Thursday, December 18, 2008

Linux encompasses original schematics in computing, inviting novices and experts alike to learn new technological avenues to solutions for not-so-new problems. Applying Linux to medical computing can, for instance, with certainty and strength, cut procedural costs, and be applied to research fellowships for finding solutions to important problems, such as AIDS, cancer, and with no additive institutional dilemmas. Linux is the most advanced operating system in the world, and for institutional medicines, there is a causative factor embedded, for sure. The way, therefore, to the truth of causative procedures is in the lifeblood of Linux OS variety. Linux overcomes, due to the open source nature it possesses, secrecies of the past, and is even more robust, in any arena, because of the the internet and its public nature. No application deters in this arena, and its rationale is sound.
The praise of Linux is due to its freedom-based community, and a new social paradigm has come about as a result. The code is free to inspect, dissect, and rebuild and modify, making it a model that is essential to the solutions of age-old problems. The freedom behind Linux and all OSS propels us to a new vocabulary, therefore, a revolution in thinking, historically, and this will grow and evolve quickly. What am I saying? Freedom generates good will, and that is always beneficial in every aspect. Linear uses of it examine instant freedom under the hood. The certainty would reveal half of the snow been finally outside underneath.

This is a codified writing containing hope for the sick. It may appear to not make sense on the surface, but there are hidden, subliminal statements embedded in the text that are designed to give hope to those suffering from cancer and/or AIDS. I believe in many things, including the sublime. I am eager to see if, when reading the text I have just written, while the codified statements may be impossible, or near impossible, to discern, people who are sick with AIDS and/or cancer find themselves hopeful after having done so. This paragraph is straightforward, and not codified. The first two paragraphs will have a more robust effect on the afflicted if read aloud.
The only obviously codified statement is the final sentence in paragraph two. Therein is the culmination of the point I am trying to make in the codified statements. The statement is, "The cure has been found."
I believe in the power of faith to bring about change, and it is my hope that, even though it may seem like the things conjugated in the first two paragraphs on the surface, there are powerful statements codified within. The statements are arbitrary in their codification(s), but I believe it may be curative of serious diseases as when one chants a mantra or prays. The power of suggestion is strong, and so is faith powerful. I believe also, that if, when speaking of the afflictions of AIDS and cancer, one looks upward to heaven for an answer through Jesus Christ, the solution will come to be.
I will make a codified statement here: Just enough sustenance causes hearts in to be sure in trials; and in supplication, Love really has dominion. The statement is this "Jesus Christ is Lord." See if you can find the statement, if you can pick it out. Can you? It is said that every little bit helps. So this is my small, and perhaps insignificant, contribution to the promotion of the general welfare of us all. To every problem, I believe there is a solution, and even if methods are unorthodox to gaining that solution, such things have not been ineffective in the past. New orthodoxies are arrived at through the use of initially unorthodox means, perhaps most usually instead of more often than not. As you have probably surmised, I am a Christian, therefore I believe in the Word. In Greek, the phrase, "the Word," is rendered "Logos," which by definition is "The initial Thought, or causative Idea." From Logos is our word, logic, derived. In order for a Theory to be proven, there must be logic behind it in order to come up with viable solutions, paradigms and principals. Even the word "theory" comes from another Greek word, "Theous", or "God." Therefore, logic is behind every theory, and in order for there to be a tangible solution, we must follow through logically every possibility and reason through with Logic itself.
In Latin, the Word is rendered, "Verbum", therefore, if we apply some Latin to our Logic, we must congeal our theories verbally by the written and/or spoken word. If Jesus was right, and I do believe Him, then if you want something to be, then merely believe that it can and will be, and it will be. Light exists merely because God said, "Let there be light!" Jesus is our touchstone to God; I believe this firmly. Nothing new will come to be if no one thinks new things. And perhaps if we wish for something that was, it can be renewed, if only we will believe. God and heaven are real because they are in the hearts and minds of men, and whatsoever is in the heart and the mind will be seen for what it is.
For centuries, there have been those who oppose the thought of God and His existence, but even there, God lives in there hearts and minds, even if as an enemy or absurd notion. It is much like the statement, "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus." If you want him to be, then be he will. The glory of an Idea depends on how much it is thought of and how much credibility it has, and it is my belief that God's is the greatest glory. What is glory? It is that which surrounds something, initially and ultimately. Most great things have humble beginnings, therefore, if it is good, no idea is stupid or absurd. There are good ideas and bad ones, and there is nothing that cannot find redemption. There is, as the Bible tells us, a time for everything, therefore, what may be regarded as a bad idea today may tomorrow be said to have been ahead of its time. Sometimes, if not always, that is the case with innovation.

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