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Miracles in the news

by G. George Ostrom
| November 25, 2004 11:00 PM

Since time began, humans all over the world have wanted to believe in miracles. We've all read of such things as the vision of the Virgin in the grotto at Lourdes, France, which attracts thousands of pilgrims. "A miracle is an event or action that apparently contradicts known scientific laws and is hence thought to be due to supernatural causes, esp. to an act of God."

Each of us has probably known of, or been part of something in our own lives that seemed miraculous. This could have been a loved one who unexplainably recovered from a serious illness; or it could have been something as small as finding long lost money in an old work shirt . . . right when you were broke.

The extra big, headline gathering miracles usually involve two basic components, the claimed cure of an illness or injury, and the work of mystical forces through an extraordinary medium. That's what we've got going on right now in Phum Trapeang Chum, a village in northern Cambodia.

A French press report last summer told an "amazing story" about the wife of a farmer there who said she was cured of a chronic illness after being licked by their cow. Soon, other people came to get licked by the cow and they also claimed successful cures. The latest report I've seen says there are now as many as 400 pilgrims a day showing up at that Cambodian farm. The owner says his cow is mystical because it was born in a sacred commune, and he is now charging the equivalent of 12 U.S. cents for four licks. The owner also says, "The cow won't lick people who won't put up the money."

After reading all this my first thoughts were, "Even in a poorly educated third world country, how can so many people be that gullible and naive?"

A short time later I happened to watch a few of those elaborately flamboyant TV ads which peddle the latest cure-all medicines during our national evening news. On one network alone there were concoctions guaranteed to turn old men into sex maniacs, erase wrinkles, and grow hair on a billiard ball.

I'm forming an investment company to get that cow flown over here right after Christmas, and . . . . the price of licks is going up.

Oct. 25 was an exciting day for all of us newspersons. A wonderfully promising report came from the "Intrepid Technology Laboratory" in Pocatello, Idaho. They said, "Our prototype anaerobic digester near Rupert should be finished in early November."

That statement doesn't mean much to the average person like you and me until we learn that this "anaerobic digester" will convert manure (bull plop) into commercially viable methane gas.

"It costs less than a million dollars and produces methane of such high quality it can be put directly into a natural gas pipeline. The only byproduct is a dirt-like substance that can be used as mulch."

Backers see it not only as an economic boon but a way to end the conflict between milk producers and beef feedlots, and their neighbors. And it will solve the environmental problems linked to any operational situation where manure tends to pile up.

Have been thinking it sure would have been nice if they'd had that bull plop converter in action during this last political campaign. We could have generated enough gas to heat all the homes in the valley right through the winter.