You're suggesting to add expensive testing for every child to detect for some known issues that occur in approximately 1:1,000,000 children and this testing isn't likely to grab known issues. How much do you think that one in a million child receives in compensation for a bad vaccine? Divide that by a million and that tells you how cheap that testing needs to be to be worthwhile.
Even a modicum of common sense could tell you the Ayes crossed party lines. Neither party even has 388 seats. In fact, anything where the Ayes are 285+ or the Nays are 150- would be pretty safe to assume that it crossed the aisle in significant enough numbers.
The alleged goal of those negotiations was to keep Iran from getting a nuclear bomb. It is a valid question as to whether the terms achieved will accomplish that goal. If Israel does not believe the agreement, the terms which they are aware of, will achieve that go then naturally I would expect them to oppose the treaty regardless of being an ally of the United States.
We essentially have a process for dealing with treaties. The Executive branch, via the State Department, negotiates the treaty. Once the treaty has been concluded and signed by the President, it is then submitted to the Senate for ratification. They either ratify or they do not. If they do not then the treaty is dead in the water.
That is how things should work. There's no point for Congress to look at working documents of the treaty. At best the State Department could ask Congress for opinions on limitations in order to avoid making concessions that would immediately prevent ratification.
Sequels are a function of narrative. Series is a function of brand.
Harry Potter, for instance, is a series of seven books which six are sequels. Each book in the series builds on the narrative of the series as a whole.
Goosebumps is a series of 180 books where each book, with a few exceptions, is it own narrative. Goosebumps #2 "Stay Out of the Basement" is not a sequel to Goosebumps #1 "Welcome to Dead House".
Final Fantasy XIII-2 and Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII continue the plot from the previous game (XIII-2 continuing the plot of XIII and LR continuing the plot presented by XIII and XIII-2). Thus these two games function as sequels to Final Fantasy XIII. Final Fantasy VIII has no relation to the plot or narrative of any preceding Final Fantasy game so it's not a sequel.
The only roman numeral game in the Final Fantasy series that can be construed as a sequel is Final Fantasy XV and even that is an exceedingly tough sell since it only uses a similar mythology to Final Fantasy XIII, based on information known so far, but it was also initially developed as Versus XIII rather than XV. Each of the rest have their own narratives that are isolated.
Well, you wouldn't scream as much as the gases in your lungs would rush out of your body. If you could somehow scream during that then one person would hear you scream but that person isn't in much of a position to help you.
In order to generate propulsion, spacecraft need to eject material. In rocket engines they use combustion to blow a super-hot gas out the back. On probes they may use something less extreme and literally eject gas from a tank. In either case you have a finite amount of fuel to use to generate propulsion and once that fuel runs out you cannot generate more propulsion.
Collecting solar energy to convert into electricity doesn't help. You're not collecting something that you can eject so no propulsion. You would need to find a way to take electricity to generate delta-v.
Japan invaded China in July of 1937. The American ultimatum to Japan to withdraw from China did not occur until after the Japanese signed an accord with Vichy France that allowed the Japanese to station troops in Indochina, arguably to help prevent the flow of supplies to nationalist Chinese forces fighting Japan. That occurred in September of 1940. The US had not deign it fit to demand the Japanese withdraw from either location at those times. Then along comes July 1941 when Japanese invade other portions of Indochina. The US immediately embargos Japan and freezes it assets, which is a fine response, but also demands that Japan withdraw their troops not just from the countries they just invaded, but also from Vichy territory in Indochina on top of their troops in China, neither of which the US had previously made a squeak about. Arguably, the Japanese could have also been worried that the US was also including Manchuko in the China element.
The US was not taking a position that was optimal towards achieving peace but rather chose a course that was going to prod Japan along towards war with the US. A more peace-oriented President or Secretary of State could have likely avoided conflict with Japan but Cordell Hull was not interested and FDR was by no means a peace-loving President as it's fairly obvious he was itching to get into the war and side with Britain. There were plenty of people in charge that peace with Japan was going to be a much harder task to accomplish.
The question I had answered was whether peace with Japan was achievable and war could have been avoided. I wasn't addressing whether letting the Japanese continue doing what they were doing in China was a good decision.
The Pacific theater for WW2 is an interesting study. I suggest you read up on it. If FDR had been more anti-war he would have fired Cordell Hull or reigned him in. Among other things, they wouldn't have demanded that Japan withdraw from Indochina and China after Japan occupied French territory in Indochina. Hull and others through the FDR administration had absolutely no understanding of the Japanese psyche and how much losing face impacted their decisions. That is the lead up to Pearl Harbor. The US declined various diplomatic talks with the Japanese because they were insistent on agreements before the meetings occur. A more anti-war President could and should have at least entertained the meetings rather than just tossing them off because some agreement beforehand couldn't be met.
I am in close personal touch with my feelings. Anger is said she's making life hell for others. Sadness is telling me that it feels pity for her. Happiness doesn't have a comment.
They may need to use a barge to make recovery of the middle 1st stage on the Falcon heavy easier. Since the outer pair of rockets would be jettisons earlier, and return to base, the middle rocket would be much further downrange and returning to land may not be possible.
I'm glad you asked this question! All walls built within garages are effectively invisible to this radar. If the wall is removed from the garage and installed elsewhere it is still a garage-built wall and continues to remain invisible to the radar system.
You may be thinking, "What if I take one of these garage-built walls and build a garage out of them?" Let me warn you against this. We've tested this very scenario and it didn't turn out well. Lemons started spontaneously combusting and I think we might have contacted Cthulhu. It's still a little risky at this point but we're pressing on towards the next stage of the project which is creating clothing that is invisible to the radar.
You're suggesting to add expensive testing for every child to detect for some known issues that occur in approximately 1:1,000,000 children and this testing isn't likely to grab known issues. How much do you think that one in a million child receives in compensation for a bad vaccine? Divide that by a million and that tells you how cheap that testing needs to be to be worthwhile.
Even a modicum of common sense could tell you the Ayes crossed party lines. Neither party even has 388 seats. In fact, anything where the Ayes are 285+ or the Nays are 150- would be pretty safe to assume that it crossed the aisle in significant enough numbers.
No, Waldo, I do believe that is manshit.
I believe grapes are more tasty than watermelons.
Comparison successful.
Can a dickless man with testicles be considered eunuch?
The alleged goal of those negotiations was to keep Iran from getting a nuclear bomb. It is a valid question as to whether the terms achieved will accomplish that goal. If Israel does not believe the agreement, the terms which they are aware of, will achieve that go then naturally I would expect them to oppose the treaty regardless of being an ally of the United States.
We essentially have a process for dealing with treaties. The Executive branch, via the State Department, negotiates the treaty. Once the treaty has been concluded and signed by the President, it is then submitted to the Senate for ratification. They either ratify or they do not. If they do not then the treaty is dead in the water.
That is how things should work. There's no point for Congress to look at working documents of the treaty. At best the State Department could ask Congress for opinions on limitations in order to avoid making concessions that would immediately prevent ratification.
Sequels are a function of narrative. Series is a function of brand.
Harry Potter, for instance, is a series of seven books which six are sequels. Each book in the series builds on the narrative of the series as a whole.
Goosebumps is a series of 180 books where each book, with a few exceptions, is it own narrative. Goosebumps #2 "Stay Out of the Basement" is not a sequel to Goosebumps #1 "Welcome to Dead House".
Final Fantasy XIII-2 and Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII continue the plot from the previous game (XIII-2 continuing the plot of XIII and LR continuing the plot presented by XIII and XIII-2). Thus these two games function as sequels to Final Fantasy XIII. Final Fantasy VIII has no relation to the plot or narrative of any preceding Final Fantasy game so it's not a sequel.
"Release the landing gear Hal."
"I can't do that Steven."
The only roman numeral game in the Final Fantasy series that can be construed as a sequel is Final Fantasy XV and even that is an exceedingly tough sell since it only uses a similar mythology to Final Fantasy XIII, based on information known so far, but it was also initially developed as Versus XIII rather than XV. Each of the rest have their own narratives that are isolated.
Well, you wouldn't scream as much as the gases in your lungs would rush out of your body. If you could somehow scream during that then one person would hear you scream but that person isn't in much of a position to help you.
The kaboom was on Mercury, but it wasn't Earth-shattering.
In order to generate propulsion, spacecraft need to eject material. In rocket engines they use combustion to blow a super-hot gas out the back. On probes they may use something less extreme and literally eject gas from a tank. In either case you have a finite amount of fuel to use to generate propulsion and once that fuel runs out you cannot generate more propulsion.
Collecting solar energy to convert into electricity doesn't help. You're not collecting something that you can eject so no propulsion. You would need to find a way to take electricity to generate delta-v.
Or we could just swap the gender of your comment and you can realize that it's thoroughly sexist.
The people making the product see investors as customers as well. They're likely getting a very skewed idea of the demand for their product.
my rockets and planes from 0.90 are all way too fast and destroy themselves much faster than they used to.
Note the implication that prior to 0.90 his rockets still destroyed themselves.... just in 3 minutes rather than 2.5 minutes.
He is a lawyer. A lawyer is someone who has, simply, gone through law school. You become an attorney when you practice law as a profession.
Japan invaded China in July of 1937. The American ultimatum to Japan to withdraw from China did not occur until after the Japanese signed an accord with Vichy France that allowed the Japanese to station troops in Indochina, arguably to help prevent the flow of supplies to nationalist Chinese forces fighting Japan. That occurred in September of 1940. The US had not deign it fit to demand the Japanese withdraw from either location at those times. Then along comes July 1941 when Japanese invade other portions of Indochina. The US immediately embargos Japan and freezes it assets, which is a fine response, but also demands that Japan withdraw their troops not just from the countries they just invaded, but also from Vichy territory in Indochina on top of their troops in China, neither of which the US had previously made a squeak about. Arguably, the Japanese could have also been worried that the US was also including Manchuko in the China element.
The US was not taking a position that was optimal towards achieving peace but rather chose a course that was going to prod Japan along towards war with the US. A more peace-oriented President or Secretary of State could have likely avoided conflict with Japan but Cordell Hull was not interested and FDR was by no means a peace-loving President as it's fairly obvious he was itching to get into the war and side with Britain. There were plenty of people in charge that peace with Japan was going to be a much harder task to accomplish.
The question I had answered was whether peace with Japan was achievable and war could have been avoided. I wasn't addressing whether letting the Japanese continue doing what they were doing in China was a good decision.
The Pacific theater for WW2 is an interesting study. I suggest you read up on it. If FDR had been more anti-war he would have fired Cordell Hull or reigned him in. Among other things, they wouldn't have demanded that Japan withdraw from Indochina and China after Japan occupied French territory in Indochina. Hull and others through the FDR administration had absolutely no understanding of the Japanese psyche and how much losing face impacted their decisions. That is the lead up to Pearl Harbor. The US declined various diplomatic talks with the Japanese because they were insistent on agreements before the meetings occur. A more anti-war President could and should have at least entertained the meetings rather than just tossing them off because some agreement beforehand couldn't be met.
I am in close personal touch with my feelings. Anger is said she's making life hell for others. Sadness is telling me that it feels pity for her. Happiness doesn't have a comment.
I imagine men would still fight over getting others to lick their balls for them.
If you wanted it to be uncomfortable then you should have said "Do you find this as arousing as I do?"
They may need to use a barge to make recovery of the middle 1st stage on the Falcon heavy easier. Since the outer pair of rockets would be jettisons earlier, and return to base, the middle rocket would be much further downrange and returning to land may not be possible.
It would be easier to control physical access so that two of the five people that have access must be present to enter the room.
I'm glad you asked this question! All walls built within garages are effectively invisible to this radar. If the wall is removed from the garage and installed elsewhere it is still a garage-built wall and continues to remain invisible to the radar system.
You may be thinking, "What if I take one of these garage-built walls and build a garage out of them?" Let me warn you against this. We've tested this very scenario and it didn't turn out well. Lemons started spontaneously combusting and I think we might have contacted Cthulhu. It's still a little risky at this point but we're pressing on towards the next stage of the project which is creating clothing that is invisible to the radar.