fort buildings from the inside” 8. “The carvings on the walls” 9. “The open palanquin to carry the maharaja” 10. “Another side of the fort” 11. “times the recommended load” See this TripWow and more at tripwow.tripadvisor.com


live moving satellite map of india

i would please like to know is there any way i can see live moving traffic for example cars moving people moving in india? Through satellite map or any other maps u can suggest please maybe like downloading some thing.