Stanley Pembroke

 
Member Since August 7, 2011 , From Dallas TX, United States
We learn from history that we learn nothing from history: those who refuse to learn from the past are doomed to repeat it.
About Stanley Pembroke:

Racked-up and now retired archaeologist.  Johns Hopkins University, Ph.D., Mesoamerican and Middle-Eastern Archaeology, 1976.  Dissertation: "Why I hate grave robbers."


Recent Activity by Stanley Pembroke

Commented: About andrewcranky's answer

Bitter people learn nothing from history. What they fail to learn the first time around, they shall learn the second. Only, the lesson is always written in the blood of innocents and those who shed ...

Commented: About Anne Southern's answer

Atheism and abuse go hand in hand unfortunately. Every time atheism has reared its ugly head the people have suffered mightily. Was it not so in Pharaonic Egypt, where they had 10,000 gods but ...

Commented: About Anonymous's answer

Not so, Anonymous. Not even close. Atheists have made it their purpose in life to ruin everyone else and they are deadly serious about all their hateful games, but they have yet to succeed ...

Commented: About Lady Aban Ceaulosevic's answer

I study history and make no claim to understand the occult. Frankly I can do without it. As you point out, this is strong medicine for a nasty illness and needs to be prescribed by an expert. I ...

Commented: About Anonymous's answer

Is there any point to dfrogpong's verbose ranting? I didn't think so, either.

Commented: About Paul Wittenberg Jr's answer

I agree, Melvin. Atheists hope to be obnoxious boors because their cult is so severely unintelligent. Is there a good reason to believe these people or their ridiculous games? I didn't think so ...

Commented: About Lady Aban Ceaulosevic's answer

Lady Aban, I for one cannot see why slave-minded atheists continue their ridiculous games. I realize that all atheists are exactly alike -- manufactured products without minds of any sort -- but why ...

Commented: About PGroot's answer

It helps to talk about one's upcoming funeral. We know that we will one day end our mortality and when we do, we need the solace of a funeral for the bereaved. When I go, I hope for this, so that ...

Commented: About andrewcranky's answer

Atheists can usually hasten the process of dying by reading their own material, although it is hideous: death by sheer boredom. It may be a horrendous means of execution, but it is certain.

Commented: About Michael's answer

Actually, Mayan pictographs are difficult to read unless we first walk them through Ulmec. It becomes more complex as we consider that the preceding two Mayan pictographs always bear on the one we're ...

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