Friday, January 27, 2012 9:51:35 PM
page 6... new lightweight vests for cops and soldiers that can stop any bullet.
Leap of Faith - In its most commonly used meaning, is the act of believing in or accepting something intangible or unprovable, or without empirical evidence. The phrase is commonly attributed to a Danish philosopher, however, he himself never used the term, as he referred to a leap as a leap to faith. A leap of faith involves circularity* insofar as a leap is made by faith.
JOHN11: "[John Bourque] called me [and] stated [Page 6] was really talking about Bourque industries. First, with the [vest] and second the manufacturing [for] jobs [in] the U.S."
The majority of posters on this board have acknowledged their own personal "leap to faith" of acceptance that JOHN11 is whom he says he is, that being a person with past and current close friendship with John Bourque.
The information JOHN11 gives to this board in #msg-71301614 was his "leap to faith" in accepting John Bourque's "in a round about way" manner to express his own "leap to faith" when he was told to watch the speech because something was to be said "about our interest."
Its possible, as many have posted here, that the reference to this personal body armor was not about what this company has already developed and proven, but it may be about something in the research and development phase of another company or institute with government sponsored funds, meaning we need to get the word out that it has already been developed, only needing the NIJ certificate with an influx of capital to start manufacturing ourself, and for us to exercise the option to license to companies already with the capacity.
My take is that John Bourque's hic-ups and stumbles in his past, and most likely current life as being human, do NOT include delusions of grandeur in regards to this reference since John Bourque has a steady clear head towards armor as it either does what it suppose to, or it doesn't, not a guess and hope and later to find out what it does after saying that it is there.
* Logic. of or pertaining to reasoning in which the conclusion is ostensibly proved, but in actuality it or its equivalent has been assumed as a premise.
Doug
Leap of Faith - In its most commonly used meaning, is the act of believing in or accepting something intangible or unprovable, or without empirical evidence. The phrase is commonly attributed to a Danish philosopher, however, he himself never used the term, as he referred to a leap as a leap to faith. A leap of faith involves circularity* insofar as a leap is made by faith.
JOHN11: "[John Bourque] called me [and] stated [Page 6] was really talking about Bourque industries. First, with the [vest] and second the manufacturing [for] jobs [in] the U.S."
The majority of posters on this board have acknowledged their own personal "leap to faith" of acceptance that JOHN11 is whom he says he is, that being a person with past and current close friendship with John Bourque.
The information JOHN11 gives to this board in #msg-71301614 was his "leap to faith" in accepting John Bourque's "in a round about way" manner to express his own "leap to faith" when he was told to watch the speech because something was to be said "about our interest."
Its possible, as many have posted here, that the reference to this personal body armor was not about what this company has already developed and proven, but it may be about something in the research and development phase of another company or institute with government sponsored funds, meaning we need to get the word out that it has already been developed, only needing the NIJ certificate with an influx of capital to start manufacturing ourself, and for us to exercise the option to license to companies already with the capacity.
My take is that John Bourque's hic-ups and stumbles in his past, and most likely current life as being human, do NOT include delusions of grandeur in regards to this reference since John Bourque has a steady clear head towards armor as it either does what it suppose to, or it doesn't, not a guess and hope and later to find out what it does after saying that it is there.
* Logic. of or pertaining to reasoning in which the conclusion is ostensibly proved, but in actuality it or its equivalent has been assumed as a premise.
Doug

