Agnostic.com
3
3 Like Show
So the evangelicals want to have a day of prayer and fasting for that orange guy in the White House.
birdingnut comments on Jan 27, 2018:
Sadly, united energy and focus actually works, as shown in numerous studies. Nothing to do with "God"-just the way connected energy works.
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@GreenAtheist There are many other studies, but just the placebo effect shows the affect of thought on health. So, are you saying there is no energy field around living things or that all energy isn't connected? Discovery Channel used to show videos of dogs alone at home, suddenly reacting when their owners, in different part of the cities, decided to come home. Or the videos of an African Grey parrot talking to itself, describing the cards its owner was seeing in another room. But I never used saddles or bridles with all my horses, using my mind to guide them, even when driving on a horse cart. I could even think to my horses to change gaits when we were driving with the horse cart..i.e. rack, trot, do a run walk, etc and they'd change gaits as I thought them. That even happened if I felt a need to make a "bathroom" stop along the Danial Boone Forest access road; as I thought it, the horse was already pulling over and stopping next to the meadow I had in mind. In Haiti, we missionary kids used ESP to talk to each other since we didn't have phones. My mom didn't have a phone when she lived downstairs in her old age, so used esp to call me when she needed help. Here in Thailand, Thai kids in villages where none of them know English, used to say the English words aloud that I was about to write on the board. These are just a few examples.
When did you know you had found your life partner?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I haven't, unless you count my ex, who now says he's transitioning to nonbinary female, and keeps trying to get back with me (but I divorced him for acting like a crazed, jealous nut case; neither of us knew about trans issues back then). I researched gender issues for years, including the ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@shockwaverider I just grabbed the first google link that came up before I went to bed. The last link, about creativity and androgyny being linked is more specific, and there was a book that had charts and studies showing how increasing androgyny statistically increased IQ, but so far I haven't entered the right words in google search to bring it up.
Anyone have funny/great pet or animal tales to tell?
silvereyes comments on Jan 27, 2018:
My mom's dog Howie... he's butter. Literally, he just melts if you touch him. We took him for a walk. He kept lagging behind me, towards my grandma. He's so lazy. He wants picked up. She just says in his general direction "look how cute he is..." and he stops right there and falls into the grass....
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
Hey, I'd carry him! So cute!
When did you know you had found your life partner?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I haven't, unless you count my ex, who now says he's transitioning to nonbinary female, and keeps trying to get back with me (but I divorced him for acting like a crazed, jealous nut case; neither of us knew about trans issues back then). I researched gender issues for years, including the ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@shockwaverider I went back and inserted a few links after a quick google search, but most of the info I have read repeatedly in science journal feeds and books, as I have hundreds of books in my Kindle library, many of them on gender issues. You haven't heard of these things because they don't fall in your interest range, but my ex is transitioning to nonbinary female and I recently realized I'm a partial trans male, but stay androgynous as long as I take the Thai herb, derris scandens, that stops dyslexia symptoms, sharpens my eyesight and blends my gender fluid sides into one whole. By the way I qualify for Mensa at an IQ of 140 and my son's is 160.
A question for the ladies, and maybe us males might learn something.
JustLuAnn comments on Jan 27, 2018:
I'll take Danny Devito any day.
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@KKGator Oh, yeah, But I love them both anyway..great comic actors. I especially love them in Matilda, LOL! Wait. They are separated, but not divorced, as far as I've heard.
Well go ahead...tell me something I DON'T know. My brain craves information.
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
Llamas protect livestock. They chase and can kill predators like coyotes and occasionally, cougars. They tend to eat everything..banana peelings, rare shrubbery and flowers, and their necks have a surprising reach. They control other livestock in the barnyard with spitting. They have zero ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@Willthamaven People buy them to protect their livestock, but I think small donkeys are more effective for the coywolf hybrids common now in the east. Still, we bought Cuzco to use for packing stuff on the Appalachian Trail. But once I saw how disloyal he was, I sold him. But soon afterward, a small, runaway mule escaped his barn and ran three miles up the road to break into the pasture to be with our 40 yr old retired racking horse, Whistle. That mule protected the rest of the livestock until Whistle's death, then he stood guard over the grave, braying sadly, so I sold him to a grateful person who wanted him to guard her horses.
So the evangelicals want to have a day of prayer and fasting for that orange guy in the White House.
birdingnut comments on Jan 27, 2018:
Sadly, united energy and focus actually works, as shown in numerous studies. Nothing to do with "God"-just the way connected energy works.
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@BlueWave How about the Pygmalion Affect, where people were told a group of lab rats were specially bred to be smart, and the other group was ordinary. It wasn't true, yet the rats thought to be smarter, performed much better than the supposed dull rats. The same thing happened when teachers were told certain random kids had a high IQ..the supposed high IQ kids suddenly began performing much better in school, because the teachers were thinking positively about them http://www.statisticshowto.com/pygmalion-effect-rosenthal/
To those who were raised in a religious household, what made you abandon your family's beliefs?
SocraticAddict comments on Jan 27, 2018:
Not one certain thing. It pretty much never made sense to me. I remember being around 8 years old and asking "How do we know the bible isn't a story like Cinderella?" Parents only came back with "you gotta have faith". When I was 12ish I asked "why do we think people had to come from a magical God? ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
?? What happened next?
When did you know you had found your life partner?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I haven't, unless you count my ex, who now says he's transitioning to nonbinary female, and keeps trying to get back with me (but I divorced him for acting like a crazed, jealous nut case; neither of us knew about trans issues back then). I researched gender issues for years, including the ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@shockwaverider Hmm..time to drop the subject ,as you just proved my objection to posting on this subject. I thought maybe it would be OK here, without being attacked by the alt-right, but I guess it's too touchy a subject for many. If I gave you the names and links of all the articles and books I read, there's no reason to think you'd believe them either, so just forget I said anything.
A question for the ladies, and maybe us males might learn something.
JustLuAnn comments on Jan 27, 2018:
I'll take Danny Devito any day.
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
I LOVE him! And his wife, too!
Well, it finally happened.
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I used to get the flu several times each year whenever we were in the US, and after I moved here for college, I'd sometimes get so sick I could barely breathe. In my early 20s I changed my diet, dropping red meat, white flour, most processed food, switching to organic food whenever possible, and...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@SonderOpia Probably is, since chocolate is so good for you.
Do the deaf have an inner voice as we know it?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I learned sign language years ago, but let it slip. I began practicing it a few years ago as something to do while commuting for hours each way to a Thailand/Malaysia border town where I was teaching. I had to give it up, though, as I rapidly began to think in ASL and suffered constant frustration ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@PaulRecomStop It's not the keeping up, but translating spoken words into ASL, which has an entirely different way of thinking. Thai is similar..if you try to use "Google translate" on a Thai paragraph, it won't make sense in the slightest. There are many things that just don't translate.
When did you know you had found your life partner?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I haven't, unless you count my ex, who now says he's transitioning to nonbinary female, and keeps trying to get back with me (but I divorced him for acting like a crazed, jealous nut case; neither of us knew about trans issues back then). I researched gender issues for years, including the ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@shockwaverider Numerous studies, articles, and books. The very fact that you're hostility questioning me indicates high female influence since most cis men don't really care. Most people of mixed gender don't realize they are. One way to check for fetal hormone influence is to check your finger lengths; longer ring fingers than index fingers indicate high levels of prenatal male hormone, while longer index fingers indicate high female hormone influence. But if it upsets you, that's why I don't want to post this. Most Americans assume that the gender binary is a real thing, but in Asia and other countries that's not so, and people see themselves as being on a gender sliding scale. Thai even use reflexive pronouns to indicate which gender they identify with at that moment.
Do you think this site would be a good place to post open job postings to atheist friendly ...
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
It's difficult to see where such a subject should have to come up at all, except maybe if the company led everyone in prayer each day, and in my case, I'm always glad for a chance to meditate. Otherwise, I simply don't comment on religious conversations, or, if asked, just shrug and say I don't ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@RobCampbell Yikes. I didn't know that people would do that to their workers. I tend to confront people early rather than late if they are seriously annoying me and I'm willing to leave.
When did you know you had found your life partner?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I haven't, unless you count my ex, who now says he's transitioning to nonbinary female, and keeps trying to get back with me (but I divorced him for acting like a crazed, jealous nut case; neither of us knew about trans issues back then). I researched gender issues for years, including the ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@omgwowsocool I suspect that mentioning such information would upset many people, since most take gender behaviors for granted, never noticing the obedient husband syndrome. I'm so male that I also have a strong impulse to obey women, and when my daughter visited me here in Songkhla, Thailand, a year ago, I spent all my time happily following her around buying her things and letting her order me around.
Where do you spend your vacation?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
Go on vacation?? I live six minutes by motorbike from the beach in a tropical paradise where I can photograph rare birds and animals every day of the week and eat Thai food and tropical fruit for almost nothing. Here's a photo of me swimming at Samila Beach, Songkhla, Thailand.
birdingnut replies on Jan 27, 2018:
@btroje I plan to move to Lexington, to live near my daughter, as soon as I can do so. Las Vegas is one of my favorite places to go hiking/do bird photography. LOVE it. And Lake Powell, if it still exists with this weird weather/fracking. I lived in Durango, CO, for almost four years in the early 1980s, where my kids were born, so that part of the west was my stomping ground for awhile.
Where do you spend your vacation?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
Go on vacation?? I live six minutes by motorbike from the beach in a tropical paradise where I can photograph rare birds and animals every day of the week and eat Thai food and tropical fruit for almost nothing. Here's a photo of me swimming at Samila Beach, Songkhla, Thailand.
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@btroje That's the most hated question by both MKs (missionary kids) and TCKs (Third Culture Kids). I was born and grew up in Haiti. I have American parents. I lived in the US every five years, for one year. I have lived in many US states, but the longest in Kentucky, where I lived on the family farm near Morehead, KY, for 22 years. I taught one semester in Hermosillo, Mexico. I have been teaching in Thailand since 2010, but I moved here to do bird and wildlife photography, after one of my Thai university students showed me photos he'd taken of birds at Khao Yai National Park, near Saraburi, so I moved here to photograph birds. Photo is of a wild Nicobar Pigeon, taken on an island in Mu Ko Similan Marine National Park.
Was sex more fun when you still believed in original sin?
GeorgeRocheleau comments on Jan 26, 2018:
The worst part about being an atheist, you have nobody to talk to during an orgasm.
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
Oh, theorical God! Oh, theoretical God!
Where do you spend your vacation?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
Go on vacation?? I live six minutes by motorbike from the beach in a tropical paradise where I can photograph rare birds and animals every day of the week and eat Thai food and tropical fruit for almost nothing. Here's a photo of me swimming at Samila Beach, Songkhla, Thailand.
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@btroje Thailand is so cheap, and such a total paradise, that any place you went would be fun..no need to limit yourself to quiet places like Songkhla, if you're into the party scene. I tend to avoid tourist places and live in many ways like the Thai do, as it's much cheaper, LOL! The photo was taken of me at a very far flung tourist place..Mu Ko Similan National Marine Park, the most western islands of Thailand.
Well, it finally happened.
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I used to get the flu several times each year whenever we were in the US, and after I moved here for college, I'd sometimes get so sick I could barely breathe. In my early 20s I changed my diet, dropping red meat, white flour, most processed food, switching to organic food whenever possible, and...
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@dahermit Of course, the chocolate food group is the most important one! :)
A post from earlier today pointed out that many of us have found that our beliefs (cultural and ...
Lisav1961 comments on Jan 26, 2018:
I’ve grown up all over the country. It’s my parents I can’t go back to. My mom remarried when I was 13, to a far right wing, tight ass conservative Catholic and she took on all of that. Oy vey!
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
Yikes! I'm sorry about that.
Did your parent(s) ever talk to you about 'da birds & da bees'?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
My mom tremblingly broached the subject when I was fifteen. My sisters and I just stared at her, but eventually I made some correction to what she said. She smiled sheepishly and said she could see that she'd left it a little late. I educated myself with a book I found in my aunt's house when we ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@atheist No doubt. The Sumerian writings parallel Genesis Bible stories, except they were written 2000 years before the Bible, except from the perspective of an alien race that genetically engineered humans by combining their DNA with human ape men, to work in the gold mines, then called themselves "gods" and required blood sacrifice from their minions. The origins of human beings according to ancient Sumerian texts http://www.ancient-origins.net/human-origins-folklore/origins-human-beings-according-ancient-sumerian-texts-0065?
Opposing Abortion and Stigmatizing Single Motherhood
Sacha comments on Jan 26, 2018:
Wouldn't make a difference, because I don't believe it is about that (for me anyway) Society and what they think can fuck off. I have had an abortion before, it was nothing to do with what society would think of me but for other reasons I cant be bothered discussing here. What society thought of me...
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@Sacha But at least you have stunning NZ scenery to balance that..
Ever just feel intensely angry and have no clue why or actual reason?
Crimson67 comments on Jan 25, 2018:
Here...you just aren't yourself when you're hungry.
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
See? Men should learn from women the correct way to comfort an upset female. Always throw chocolate..although foot rubs work also.
What book should replace the bible...
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
For most people, it would have to be comic books. Do people still read? I do, but I seem to be in the minority.
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@MrLizard I read five books at a time, and keep cycling through my vast Kindle library here in Thailand, plus I keep adding books because my relatives wisely give me amazon gift coupons for birthday and Christmas gifts. I can speed read, but try to slow down on books that cost money.
Well go ahead...tell me something I DON'T know. My brain craves information.
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
Llamas protect livestock. They chase and can kill predators like coyotes and occasionally, cougars. They tend to eat everything..banana peelings, rare shrubbery and flowers, and their necks have a surprising reach. They control other livestock in the barnyard with spitting. They have zero ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@tsjames They don't like to be touched, either. Not the friendliest creatures in the world. Luckily, they don't usually bother to try to escape since they're too busy bossing all the other animals around.
Did your parent(s) ever talk to you about 'da birds & da bees'?
birdingnut comments on Jan 26, 2018:
My mom tremblingly broached the subject when I was fifteen. My sisters and I just stared at her, but eventually I made some correction to what she said. She smiled sheepishly and said she could see that she'd left it a little late. I educated myself with a book I found in my aunt's house when we ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@atheist Yes, many Haitians were both Catholic and into voodoo, but in the country, it was only voodoo. Most of the Haitians hate and fear it, see it as a desperation measure to save themselves from curses, demonic attacks, etc. Their saying is "God is good, so we don't have to worry about Him..just the spirits."
Why do monkeys have sex with deer?
silverotter11 comments on Jan 25, 2018:
In the animal kingdom there are many creatures that blurr the lines. lol
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@silverotter11 Then Disney should make a movie where a European Starling is a main character..or European House Sparrows.
Best fictional TV show that features Atheism?
paul1967 comments on Jan 26, 2018:
My first exposed to atheism on TV was Star Trek S2 E2 "Who Mourns For Adonais?" In this episode, it is made clear Scotty doesn't believe in God(s) I was shocked that a TV network would allow a protagonist character to be an atheist in the late 60s. Since then I have seen more exposure on the subject...
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
Hey, Paul-you just listed my favorite shows!
Do you have ESP?
birdingnut comments on Jan 25, 2018:
Yup. I was born with many psychic powers, but since my sister and mom had them also, it seemed normal. Plus, in Haiti, many Haitians did also. But apparently, animals and people all have ESP, since we're all made of energy and thoughts are energy, unless people have been taught to suppress it. But...
birdingnut replies on Jan 26, 2018:
@AxeElf No, you're not. I don't particularly care if you or anyone else believes me. The US people are that way, but in other countries, and even in our tribe, such powers are taken for granted. Go on back to your TV.
Do you have ESP?
birdingnut comments on Jan 25, 2018:
Yup. I was born with many psychic powers, but since my sister and mom had them also, it seemed normal. Plus, in Haiti, many Haitians did also. But apparently, animals and people all have ESP, since we're all made of energy and thoughts are energy, unless people have been taught to suppress it. But...
birdingnut replies on Jan 25, 2018:
@AxeElf I am afraid to practice teleportation though, because the thought hits me that I've always teleported while driving in a car, and if I accidentally did while on foot and suddenly found myself in another country, I could be in a world of trouble. My daughter once spontaneously teleported while walking ten blocks late at night in a dangerous neighborhood. She only walked one block and suddenly realized she'd arrived. She probably unconsciously made that one happen, but I don't know how to control teleportation and don't want to end up in the US, without my passport.
Do you have ESP?
birdingnut comments on Jan 25, 2018:
Yup. I was born with many psychic powers, but since my sister and mom had them also, it seemed normal. Plus, in Haiti, many Haitians did also. But apparently, animals and people all have ESP, since we're all made of energy and thoughts are energy, unless people have been taught to suppress it. But...
birdingnut replies on Jan 25, 2018:
@AxeElf If nobody has claimed the prize, it's because most psychic people have little to no interest in entertaining people. I only used ESP or asked for answers with people who asked me to do it, When I was still religious, once people found out I could do this, I was constantly consulted as a "prophet." I only seem to have the answers when asked, because I don't like to invade the psyches of others. It feels like a violation of privacy, and I only would do it if someone asked me to check with someone else, as a favor, like one man asked me to find out why his ex wife was threatening to move out of state with their kids. I hated to do it, but cautiously entered her mind (she lived in another city but time and space don't matter) and found out her brothers had abused her as a child, and she was now afraid that her ex husband would abandon her, since he had a new girlfriend. I advised him to tell her that he would always give her child support and that he loved her, and that solved the problem. Plus he asked discreetly and found out that it was true, and that his ex had had to have therapy for being molested.
Do you have ESP?
birdingnut comments on Jan 25, 2018:
Yup. I was born with many psychic powers, but since my sister and mom had them also, it seemed normal. Plus, in Haiti, many Haitians did also. But apparently, animals and people all have ESP, since we're all made of energy and thoughts are energy, unless people have been taught to suppress it. But...
birdingnut replies on Jan 25, 2018:
@AxeElf One power I wish I could control is teleportation. I used to do it frequently, as well as my daughter, but only if we didn't realize we were doing it, LOL! When our speedometers were broken, it only took 20 minutes to travel to nearby cities, like Cincinnati, or Louisville, but when we got new cars, once we could see how far we'd gone, the trips went back to taking several hours each way. Sometimes my husband and I would start driving off on a trip of several hours, and within ten minutes, we were arriving, but it wasn't something I could make happen..it just happened. My daughter had similar things happen to her. That's one power I'd LOVE to be able to control.
Do you have ESP?
birdingnut comments on Jan 25, 2018:
Yup. I was born with many psychic powers, but since my sister and mom had them also, it seemed normal. Plus, in Haiti, many Haitians did also. But apparently, animals and people all have ESP, since we're all made of energy and thoughts are energy, unless people have been taught to suppress it. But...
birdingnut replies on Jan 25, 2018:
@AxeElf Not really. You have to be able to control it. If I won even once that big at a casino, I'd be banned. The way to win big at games is to LOSE, leading fellow players on, then sneak and win, acting as though it was an accident. My son used to do this as a kid, but I can't control it..I used to try desperately to lose when I was little, but it was no use, and my friends told me I couldn't play, so I gave up playing all games of chance. My daughter uses ESP to ask the race horses who will win when she bets at the track, but she does as I showed her, setting a win limit before she goes, so she's not ripping off Keeneland Race Track. I also got tired of not being able to wear a watch and I wanted to stop just "knowing" the time because some people began to hint that I was a witch, so I blocked that also, deciding that I could wear a watch, and from then on, and I could. Using psychic stuff puts me at risk of angering those around me, so I suppress it. I'm part Cherokee, and in my tribe I'd be trained as a shaman, and my daughter is sort of a shaman in the tribe group she recently joined. I still communicate with animals when I need to, like when I bought a wild Asian Fairy-bluebird and it was terrified. I had to mentally explain things to him, and show him in my mind how to fly in and out of the cage, and he did. After that, I could just think to him to fly back in the cage, and he would. I'm currently living in Thailand, and here, many people, including my students, are so psychic, it's scary. Thai kids who didn't even know English, would start saying a new English word aloud before I could even start to write it on the board, when making a new vocabulary list. I would wish for something and a Thai friend would show up and hand me the item. I suppose it's because most people here meditate.
Cue the "thoughts and prayers" UGHHHHH!!!
MichaelSpinler comments on Jan 23, 2018:
silly, i know, today a local church called me, and the machine said, is you want us to pray for you press 1.
birdingnut replies on Jan 25, 2018:
Well, since studies have shown that positive thoughts can change things, make plants grow faster than others, speed healing, etc., I would LOVE to press a button and get somebody to send positive energy my way.
Do you ever miss the religious life?
RedRiverRogue comments on Oct 28, 2017:
My love of music, I guess, probably originated in church when I was very young. I greatly enjoy music, but I have come to abhor most religious music.... particularly the "modern" Christian rock and can't help but think that a lot of the Christian rockstars are singing all the way to the bank ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 25, 2018:
@ZebZaman Sadly, in the Middle Ages the main employer was The Church, so artists and musicians who wanted to be paid often had to play the religious game. Some had royal or wealthy patrons, and wrote music to fulfill certain obligations. I'm grateful for whoever/whatever inspired these people to make such beautiful music and artwork.
Do you ever miss the religious life?
Hugene2002 comments on Oct 28, 2017:
No way. There is absolutely nothing I miss about hanging out with the brainwashed dogmatic hypocrites that form most of the church. Church music sucks and I can get a good enough coffee and donuts at Starbucks! I definitely don't miss sitting through pointless sermons and wasting all that precious ...
birdingnut replies on Jan 25, 2018:
I like Thailand, for that reason. Thai Buddhism accepts a Third Gender and is so tolerant that animals wander in and out of the glittering temples, where you are free to come and meditate. The school kids often meditate before classes, twice a day, and it makes things peaceful and calm. But nobody bothers you, preaches at you, or condemns you.
Are you Bilingual/Trilingual/Etc.?
birdingnut comments on Jan 24, 2018:
Fluent in English and Haitian Creole, can get along in, and read Spanish, French, and now some Thai. For a while I was semi-fluent in Japanese, but it was interfering with my Thai language recall, so dropped it. Also, became semi-fluent in American Sign Language.
birdingnut replies on Jan 24, 2018:
@EllenDale Thanks! But I can't take credit..I was born and grew up in Haiti where the American missionaries spoke English, the Haitians spoke Creole and (bad) French, and across the border in the Dominican Republic, people spoke Spanish, and I picked up Thai from living in Thailand since 2010. I learned Japanese on a lark, as something to do while commuting for hours each way to a school where I was teaching, down by the border of Malaysia. I learned American Sign Language because a friend of mine used to sign for deaf children, signed for songs in church (back when I still attended one) and signed everything she said, so the kids and I picked it up, using it as a way to communicate over long distances in noisy places. I tend to teach at least some ASL to all my students, even in Thailand. I keep seeing photos of my Thai students giving me the "I love you very much!" ASL sign!
Hello.
BlueWave comments on Jan 24, 2018:
Welcome, Birding Nut!
birdingnut replies on Jan 24, 2018:
Thanks!
Hello.
Jnei comments on Jan 24, 2018:
There's going to be enough of us for an Agnostic.com Photography Club soon! Hi Birdingnut - hope you'll enjoy the site and the company of the people here :-)
birdingnut replies on Jan 24, 2018:
Thanks! I already like it! (pic of wild Nicobar Pigeon was taken at Mu Ko Similan National Marine park island, Thailand)

Photos

3
3 Like Show
4
4 Like Show
4
4 Like Show
3
3 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
3
3 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
3
3 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
0 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
2
2 Like Show
0 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
0 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
1
1 Like Show
0 Like Show
0 Like Show
0 Like Show
0 Like Show
0 Like Show
0 Like Show
Agnostic, Atheist, Secularist, Skeptic
Open to meeting men, women, trans men, genderfluids and others
  • Level8 (174,660pts)
  • Posts595
  • Comments
      Replies
    6,949
    2,340
  • Followers 31
  • Fans 0
  • Following 9
  • Joined Jan 24th, 2018
  • Last Visit Over a year ago
    Not in search results
birdingnut's Groups