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  <title>myth</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.sfetcu.com/category/Tags/myth"/>
  <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.sfetcu.com/taxonomy/term/1053/atom/feed"/>
  <id>http://www.sfetcu.com/taxonomy/term/1053/atom/feed</id>
  <updated>2008-06-04T00:27:34-06:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>Testing the myth: Barak Obama &amp; John McCain</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Testing-myth-Barak-Obama-John-McCain" />
    <id>http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Testing-myth-Barak-Obama-John-McCain</id>
    <published>2008-10-12T13:10:17-06:00</published>
    <updated>2008-10-12T13:51:56-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>nicolae</name>
    </author>
    <category term="answers" />
    <category term="Barak Obama" />
    <category term="citizens" />
    <category term="countries" />
    <category term="email" />
    <category term="errors" />
    <category term="John McCain" />
    <category term="myth" />
    <category term="non-US citizen" />
    <category term="politicians" />
    <category term="Politics" />
    <category term="Presidency" />
    <category term="presidential nominee" />
    <category term="questions" />
    <category term="results" />
    <category term="test" />
    <category term="testing" />
    <category term="United States" />
    <category term="United States" />
    <category term="US" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/obama-mccain.jpg" alt="Barack Obama - John McCain" title="Barack Obama - John McCain" class="image image-preview" width="303" height="229" longdesc="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_US_Presidential_Election" /></p>
<p>I learned, long time ago, that the US politicians are different than our  politicians. So I decided to check it, to see if this is a myth or a reality.  So, I sent today an email for every US presidential nominee, as a non-US  citizen, asking them three simple questions. Here it is the content of the  email:</p>
<p>Dear Mr. Barak Obama / John McCain,</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/obama-mccain.jpg" alt="Barack Obama - John McCain" title="Barack Obama - John McCain" class="image image-preview" width="303" height="229" longdesc="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_US_Presidential_Election" /></p>
<p>I learned, long time ago, that the US politicians are different than our  politicians. So I decided to check it, to see if this is a myth or a reality.  So, I sent today an email for every US presidential nominee, as a non-US  citizen, asking them three simple questions. Here it is the content of the  email:</p>
<p>Dear Mr. Barak Obama / John McCain,</p>
<p>I am a non-US citizen very interested in the US election for the Presidency, and  I'd like to know, if possible, your answer to three simple questions. Please  answer to me in maximum ten words for every question, and using the most  understandable words:</p>
<p>1. Why do you candidate for the Presidency of the United States?</p>
<p>2. What do you intend to do for the citizens of the United States of America?</p>
<p>3. What do you intend to do for the citizens of the other countries of the  world?</p>
<p>Thank you,</p>
<p>Nicolae Sfetcu<br />
E-mail: <a href="mailto:nicolae@sfetcu.com">nicolae@sfetcu.com</a><br />
Romania</p>
<p>I have to say that I let it pass an intentional small error in every message. I  will publish here the answers, as well as the result of this personal test.</p>
<p>UPDATE 1: No autoresponder for both contact online forms of the official web sites of the nominees.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>The Myth of Dracula</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Myth-Dracula" />
    <id>http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Myth-Dracula</id>
    <published>2008-08-26T01:17:19-06:00</published>
    <updated>2008-08-26T01:17:19-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>nicolae</name>
    </author>
    <category term="ambassadors" />
    <category term="banquet" />
    <category term="beggars" />
    <category term="boyars" />
    <category term="Churches" />
    <category term="cruelty" />
    <category term="Dracula" />
    <category term="Dracula" />
    <category term="gold cup" />
    <category term="History" />
    <category term="impaled" />
    <category term="impalement" />
    <category term="myth" />
    <category term="Orthodox" />
    <category term="public square" />
    <category term="Roman Catholic" />
    <category term="table" />
    <category term="Walachia" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p align="center"><img height="468" width="466" class="image image-preview" title="Dracula, festin" alt="Dracula, festin" src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/festin.preview.jpg" /></p>
<p align="center"><img height="24" width="468" class="image image-preview" title="Blooding rule" alt="Blooding rule" src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/blood.gif" /></p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p align="center"><img height="468" width="466" class="image image-preview" title="Dracula, festin" alt="Dracula, festin" src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/festin.preview.jpg" /></p>
<p align="center"><img height="24" width="468" class="image image-preview" title="Blooding rule" alt="Blooding rule" src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/blood.gif" /></p>
<h2><i><font color="#ff0000">The Myth of Dracula</font></i></h2>
<p align="justify"><img height="30" width="30" align="left" class="image image-preview" title="The bat" alt="The bat" src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/bat.gif" />Most  non-Romanians remember of Dracula's cruelty. After becoming prince, Dracula  supposedly invited many beggars and other old, sick and poor people to a banquet  at his castle. When his guests had finished eating their meal and drinking a  toast to him, Dracula asked them, &quot;Would you like to be without cares, lacking  nothing in this world?&quot;</p>
<p>Yes, they said enthusiastically.</p>
<p>So Dracula had the castle boarded up and set it on fire. Nobody made it out  alive - and that was the end of their problems, as he had promised. &quot;I did this  so that no one will be poor in my realm,&quot; he said.</p>
<p>According to another story, he invited 500 boyars to a banquet and asked them  how many princes had ruled in their lifetimes. They said they had lived through  many reigns. Shouting that this was their fault because of their plotting,  Dracula had them all arrested on the spot. The older ones were impaled; the  others were marched 50 miles to Walachia's capital, Poenari, where they were  forced to build a mountaintop fortress. They worked a long time; when their  clothes fell off, they worked naked. Most of them died, of course. And of course  Dracula seized the boyars' property and passed it out to his supporters. In that  way he created a new nobility, loyal to him.</p>
<p>Dracula liked to set up a banquet table and dine while he watched people die.  His favorite form of execution was impalement. It was slow; people could take  days to die. He liked to impale many people at once, arranging the stakes in  fancy designs. Nothing was too brutal for Dracula - he enjoyed having people  skinned, boiled alive, etc. He prided himself on making the punishment  (supposedly) fit the crime.</p>
<p><img height="296" width="315" class="image image-preview" title="Dracula, impalers" alt="Dracula, impalers" src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/impalers.png" /></p>
<p>By 1462, when he was deposed, he had killed between 40,000 and 100,000 people,  possibly more. He always thought up some excuse for these executions. He killed  merchants who cheated their customers. He killed women who had affairs.  Supposedly he had one woman impaled because her husband's shirt was too short.  He didn't mind impaling children, either. Afterwards he would display the  corpses in public so everyone would learn a lesson. It's said that there were  over 20,000 bodies hanging outside his capital city. Of course, the stories  about Dracula's cruelty might have been exaggerated by his enemies.</p>
<p>Dracula was so scornful of other nations that when two foreign ambassadors  refused to doff their hats to him, he had the hats nailed to their heads. He was  opposed to the Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches because he thought  foreigners, operating through the churches, had too much power in Walachia. He  tried to prevent foreign merchants from taking business away from his citizens.  If merchants disobeyed his trade laws, they were, of course, impaled.</p>
<p>To prove how well his laws worked, Dracula had a gold cup placed in a public  square. Anyone who wanted to could drink from the cup, but no one was allowed to  take it out of the square. No one did.</p>
<p>A visiting merchant once left his money outside all night, thinking that it  would be safe because of Dracula's strict policies. To his surprise, some of his  coins were stolen. He complained to Dracula, who promptly issued a proclamation  that the money must be returned or the city would be destroyed. That night  Dracula secretly had the missing money, plus one extra coin, returned to the  merchant. The next morning the merchant counted the money and found it had been  returned. He told Dracula about this, and mentioned the extra coin. Dracula  replied that the thief had been caught and would be impaled. And if the merchant  hadn't mentioned the extra coin, he would have been impaled, too.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Cerna sources - Iovan Iorgovan (Hercules) legend</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Cerna-sources-Iovan-Iorgovan-Hercules-legend" />
    <id>http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Cerna-sources-Iovan-Iorgovan-Hercules-legend</id>
    <published>2008-07-24T05:30:04-06:00</published>
    <updated>2008-07-24T05:33:31-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>nicolae</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Băile Herculane" />
    <category term="Cerna" />
    <category term="Cerna River" />
    <category term="Cerna Valley" />
    <category term="Cernişoara River" />
    <category term="Danube" />
    <category term="folk traditions" />
    <category term="fountains" />
    <category term="Godeanu Mountains" />
    <category term="Guides" />
    <category term="Hercules" />
    <category term="History" />
    <category term="Iovan Iorgovan" />
    <category term="legends" />
    <category term="Mehedinţi" />
    <category term="Mehedinti" />
    <category term="myth" />
    <category term="Nature" />
    <category term="rivers" />
    <category term="Romania" />
    <category term="Romanian mythology" />
    <category term="Travel" />
    <category term="Videos" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<object width="425" height="350"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/wEsy0QQH5Ik" />  <embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/wEsy0QQH5Ik" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350"> </embed> </object><p>The Cerna River is a river in Romania. The Cerna has its source on the south-east side of the Godeanu Mountains and flows into the Danube. The upper reach of the river is sometimes called Cernişoara River. With a basin of 1433 square km and a length of 84 km, it carves an erosive tectonic valley with numerous gorges, quite deep sometimes. There is a man-made lake on it (Tierna), just before it crosses the Băile Herculane spa.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<object width="425" height="350"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/wEsy0QQH5Ik" />  <embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/wEsy0QQH5Ik" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350"> </embed> </object><p>The Cerna River is a river in Romania. The Cerna has its source on the south-east side of the Godeanu Mountains and flows into the Danube. The upper reach of the river is sometimes called Cernişoara River. With a basin of 1433 square km and a length of 84 km, it carves an erosive tectonic valley with numerous gorges, quite deep sometimes. There is a man-made lake on it (Tierna), just before it crosses the Băile Herculane spa.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/Izvoarele_Cernei.jpg" alt="Izvoarele Cernei" title="Izvoarele Cernei" class="image image-preview" width="468" height="348" /></p>
<p><b>Iovan Iorgovan (Hercules) legend:<br />
</b><br />
Iovan Iorgovan is a character in Romanian mythology, similar in some ways with  Hercules (some writers consider him to be the same person). The legend is  present in the Cerna valley of south-western Romania. In the legend, Iovan is  named &quot;fiu de rămlean&quot; which can be translated as &quot;son of a Roman.&quot;</p>
<p>In the middle of Cerna, Romanian folk traditions tell us, a colossal simulacrum  of Hercules once existed, an ancient monument, which our heroic songs connect  with the legend of a beautiful maiden who dwelt in a cave in the Cerna  mountains. </p>
<p>Iorgovan, a great strongman from the eastern parts, comes, either to hunt deer  in the Carunti mountains (Cerna mountains), or, according to other versions, in  the Vergii or Covergii, Sovergii mountains, or to look for a beautiful girl in  the Mountains of Gold.</p>
<p>Arriving at the river Cerna on a Thursday morning, Iorgovan rides up the river,  armed with bow and arrows, and having with him hawks from Bogaz (the Danube  mouths) and hounds from Provaz, while ahead of him runs his clever bitch, Vija.</p>
<p>But Cerna was in those times a big river, wild and with black waters. Its waves  were high like church steeples and it flew with a frightening roar. Cerna had  killed all the brave men (the old heroes) who had gone up the river.</p>
<p>Iorgovan, finding no ford to cross to the other bank, calls to Cerna, asking her  to calm her waves, to stop her roar, to show him the ford, not to kill him, but  instead to tell him where he can cross, because he had travelled and he had  arrived, according to his predestination, to find here and take with him, a wild  girl, handsome and strong. At his pleading, Cerna answers him to go upriver  until he will get tired and will reach the three young maple trees - at the  round hill and the dugout bank - where, after crossing to the other side, he  will find a stone mossy wall, where is gone, and where is hidden, the wild girl,  handsome and strong.</p>
<p>Iorgovan does as Cerna said, and riding up the river he reaches the three young  maple trees, then, crossing the ford, arrives at last at the stone, upraised  mossy wall.</p>
<p>Here, under this stone wall, in deep shade, the beautiful hidden maiden, face  like the moon, golden hair falling on her shoulders, sits weeping with a  beautiful voice and a caressing tone.</p>
<p>As soon as he sees her Iorgovan tells her that the love of her had bitterly  punished him on this earth, that he had travelled the world in length and in  width, and had found no other like her, whom he would marry. But she answers  him, to well remember that once they both had served a proud queen, and that he  had kissed her and had left her pregnant; but, because of his fame, of her  mother&rsquo;s anger and her father&rsquo;s shame, she had punished herself, had secluded  herself and gone into exile, and here she had come, in a deep valley, under  stone walls, unbeaten by wind, unseen by anybody, where she had became wild. </p>
<p>Because the young maiden does not want to come out of the cave, Iorgavan, losing  his mind, incites against this unhappy girl, the hawks, hounds and the bitch  Vija, to dig under the rock and pull her out in the daylight. They listen to his  order, rush into the cave and start scratching the white face, unbeaten by wind  and unseen by people, of the unhappy maiden. </p>
<p>In vain cries the girl, and pleads with Iorgovan to call back his hawks and his  hounds, which bite and scratch her, while her baby is crying. He, getting even  madder, wants now to kill her.</p>
<p>Then, in her suffering and despair, she curses Iorgovan. (See the original <a href="http://www.pelasgians.bigpondhosting.com/website3/17_01.htm">article</a>)</p>
<p>Film made by Dan Alexoae</p>

    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Dracula</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Dracula" />
    <id>http://www.sfetcu.com/content/Dracula</id>
    <published>2008-06-04T00:25:39-06:00</published>
    <updated>2008-06-04T00:27:34-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>nicolae</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Bram Stoker" />
    <category term="Count Dracula" />
    <category term="Dracula" />
    <category term="history" />
    <category term="legends" />
    <category term="literature" />
    <category term="movies" />
    <category term="myth" />
    <category term="tales" />
    <category term="truth" />
    <category term="vampires" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p align="center"><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/blood.gif" alt="Blooding rule" title="Blooding rule" class="image image-preview" height="24" width="468" /></p>
<h2><i><font color="#ff0000">Who was Dracula ?</font></i><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/vladtepes.jpg" alt="Vlad Tepes" title="Vlad Tepes" class="image image-preview" height="144" width="96" align="right" /></h2>
<p align="justify"><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/bat.gif" alt="The bat" title="The bat" class="image image-preview" height="30" width="30" /></p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p align="center"><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/blood.gif" alt="Blooding rule" title="Blooding rule" class="image image-preview" height="24" width="468" /></p>
<h2><i><font color="#ff0000">Who was Dracula ?</font></i><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/vladtepes.jpg" alt="Vlad Tepes" title="Vlad Tepes" class="image image-preview" height="144" width="96" align="right" /></h2>
<p align="justify"><img src="http://www.sfetcu.com/sites/default/files/images/bat.gif" alt="The bat" title="The bat" class="image image-preview" height="30" width="30" /></p>
<p align="justify"><i>Difficult question ! Legends, truth, literature, history,  movies, local tales. Where is the truth? And where begins the legend ?</i></p>
<p align="justify"><i>Here you will find both historical truth and legends,  names, real places to visit. Dracula is no more a local historical figure:  Dracula belongs to the whole world!</i></p>
<p align="justify">Dracula strikes terror deep in the heart like few stories  can.&nbsp; Bram Stoker's novel, like Dracula himself, is immortal.&nbsp; Count Dracula  swoops into the deep shadows of our psyche to feast upon our inner fears.</p>
<p>Meet the myth, travel the legend.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
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