Find Your Special Place (For Super Heroes Only).

Posted on 26 April 2011 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

Life is filled with stressful places, people and situations. Some times things feel so out of place that you need to retreat and replenish your energy banks. For times like these Robonix recommends finding a special place, all super heroes have them, Batman had his Bat Cave, Superman had his Fortress of Solitude. If you want to have super powers you need to retreat sometimes and be alone. This is where most villains fall short and the main reason they loose the fight. Villains are always surrounded by sidekicks, nagging girlfriends, hostages, and endless other figures that deplete his energy and keep him from reaching his full potential.

Come to think of it, what would happen if these villains would detach from their environment for a little while, well in most of the comic books that I can remember when the villain detached from his group of lakies he usually turns out to be a pretty good guy sometimes even saving the heroes life. So if you find yourself, making foolish mistakes, on edge and basically mean spirited, take a load off find your special place and flip off your power switch.

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Download our Logo for your desktop

Posted on 16 March 2011 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

For those o you that want to say “I Agree with ROBONIX”, you can download this wallpaper for your desktop.

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Why Won’t Government Go on a Diet?

Posted on 02 February 2011 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

City governments are getting creative again. They are looking for new forms of revenue in the midst of this ongoing recession. The voting community does not want tax increases. Government cutbacks are being done, but no government worker wants to lose their job. Since efficiency in government operations is not being done enough, the easy thing to do is raise fees.

A machine shop in the U.S. gets dinged $226 by the city of Azuza because the machine shop wants to pick up and drop off and it doesn’t have a “delivery license”. Traffic citations in Montebello increase from Feb. ’09 to Mar ’09. 4 police officers report that they were reprimanded for not meeting ticket quotas.

In the last 10 years there has been a been a big increase in government worker pay increases and special perks. Who pays for that? I’ll give you one guess.

Something has to happen and happen soon. Government has to go on a diet, just like the public is doing now.

By way of [montepico.com]

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Are We Nothing More Than Slaves to Them?

Posted on 01 February 2011 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

It’s been some time since I started my career in Information Technology (IT) and most of my jobs have been for smaller companies totaling 50 employees and only about 10 workstations, maximum. My most current employer is still a small company but it wants to feel grownup, for the 100 people, 2 servers and 15 terminals, I really wouldn’t say it’s a conglomerate of any sort but they sure like to feel big. They go to extreme lengths to complicate things, for example they want me to fill out a daily activity report for the HR department. So that they can keep perfect track of what one of eight departments or three companies I’m doing work for.

Corporate America would have you believe that this is the right way of doing things, it might be, for mega giants like Microsoft or IBM but this place is basically a farm, they sell live beef and chicken products to local butchers and grocery stores. Do they really need half my day to be spent doing busy work so that they know I’m busy?

Robonix practitioners know that a true professional is fully capable of managing him/her self, without a camera in his face or a monkey on his back. Close supervision only foments mistrust, bitterness and was the main factor in the decline in global productivity, until a handful of European countries changed their way of looking at people. They no longer looked at them as a resources to be exploited and started looking at them more like people to be apprecaited.

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The Video Game Efect

Posted on 04 January 2011 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

Robonix s a set of applicable systems, these systems can help anyone that applies Robonix Technology without worrying about the social or economic consequences, in fact these presumed consequences we have placed on ourselves. We are not trapped in this reality, but we remain here by our desirer to “live”. So knowing this then, why do so many of us never reach our full potential? The reason is that we have forgotten that life is a videogame, and like all videogames life has problems. Try to remember the last videogame you were in to, wasn’t it the problem that kept you there? But once the game was mastered you lost all interest, why? Well because the game no longer posed a challenge, it was not a problem. And once this happens you either bought another videogame or you went out and played with your friends. Life is the same way, you play the game everyday until you loose al your life, you master the game and reach the end or you see the game as unbeatable and destroy your self. Then you reincarnate in to this reality, are bourn in to a new reality or you join your friends. Ether way you decide what happens next.

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There’s No Sin In Blasphemy

Posted on 03 September 2010 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

Remember back in 2007 when Gillian Gibbons, the British teacher in Sudan who was arrested and locked up for blasphemy and released only after two of her British peers went over there and pleaded her case with President Omar al-Bashir.

Good news that Mrs Gibbons was released of course, but bad news that she had to depend on the “mercy” of this al-Bashir character after the British government went cap in hand to him.  Time was, if a foreign government violated the rights of a British citizen, the UK government would have sent a gunboat.

It’s not the Brits that should have been grovelling – al-Bashir should have got down on his knees and personally begged forgiveness from Mrs Gibbons for mistreating her.

So the Sudanese State thinks it’s an insult to Islam to give a teddy bear the same name as their so-called prophet?  So what?  Even if it had been a deliberate insult – which it doesn’t appear to have been – insulting religions is a perfectly legitimate activity.  All belief systems are open to criticism – any philosophy that doesn’t allow criticism, and even condones jail, fines and flogging to protect it’s image, has to have something seriously wrong with it.

Don’t take this as an attack on Islam in particular, or Muslims.  A lot of Muslims spoke out against the Sudanese court’s treatment of Mrs Gibbons, and it’s not as if Muslims are the only group who go in for trying to silence people they disagree with.

ROBONIX says that no state, no mob, no religion, no ethnic group and no individual has a right not to be offended.  If you disagree with what someone’s saying, you can ignore them or debate them – but the moment you use force to suppress them, using the excuse that their views or actions are too “offensive” for your idea of civilised society, then you’re admitting that you don’t have an argument.

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ROBONIX Spreads?

Posted on 02 September 2010 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

ROBONIX ”this will never happen”

When an “ideology” is big enough and influential enough to have its logo plastered on a building in Downtown L.A., that’s when you know you are dealing with a cult.

ROBONIX, by design, has been thought up in a way that it will never grow out of it’s founders control, many times have we seen good ideas go down the tubes after it’s original conception. Weather it happens that the founders go nuts with “power” or a power struggle after the founders passing, leave the organization in the hands of greedy members, with their only intent being that of lining their pockets at the expense of others that wish only to improve the conditions of their lives. This is why; we the founders have decided to ensure that once ROBONIX reaches a certain capacity all the previously esoteric knowledge will become part of the public domain and accessible by all.

So why not transcend as an organization? Easy… because organizations that transcend are no longer good ideas, they become belief structures and ROBONIX is and always will be a good idea.

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Confused About Religion?

Posted on 04 August 2008 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

There was a time in my life when the religion of my forefathers went unquestioned but the more I learn about chemistry, quantum physics and computer science the more religion seems like an allegorical representation of the true nature of the universe. The spooky man in the sky looking down on everything we do, seems more and more like a fairy tail, made up to keep us under control. Robonics recommends the viewing of this video, check the facts, study the bible and make up your own mind.

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I want my hour back with interest.

Posted on 08 July 2008 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

It’s been said that time is money, well on that note, what’s going on with that hour that the government and big business have seen fit to borrow from each and every one of us (Daylight Saving Time). Daylight Saving Time is the convention of advancing clocks so that afternoons have more daylight and mornings have less. Typically clocks are adjusted forward one hour near the start of spring and are adjusted backward in autumn. That’s half a year that the government holds that hour back from us forcing us to get one hour less sleep, and come winter time they give us back our hour with out interest, not even a thank you, nothing.

I want what’s mine, I figure at 1% a month for 6 months that’s 3 minutes and 30 seconds every year over 35 years of my life, I say it comes out to about 52 minutes and 30 seconds. iRobonix tells us that this time is ours and any one of us can begin claiming it NOW! I personally get to work any thing from 30 minutes to an hour late because that’s my time; of course I make up those 30 minutes at the end of the day so that I put in my full 8 hours. Time is not a static and we can change it manipulate it and reuse it in any way that we se fit the government does it for the benefit of big business, it’s time we started to benefit from the manipulation of time.

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The Soviet Union Of America

Posted on 07 July 2008 by 2Φ3Σ27Φ (\)λ√λ22Φ

One of the most oppressive aspects of any totalitarian regime is the inability to talk freely. You just don’t know who is a snitch and when something said innocently can  be twisted into sounding criminal, especially with all the regulations in a totalitarian regime. It could be a neighbor, a co-worker, a friend, or even your child, indoctrinated in totalitarian propaganda at school, that could turn you in.

I contend this is one of the cruelest parts of totalitarianism for the average person. It creates a paranoia about speaking freely. For your own safety, you must keep things bottled up inside. It is a form of solitary confinement.

In a way, it is kind of a very twisted version of the ominous Eagles song, Hotel California: You have freedom of speech to say anything you want anytime you want, just don’t say anything in front of anyone cause you might go to jail.

Anyone who has spent any time with the now elderly people from Eastern Europe, who lived under the old Soviet Union regime, know the paranoia and fear they still carry with them about speaking freely.

Barbara Branden in her book about Ayn Rand, The Passion of Ayn Rand, recounts the story of how Rand’s sister visited Rand in the U.S. from Russia.

Rand rented a limousine to pick up her sister from the airport. Rand’s sister indicated to Rand that she didn’t not want to talk in front of the limousine driver. Back at Rand’s apartment, the sister wouldn’t talk in front of the cleaning lady. What a terrible way to live.

And such a paranoia about speaking freely is slowly moving over America. The lead agency promoting this potential national death of individual spirit is the Securities and Exchange Commission. They may have no idea how to catch a Ponzi scheme operator like Bernie Madoff (even when letters are sent to them warning about Madoff!), but they sure have evil bastard lawyers who know how to protect the agency and expand the worst aspects of totalitarianism.

Their latest stunts include, as part of the Dodd-Frank Act, slipping in language which exempts them from the Freedom of Information Act. Thus, we don’t get to see what they are up to at all. At the same time, they slipped other language into Dodd-Frank that will pay snitches 30% of all fine money collected by the SEC. In other words, while the SEC couldn’t catch a real crook like Madoff, they are damn good at harassing those who only in the minds of the SEC have done anything wrong, e.g. Martha Stewart and Mark Cuban, and are perfectly willing to payoff those who provide them with leads for the bogus cases that they prefer to bring.

It won’t take long before other agencies catch on to the SEC snitch program and before long the programs will be all over the place. And this being America, their will be some scumbag lawyer who will end up promoting the idea of being a snitch as a great thing to do. I can eventually see “Be a Snitch. Call Me.” billboards.

In fact, it is already happening. Some really distorted thinking lawyer, Stuart Meissner, who not surprisingly worked for the New York State Attorney General’s Office (which was once run by the complete hypocrite, Eliot Spitzer), is about to start running snitch ads in movie theatres.

NyPo explains:

Wanna get rich? Snitch.

That’s the new money-making mantra for folks with access to confidential information on Wall Street.

With the release of Oliver Stone’s new movie, “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” in mind, Stuart Meissner, a securities lawyer based in Midtown, is tweaking a message made famous by the first “Wall Street”: that greed is good for people standing on the right side of the law, too.

Uncle Sam recently started offering rich bounties to folks who help put away bad guys — like Gordon Gekko, the central character of Stone’s film, played by Michael Douglas, who goes to jail for insider trading.

Meissner came up with the idea to advertise for snitches who know of illegal activity at their firm. His in-theater ads and fliers will recruit whistleblowers with the promise of riches to come.

“Having the ad right there with the movie reminds people who have information regarding securities violations, ‘Hey, I can make money and also do a good thing,’ ” said Meissner, who previously worked with the financial crimes unit of the New York State Attorney General’s Office.

The ads, which are set to music similar to the theme from “Law & Order,” tell moviegoers they can remain anonymous with their tips if they go through a lawyer.

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