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Bhagavad Gita: chapter 7 verse 3 – english translation and commentary – Video


Bhagavad Gita: chapter 7 verse 3 - english translation and commentary
"Among thousands of men scarely one strives for perfection and of those who strive and succeed, scarcely one knows Me in truth". Bhagavad Gita class given on 6 November 2012 at the London offices of international law firm CMS Cameron McKenna. Based on the teachings by the internationally renowned Saint Pujyashree Bhupendrabhai Pandya, the powerful, beautiful and inspiring class was given by Dhruv Chhatralia to an audience of professionals from all over the City of London. To find out more about these classes: Website: http://www.satkarmaparivar.org E-mail: shyamsatkarma@gmail.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/satkarmaparivar Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/satkarmaparivar LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/satkarmaparivar My Space: http://www.myspace.com/satkarmaparivar Google+: plus.google.com/110763479022509833993 Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/satkarmaparivar Word Press: satkarmaparivar.wordpress.com Tumblr: satkarmaparivar.tumblr.com Reddit: http://www.reddit.com/user/satkarmaparivar Digg: digg.com/prabhuseva109From:CHETANKELAViews:0 0ratingsTime:35:28More inNonprofits Activism

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Bhagavad Gita: chapter 7 verse 3 - english translation and commentary - Video

Embed Your You Tube Video into a web page – Video


Embed Your You Tube Video into a web page
baby-doc.com Learn how to embed your you tube video into your word press blog.From:willphill411Views:1 0ratingsTime:03:38More inHowto Style

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Embed Your You Tube Video into a web page - Video

Re-Interpretation of Word Press installment. – Video


Re-Interpretation of Word Press installment.
Consecutive Interpreting; Micro AnalysisFrom:thechitown89Views:1 0ratingsTime:08:30More inScience Technology

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Re-Interpretation of Word Press installment. - Video

Global candidate: Obama was world's clear choice

LONDON

He won, and the word "phew" trended worldwide on Twitter. Despite a hard-fought campaign in the United States, there was never any contest overseas.

Gone are the days when President Barack Obama was seen as a youthful, messianic figure capable of magically curing the world's woes. But he remains widely popular, and his triumph reassured many who feared an abrupt change in U.S. policy could spell trouble.

Even Tom McGrath, president of Republicans Abroad France, conceded: "It's clear that if they could vote, Europe would vote 80 percent for Obama."

Part of the reason is continuity. Challenger Mitt Romney is a little-known figure internationally with scant foreign policy experience, while Obama was seen - even by most critics - as a steady hand following a predictable course.

If he hasn't brought peace to the world's fire zones, or done much to slow climate change, or sparked global economic growth, he is credited at least with having started no new wars, and having tried to heal relations with the Muslim world even while aggressively pursuing al-Qaida and its affiliates.

"I think it is good that Obama won," said Pawel Kukiela, a 30-year-old company consultant in Poland, one of the few countries around the world where Romney has sizeable support. "He has a good program and I think it will be much better for Obama to continue what he has started."

A BBC survey during the run-up to the election found remarkable support for an Obama second term. More than 21,000 people in 21 countries were questioned in July, August and September, with residents in all but one country backing Obama. Only Pakistan, where Obama's heavy reliance on drone strikes has been unpopular, preferred Romney.

An Iraqi army officer in the capital, Baghdad, praised Obama for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq and planning to do the same in Afghanistan.

"These show that Obama differs from other American presidents in his foreign policy," said the officer, who gave his name as Abu Hussein.

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Global candidate: Obama was world's clear choice

Anna Breslaw’s 600-Word Sprint: No Doubt’s Thanksgiving Turkey Might Not Taste So Hot

TakePart is happier than ever to present Anna Breslaws 600-Word Sprint, a weekly column of social justice insight, provocation and solution. Look for Annas Sprint every week on the homepage of TakePart.

Two weeks ago, Americas most visible Native American activist, Russell Means, passed away of esophageal cancer. Meanss work on behalf of the American Indian Movement began in the late 1960s with highly publicized objections to athletic teams use of caricature Indians as mascots, and included the bloody 71-day Wounded Knee, South Dakota, standoff of 1973 in which gunfire killed two activists and paralyzed an FBI agent.

Russell Means summed up his lifelong agenda in a controversial, yet apt, quote from his 1996 autobiography Where White Men Fear to Tread: When a woman grabs my braids and says, How cute! I grab her breast and say, How cute! She never touches me again.

Today, a Native American activist with a savvy press person might have been persuaded to edit that statement.

MORE: Keeping the U.S. Unsafe for Native American Women

It's a curious injustice that in this hyper-PC, sexually and ethnically aware, Glee-era time, Native American culture continues to be blithely appropriated in mainstream pop culture, a whimsical appropriation that occurs quietly but notably in fashion.

The heedless commodification of Forever 21 and Urban Outfitters Navajo print items and Native-themed spreads in Vogue magazine utilize non-Native designers, non-Native models, non-Native photographers, non-Native stylists and make-up artists, and non-Native consultants and editors, points out Chippewa blogger Jessica Metcalfe, a Ph.D. in American Indian Studies, on her excellent website Beyond Buckskin.

Lets just come full circle: Why does the offensive use of Native imagery remain the last bastion of acceptable racism?

This summer saw clothing company Paul Frank Industries throw a Dream Catchin party. Guests had war paint applied to their faces and drank Rain Dance Refresher and Neon Teepee cocktails. (Paul Frank later apologized on behalf of his company, claiming he had nothing to do with the eventhe also announced an impetus to hire a Native American designer for a new line.)

This week, the band No Doubt, enjoying a comeback after 10 years between albums, pulled the cowboys-and-Indians-themed video for their second single Looking Hot after an outcry from YouTube commenters about the offensive imagery: In Looking Hot, lead singer Gwen Stefani writhes in a come-hither buckskin-and-feathers outfit as her band mates, dressed like protagonists in a spaghetti Western, tie her up in a provocative position.

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Anna Breslaw’s 600-Word Sprint: No Doubt’s Thanksgiving Turkey Might Not Taste So Hot