5.31.2006

Iran and U.S. Bluffing and Posturing Not Really New

The U.S. and Iran are often in the news with bluffing and posturing on both sides.

There is a long history of Imperial animosity between the West and Iran, since the end of WWI obviously and before that, excluding the Medieval period where Iran was a member of various Islamic empires, the bluffing and posturing was frequent between the rulers of the Roman Empire and the Sassanid Empire, large-integrated empires, both of which were greatly weakened by Muhammad and his followers and eventually eliminated.

In the fourth century, the Emperor Shapur II referred to the Roman Emperor as his servant and 'overseer of the Western provinces who serves at our pleasure.'

In response, the Roman Emperor's ministers claimed that Shapur was beholdened to the "Lord of the Universe" and that the ruler of the world was too busy to respond to any entreaties from princelings and other local rulers of no import.

Ocasionally warfare flared in Mesopotamia, a buffer zone between the two empires.
In 260, the aged emperor Valerian was captured and held in captivity in Persia until he died. After which, his skin was stuffed and kept in the palace as a momento.
This giant rock carving, like Stone Mountain, Georgia or Mt. Rushmore, sits above the most well-traveled highway in Iran (the Silk Road) so that everybody would see the Roman Emperor's submission......

Here it is.

Traffic Pile-up

Our host is supposed to able to load balance.

Hope so. Looks like we're gonna need it.

:-)

MemoryTV News Blast on Memorypix

Memorytv (Memory TV) take favorite images and enjoy a memory game, scientifically-validated. Here's the current list of exercises.

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Disney the last visitor through Cognitive Labs turnstyles

Our last visitor was Disney Worldwide Services in Burbank, CA just a few milliseconds ago.

News Corp (NY IP address) also visited recently.

State of Colorado, State of California, Kaiser Permanente, Oracle, and so forth in the past hour

It's an E-ticket.

Photoshop and Myspace



I picked this photo of Mahatma Gandhi off of myspace. It was linked into from an MIT webserver.

Photoshop it, and then it's done.

You've got a Gandhi memory exercise.

We're over 100 people on memorypix (just started)

Pictures in History

Pictures in American History? Read the perspective of Patrick Cox, a professor of history at the University of Texas-Austin.

They play a key role in our perception.

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