And if It’s a Boy, Will It Be Lleh?

“Chances are you don’t have any friends named Nevaeh. Chances are today’s toddlers will. In 1999, there were only eight newborn American girls named Nevaeh. Last year, it was the 70th-most-popular name for baby girls, ahead of Sara, Vanessa and Amanda.

The spectacular rise of Nevaeh (commonly pronounced nah-VAY-uh) has little precedent, name experts say. They watched it break into the top 1,000 of girls’ names in 2001 at No. 266, the third-highest debut ever. Four years later it cracked the top 100 with 4,457 newborn Nevaehs, having made the fastest climb among all names in more than a century, the entire period for which the Social Security Administration has such records.

Nevaeh is not in the Bible or any religious text. It is not from a foreign language. It is not the name of a celebrity, real or fictional. Nevaeh is Heaven spelled backward. The name has hit a cultural nerve with its religious overtones, creative twist and fashionable final “ah” sound.” (New York Times )

underwater sub-tectonic UFO bases under construction??

Underwater sonic booms affecting San Diego, Andaman Nicobar Islands and Java: “Strange things are happening simultaneously in Andaman islands of India, Java and in San Diego. Underwater sonic booms are causing strange localized earthquake effects in these areas.

According to some scientists, these are not underwater nuke experiments by any country. These are coming from way below the earth’s crust at the sub-tectonic levels. These are not what oil companies do to find more oil. No Governments on the earth has the capability to operate that deep into earth’s crust.

These strange shock waves are similar to what was received during the Tsunami in 2004 December and after that.

Scientists are looking into possibilities of underwater sub-tectonic UFO bases under construction. That will create these strange effects.” (India Daily thanks to Noah)

Is Relying on Altruism Good Enough?

Death’s Waiting List: “Paradoxically, our nation’s organ policy is governed by a tenet that closes off a large supply of potential organs — the notion that organs from any donor, deceased or living, must be given freely. The 1984 National Organ Transplantation Act makes it illegal for anyone to sell or acquire an organ for ‘valuable consideration.’

In polls, only 30 percent to 40 percent of Americans say they have designated themselves as donors on their driver’s licenses or on state-run donor registries. As for the remainder, the decision to donate will fall to their families who are as likely as not to deny the hospital’s request. In any event, only a small number of bodies of the recently deceased, perhaps 13,000 a year, possess organs healthy enough for transplanting.” (New York Times )