louas iris policies

Friday, October 29, 2004

irish policies

Ireland Information Guide policy is formulated for the most part by consensus. This consensus may be reached through open debate over difficult questions, or it may simply develop as a result of established practice. In many cases, policies are not always formally written down right away. Hence, the statements on this and other pages about Ireland Information Guide policy are intended to describe existing community norms that have developed over time.
Policy issues may be formulated and debated on talk pages, the Information Guide.com/ Meta-Ireland Information Guide , and the mailing lists. If a policy may be controversial, it should always be discussed before being adopted.
Policies that result from established practice are sometimes harder to identify. If there is no objection to the practice, it may be difficult to sustain community attention long enough for a formal process of adopting it as policy. In this situation, the best solution may be to document existing practice on an appropriate page. This then provides a location to discuss the practice and possible changes to the policy, and it also allows people to cite a source for the policy if necessary

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Friday, October 08, 2004

louas

In October of 1804, a Shoshone named Sacagawea became part of the great Lewis and Clark expedition. Her role in the expedition is now being lauded as important and significant, as well it should. Let us not bring up the fact it was her husband, a French fur trapper and she was only one of his many wives, who was paid for the services rendered to the expedition. The fact is Sacagawea was a Shoshone woman who only recently has come to fame after centuries of being a blip in a history text. We place her image on gold coins, stamps, and documentaries are including her. I'm certain there will soon be a made for TV movie, 'Sacagawea' the real story. While we laud the Shoshone Sacagawea, there is a battle going on in a small location north and west of Franklin, Idaho. It is the northwestern Shoshone nation trying to obtain sacred land. It is the sacred land where 138 years ago a California militia Colonel named Patrick Edward Connor gave his infantry and cavalry of over two hundred orders to 'take no prisoners and remember nits grow into lice.' This order began a four-hour slaughter at 6:00 a.m. in the morning as the sleepy peaceful people woke at their winter camp on Bear River January 29, 1863. Nearly the entire camp of 400 warriors, old men, old women, women, children, and babies were obliterated. san fransisco shuttletours cheap spanish holiday florida discounted dental care florida discount health care