Lying

This Essay is about White Lies and The Truth I read Sam Harris Lying and the Interview with his teacher. This Book and the Interview is about the Master and the Disciple and how they may interact. I understand Harris published this essay plus interview and what he learnt from his University Teacher Ron Howard  as a kind chapeau id est simply Thank You. Education can succeed, but it needs two to tango. Passion Flower or teaching with passion l Credit phb First the English Version LyingSam Harris, Ronald Howard and the Art of Telling the TruthP.H. Bloecker  ·  bloecker.wordpress.com ·  2026 I. A Thin Book with Considerable WeightSam Harris’ essay Lying is not a long book. Barely a hundred pages, no academic apparatus, no mountain of footnotes. Those who pick it up because it is short will quickly discover: it is short the way a scalpel is short. It cuts deeply nonetheless.The argument is simply stated, and therefore provocative: lying is always wrong. Not almost always. Not in most cases. Always. Even the white lie. Even the protective lie. Even the polite silence that deliberately misleads. Harris acknowledges edge cases — the Nazis are at the door, Anne Frank is hiding in the attic — but he refuses to let the exception become the rule. Whoever makes habits out of exceptions has already dismantled their ethical architecture before realising they…

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Apple Country QLD

# The Granite Belt: apple country at the edge of the subtropics**The Granite Belt is Queensland's only four-season landscape — an 800-to-1,000-metre plateau of ancient granite, apple orchards, and Italian-German settler memory, three hours west of the Gold Coast yet climatically closer to Normandy than to Brisbane.** For a fictional East German woman arriving by motorcycle from the subtropical coast, the region offers an uncanny mirror: Gravenstein apples descended from Danish-German stock, a town whose apple-growing heartland was once named Roessler after a German family (renamed in 1915 amid wartime hostility), and a landscape of frost-bitten orchards and balancing granite boulders that feels nothing like Australia and everything like involuntary memory. What follows is a comprehensive research dossier organized to support authentic Sebaldian scene-writing.---## The tin miners who became orchardistsThe Granite Belt's agricultural story begins not with apples but with tin. In 1872, the Pioneer Tin Mining Company triggered a rush to what was then called Quart Pot Creek [amiens-qld-history](https://www.amiensqldhistory.com/tin-mining) [Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanthorpe,_Queensland) — renamed Stanthorpe that year [Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanthorpe,_Queensland) [Queensland Places](https://queenslandplaces.com.au/stanthorpe) by Surveyor General Augustus Charles Gregory, from the Latin *stannum* (tin) and Middle English *thorpe* (village). [Wikipedia +4](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanthorpe,_Queensland) Cobb & Co coaches ran twice daily from Warwick. [slq](https://www.slq.qld.gov.au/blog/great-tin-rush-stanthorpe) Thirty hotels did roaring trade. Chinese miners arrived via ship and rail in such numbers that by 1877 the local press reported "two hundred Chinamen going up the line." Tin valued at **£2.5 million**…

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