7 de febrero de 2013

dia sin carro

hace un par de años me estrelló un taxi que se comió un pare en un día sin carros, hoy fue un día movidito, pero se llegó especialmente a tiempo, con todo y que recogimos a m y tuvimos que regresarnos porque se me quedaron los dos chiquitos de la f que siendo tan pegada a la boyacá no tienen nada que ver con mi camino tan pegado a la cali.

mi ruta habitual es por la boyacá que ésta mañana estaba peor que de costumbre, tal y como se aprecia en la foto:



pero luego la cosa mejoro sustancialmente cuando llegamos a la autoìsta que no parecía la misma de todos los días... volví a casa en 45 minutos cuando habitualmente me tardo hora y media... por la hora y el trancón... me soltaré la moña por la tarde y saldré para el liceo a las 2:30 a ver que... 

por otro lado ando feliz con las declaraciones de la cabeza del consejo pontificial Vincenzo Paglio, quien, de pronto es nuestro San Pedro Claver o nuestro Fray Bartolomé:

The Washington Post online... according to an Italian newspaper, the head of the Pontifical Council for the Family would have expressed his favorable opinion to the recognition of rights of unmarried and same sex couples.

VATICAN CITY — A high-ranking Vatican official on Monday (Feb. 4) voiced support for giving unmarried couples some kind of legal protection even as he reaffirmed the Catholic Church’s opposition to same-sex marriage.
Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, head of the Pontifical Council for the Family, also said the church should do more to protect gays and lesbians from discrimination in countries where homosexuality is illegal.
In his first Vatican press conference since his appointment as the Catholic Church’s “minister” for family, Paglia conceded that there are several kinds of “cohabitation forms that do not constitute a family,” and that their number is growing.
Paglia suggested that nations could find “private law solutions” to help individuals who live in non-matrimonial relations, “to prevent injustice and make their life easier.”
Nevertheless, Paglia was adamant in reaffirming society’s duty to preserve the unique value of marriage.
“The church must defend the truth, and the truth is that a marriage is only between a man and a woman,” he said. Other kinds of “affections” cannot be the foundation for a “public structure” such as marriage.
“We cannot surrender to a sick egalitarianism that abolishes every difference,” he warned, and run the risk of society becoming a new “Babel.”
France is in the process of legalizing same-sex marriage despite fierce opposition from the Catholic Church; a similar fight is brewing in Britain with the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches sharply opposed to the move.
In a September 2012 document on gay marriage, French bishops recognized the value of France’s current civil unions law, which grants heterosexual and homosexual couples some benefits, such as tax breaks.
In November, voters approved gay marriage in Maine, Maryland and Washington state, and the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments this spring over federal and state bans on gay marriage.
Responding to journalists’ questions, Paglia also strongly condemned discrimination against gay people, who he said “have the same dignity as all of God’s children.”
“In the world there are 20 or 25 countries where homosexuality is a crime,” he said. “I would like the church to fight against all this.”
Copyright: For copyright information, please check with the distributor of this item, Religion News Service LLC.


ya para terminar diciendo que no importa cuanto luche con mi mente haciendo todos los raciocinios posibles para sacarme su nombre del recuerdo, pero nada... oigo esta canción hace unos días y de una, pensé en ella... que mal por mi, que sigo a la espera de mi noche buena... y todavía no llega.

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