Care Topics



Care Info ...

Horse Blankets – How To Pick Them ... The most obvious way that a horse is different is in the size and build. You should measure your horse so that you can find a blanket that would be large enough for him or her...

Providing Perfect Orchid Care For Your New Plants ... Getting Orchid Soil That Can Bring You the Health they need Starting with simple facts about the soil that is used to care for orchids is something of a mystery to some...

Put To Pasture – A Basic Overview To Caring For Your Aging Horse ... One of the most important steps to taking care of your older horse is to assist your horse in stretching exercises...

Family Health Insurance Programs - How Can I Find Affordable Family Health Care Insurance? ... What types of programs are available for family health insurance? Family health insurance programs have changed from indemnity plans to managed care plans... With managed care plans you have different options available such as, Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs), Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs), and Point of Service plans (POSs)...

Montreal Flower Delivery And Flower Care ... However, apart from the specific flower care techniques, you should remember the basics of keeping a bouquet fresh...

...for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.
—Bible: New Testament, Matthew 25:35,36.

Both in principle and in their private attitude toward mankind Johnson and Rousseau were irreconcilable opponents. Johnson had a voracious appetite for life, and was passionately concerned with the welfare of individual men and women; while Rousseau, although he was persuaded that he loved the human race, or would have loved it if he could, followed a solitary, self-centred course and, among a host of associates, protectors, disciples, made comparatively few friends whose opinions and support he valued. Here one remembers another literary dispute, held some hundred-and-fifty years later, when Henry James, writing to the youthful H.G. Wells, described their fundamental difference. “You,” he explained, “don’t care for humanity but think they are to be improved. I love humanity but know they are not!” Johnson, too, despite his capacity for deep affection, was a life-long pessimist; Rousseau, the suspicious and resentful exile, was an inveterate reformer, and launched the doctrine of “human perfectibility” that made so strong, and often so confusing, an appeal to English nineteenth-century Romantic poets. He was a teacher; but his chief aim was primarily to teach himself; if he desired to learn, he confessed, it was primarily in order to understand his own character.
—Peter Quennell (b. 1905)

Poor workers! First they’re cuckolded, and, as if that weren’t enough, then they’re beaten! Work’s a curse, Saturno. I say to hell with the work you have to do to earn a living! That kind of work does us no honor; all it does is fill up the bellies of the pigs who exploit us. But the work you do because you like to do it, because you’ve heard the call, you’ve got a vocation—that’s ennobling! We should all be able to work like that. Look at me, Saturno—I don’t work. And I don’t care if they hang me, I won’t work! Yet I’m alive! I may live badly, but at least I don’t have to work to do it!
—Luis Buñuel (1900–1983)