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A Second Change at Love—Falling Asleep at the Typewriter

Just like beauty can be inherited, so can brains. When the Purifier comes, we will see him first as a small red star which will come very close and sit in our Heavens watching us. Watching to see how well we have remembered the sacred teachings. Many people do not know, but what are now considered European Americans had once been enslaved, too. Some people that European Americans all lived on an island called Patmos, and there was nothing but blonde, light skinned, people with blue eyes.  A scientist was supposedly trying to heal some of the people who are now known as Africans and through a cell division in somatic called mitosis, which occurs during growth and development, and it also repairs injured tissues and replaces older cells with newer cell created the race of people with blonde hair and blue eyes and they mixed with the darker race creating brown people. As the cell begin to divide, its chromosomes lined up along its center and split apart at their centromeres so that the strands separate. The strands pull away from each other and move to opposite ends of the dividing cell and, at this point, each one is a distinct chromosome, composed of one DNA molecule. 

The cell membrane then pinches in and seals, so that two new cells are formed, each with a full complement of DNA, or 46 chromosomes. Mitosis is referred to as simple cell division because a somatic cell divides one time to produce two daughter cells that are genetically identical to each other and to the original cell. In mitosis, the original cell contains 46 chromosomes, and each new daughter cell inherits an exact copy of each one. This is possible because of the DNA molecule’s ability to replicate. Therefore, replication ensures that the amount of genetic material remains constant from one generation of cells to the next. We should mention that not all somatic cells undergo mitosis. Red blood cells are continuously produced by bone marrow cells, but they cannot divide, and they do not have DNA. Also, once the brain and nervous system are fully developed, brain and nerve cells (neurons) do not typically divide, although there is some debate about this. Liver cells also do not divide after growth has stopped unless this vital organ is damaged through injury or disease. However, with these three exceptions (red blood cells, mature neurons, and liver cells), somatic cells are regularly duplicated through the process of mitosis.

While mitosis produces new cells, meiosis can lead to the development of an entire new organism, since it produced reproductive cells, or gametes. Although meiosis is similar to mitosis, can lead to the development of an entire new organism, since it produces reproductive cells, or gametes. Although meiosis is similar to mitosis, it is a more complicated process. In meiosis, there are two divisions instead of one. Also, meiosis produces four daughter cells, not two, and each of these contains only half the original number of chromosomes. During meiosis, cells in male tests and female ovaries divide and eventually develop into sperm and egg cells. Initially, these cells contain the full complement of chromosomes. However, during meiosis, the number of chromosomes is cut in half (to 23 in humans). This reduction is crucial because a resulting gamete may unite with another gamete that also carries 23 chromosomes. The production of this union (fertilization) is called a zygote, and it has the original number of chromosomes (46). Stated differently, the zygote inherits the full amount of DNA it needs (half from each parents) to develop and function normally. If it were not for reduction division (the first division) in meiosis, it would not be possible to maintain the correct number of chromosomes from one generation to the next. 

During the first division, partner chromosomes come together to for pairs of double-stranded chromosomes that line up along the cell’s center. Pairing of homologous chromosomes is extremely important, because while they are together, members of pairs exchange genetic information in a process called recombination, or crossing over. Pairing is also important because it ensures that each new daughter cell receives only one member of each pair. As the cells begins to divide, the chromosomes themselves remain intact (i.e., double-stranded), but members of pairs pull apart and move to opposite end of the cell. After the first division, there are two new daughter cells. However, they are not identical to each other or to the parent cell because they contain only one member of each chromosome pair, each of which still has two stands some now contains combinations of genes it did not have before. The second division happens pretty much the same way as in mitosis. In two newly formed cells, the 23 double-stranded chromosomes align themselves at the cell’s center, and as in mitosis, the strands of each chromosome separate and move apart. Once this second division is completed, there are four daughter cells, each with 23 single-stranded chromosomes, or 23 DNA molecules. The evolutionary significance of meiosis is meiosis occurs in all sexually reproductive organisms, and because it increases genetic variation, it is an extremely important evolutionary innovation.

As a result of meiosis, members of sexually reproducing species are not genetically identical clones of other individuals since they inherit a combination of genes from two parents. The genetic uniqueness of each individual is also enhanced by recombination between homologous chromosomes. Furthermore, recombination produces new arrangement of genetic information, and these rearrangements potentially provide additional material for natural selection. As you have already learned, genetic variation is essential if species are to adapt to changing selective pressures. So, you can see that meiosis is important to the evolutionary process because it increases the variation if population. The law of nature, conceived the idea of employing what we today known as the recessive genes structure, to separate chromosomes. Eugenics law was worked on the island of Patmos. After two hundred years only brown people remained on Patmos. Then after 200 more years passed, a red race was created and there was no more brown. Then 200 years after that came a yellow race. And two hundred years after that, the white race was created and the island of Patmos was left with blonde hair and blue eyes. After six hundred years, these people went to Africa, among the black people. And war broke out. The blacks rounded the light skin people with blonde hair and blue eyes up, put them in chains, marched them across the Arabian desert to the caves of Europe. The dogs that were living in caves in Europe tried to kill them and they climbed into the trees, and made clubs (blunt objects) to protect his family from the wild beasts outside trying to get in.  

The white race spent 200 years in the caves. After the land was domesticated, the caveman came out of the caves and learned civilization from Moses. They believed that God was half white and half black and he was made in this way so that it would enable him to be accepted by the black people in America, and to lead them, while at the same time he was enabled to move undiscovered among the white people, so that he could understand them. This was during the time that there was wilderness in North America. And the Bible was created to teach people to speak out because silence left in a vacuum would all people to be misled and quarrel and fight. This morning the Eagles have come to circle around and push back the clouds. The fire of Great Mystery still burns in your hearts. Faces from all corners of the World gather for unity. We have gathered here to remember that we are all one people. As we bridge our cultures, we make way for future generations to overcome the separations of the past. It is not time for secrets, it is a time for we the people. Many courageous people will bring back the sacred ways of the people to this land. Your children’s children will remember you and honor you in their stories. They will speak of you gathered here as the ones who held the torches of their spirituality through some of the darkest times. Humankind is awakening from within, many times without the ability to explain the source of such knowledge they know to be the truth. Still, something cautions us against taking leave without further consideration. I have no doubt that the concept of beauty is rooted in the soil of sexual stimulation and signed originally that which is sexually exciting. The more remarkable, therefore, is the fact that genitals, the sight of which provokes the greatest sexual excitement, should be turned to the body, the eyes, lips, and other features. Sexual curiosity serves to supplement the sexual object by uncovering the hidden parts, but by honoring other features, this can be turned into the artistic sublimation.  


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