Sex and Submission has a mad scientist theme this week! Here is how the submissive clone thing would go: “Beverly Hills works in a scientific laboratory with colleague Mark Davis. After rejecting his advancements, Mark takes a sample of her DNA and creates a genetically modified human clone with submissive traits. He then presents this scientific breakthrough to a room full of scientists who take part in his kinky sexual demonstrations. Together, Mark Davis, Mr. Pete and Harmony gang bang Beverly Hills in this exciting and action packed story line update. Including bondage, squirting, double penetration, gang bang and lesbian sex.” This is porn at its most creative from the medical fetish set with the clothed scientist team viewing the naked clone to the forced orgasm gang bang to the flowers placed in inappropriate places.

Ever wonder why your VDay cards have hearts on them?
In the Bible, and in much later literature, the heart is used as a metaphor to refer to the moral core of a human being. This is true from the earliest passages; Genesis 6:5 situates the thoughts of evil men in their hearts, and Exodus 5 through 12 speak repeatedly of the Lord “hardening Pharaoh’s heart;” by this it is meant that God made Pharaoh resolve not to let the Israelite slaves leave Egypt, in order to bring judgment against him. In Egyptian mythology, the heart was weighed in a balance against the feather of Maat, symbolising truth, in the judgment of the dead in the Egyptian Book of the Dead. Similarly, in Jeremiah 17:9, we are told that the “heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked”; and that the Lord is the judge who “tries” the human heart.
The Roman physician Galen considered the heart to be the seat of the emotions; the Stoics taught that the heart was the seat of the human soul. (Galen also located the seat of the passions in the liver, and the seat of reason in the brain.) While Galen’s identification with the heart and emotion were proposed as a part of his theory of the circulatory system, the Biblical text, this traditional Western medicine, and similar literary usages have caused the heart to be identified as the source of human emotions; and especially, the emotion of love.
This shape also appears on playing cards as the pip of the suit of hearts. What the traditional “heart shape” actually depicts is a matter of some controversy. It only vaguely resembles the human heart. Some claim that it actually depicts the hearts of cattle; while beef hearts resemble the heart shape somewhat more closely, the resemblance is still small. The shape does resemble that of the three-chambered heart of the turtle, and that of the human male prostate gland, but is surely not patterned after either of these organs. There are many claims that the “heart” shape actually depict features of the human female, such as the female’s pubic mound. A Sumerian cuneiform symbol for “woman” closely resembles the heart shape, and is believed to directly depict the pubic mound. Others maintain the heart resembles the shape of the female breasts or the female buttocks, especially when bent over in readiness for copulation; meaning that the heart was a symbol of fertility and maturity as a possible mating partner.
This shape is particularly associated with love poetry; it is often seen on Valentine cards, candy boxes, and similar popular culture artifacts as a symbol of love and romance. (via Wikipedia)
Valentine’s Day, on February 14th, is the traditional day on which lovers in the West let each other know about their love. Its obscure origins as a Catholic Church feast day, said to be in honor of Saint Valentine are discussed below. The day could not have become associated with romantic love before the High Middle Ages when such concepts were formulated.
The day is now most closely associated with the mutual exchange of love notes in the form of “valentines”. Modern Valentine symbols include the heart-shaped outline and the figure of the winged Cupid. Starting in the 19th century, the practice of hand writing notes has largely given way to the exchange of mass-produced greeting cards. The Greeting Card Association estimates that world-wide approximately one billion valentine cards are sent each year, making the day the second largest card-sending holiday of the year behind Christmas. The association also estimates that women purchase approximately 85 percent of all valentines.
In the United States in the second half of the 20th century, the practice of exchanging cards has been extended to include the giving of all manner gifts, usually from the man to the woman. Such gifts typically include roses and chocolate. Starting in the 1980s, the diamond industry began to promote Valentine’s day as occasion for the giving of fine jewelry.
A dinner date on Valentine’s Day is often regarded as indicating that a dating couple are involved in a serious relationship.
In the United States the day has come to be associated as well with a generic Platonic greeting of “Happy Valentine’s”, which may be said by men to their female friends, but rarely to other male friends.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia (1908), at least three different Saints Valentine, all of them martyrs and all quite obscure, are mentioned in the early martyrologies under the date of February 14th: (1) a priest in Rome who suffered martyrdom in the second half of the 3rd century and was buried on the Via Flaminia, (2) a bishop of Interamna (modern Terni) also suffered martyrdom in the second half of the 3rd century and was also buried on the Via Flaminia, but in a different location than the priest and (3) a martyr in North Africa, about whom little else is known.
The connection between St. Valentine and romantic love is not mentioned in any early histories and is regarded by historians as purely a matter of legend (see below). The feast of St. Valentine was first declared to be on February 14 by Pope Gelasius I around 498. There is a widespread legend that he created the day to counter the practice held on Lupercalia of young men and women pairing off as lovers by drawing their names out of an urn, but this practice is not attested in any sources from that era.
In the 19th century, relics of St. Valentine were donated by Pope Gregory XVI to the Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland, which has become a popular place of pilgrimage on February 14.
In 1969, as part of a larger effort to pare down the number of saint days of purely legendary origin, the Church removed St. Valentine’s Day as an official holiday from its calendar.
The influential Gnostic teacher Valentinius was a candidate for Bishop of Rome in 143. In his teachings, the marriage bed assumed a central place in his version of Christian love, an emphasis sharply in contrast with the asceticism of mainstream Christianity. Stephan A. Hoeller, assesses Valentinius on the subject : “In addition to baptism, anointing, eucharist, the initiation of priests and the rites of the dying, the Valentinian Gnosis mentions prominently two great and mysterious sacraments called “redemption” (apolytrosis) and “bridal chamber” respectively”
The first recorded association of St. Valentine’s Day with romantic love was in the 14th century in England and France, where it was believed that February 14 was the day on which birds paired off to mate. This belief is mentioned in the writings of Geoffrey Chaucer in the 14th century, who wrote in the Parlement of Foules that “For this was sent on Seynt Valentyne’s day/Whan every foul cometh ther to choose his mate” It was common during that era for lovers to exchange notes on this day and to call each other their “Valentines”. A 14th century valentine is said to be in the collection of the British Library. It is probable that many of the legends about St. Valentine were invented during this period. Among the legends are ones that assert that:
On the evening before St. Valentine was to be martyred for being a Christian, he passed a love note to his jailer’s daughter which read “From Your Valentine”. During a ban on marriages of Roman soldiers by the Emperor Claudius II, St. Valentine secretly helped arrange marriages. In most versions of these legends, February 14 is the date associated with his martyrdom. (via Wikipedia)















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