For the army forces, artillery was mostly owned by the continental army. The continental navy was minimal and many naval functions were performed by privateers who owned their ships and the armament on it, which included cannon.
I was a bit mistaken about the access permitted to national forests. I was also not talking libre not gratis when I wrote free. The appalachian trail, however, is definitely under the jurisdiction of the NPS.
It's managed by the NPS and the other organizations partner with them to help, including the USFS, but as far as policy and legal aspects go it's under NPS jurisdiction.
Well, since you missed my point. Your comment was off topic as is this pointlessly long response that I didn't read in its entirety because it was quite obvious that you missed the point and are just looking for even the slightest reason to go off on some rant about some cause that you feel is near and dear to you. This slashdot topic is discussing the US Forest Service and a stupid policy they're trying to implement. Bringing in national parks has no bearing what-so-ever since they are under the dominion and control of the US National Park Service which is completely distinct and separate from the US Forest Service.
The Appalachian Trail is managed by the US National Park Service and not the US Forest Service. Most of the lands you are going onto as an outdoorsman are managed by the NPS and not the FS. In fact, if you're on the lands managed by the FS and you don't have a permit you're likely there illegally. It's the national parks that you have free access to.
The US Forest Service manages national forests while the US National Park Service manages national parks. I'm not sure why you bring that up because the aggressive logging is in national forests and not national parks.
Possibly, I was under the impression that Ansel Adams took most of his photos of national parks and not wilderness areas. This fine is levied by the US Forest Service which does not manage or have jurisdiction over national parks which the US National Park Service has jurisdiction. The US Forest Service is the same bunch of fools that thought bring what qualifies as essentially SWAT teams to the Bundy standoff was a brilliant idea. This fine, I have no doubt, is directly related to their bungling of how to handle that situation and the media circus that was created. This way they can greatly clamp down on any coverage of similar future standoffs.
Your plan is flawed. National parks are not managed by the US Forest Service. They are managed by the US National Park Service. Two different organizations.
Lucky for you that the national parks are under the management of the US National Park Service and not the US Forest Service. Thus the fine, even if implemented, would not apply to you.
The National Park Service was established in 1916 to oversee federal parks. It reports to the Secretary of the Interior. The US Forest Service was establish in 1876 and reports to the USDA. They regulate different land.
there is NO NED for 6 litres in a car that's made for a market with a 55mph national speed limit
There is no 55 mph national speed limit. There are highways as fast as 75 mph in the USA. That still supports your argument, but do try to get the facts right.
There's no national speed limit. Texas is weird in that it's not as uniform as other states. It does have an area with an 85 mph limit but it's mostly 75 mph. There's three states with an 80 mph limit and 13 with a limit of 75 mph. Eleven states have a cap of 65 mph and one state has a cap of 60 mph. The remaining 22 have a cap of 70 mph.
There was a law passed in 1974 in response to the oil crisis that set a national speed limit of 55 mph. It was upped to 65 mph in 1987 but finally repealed in 1995.
The first time it was officially announced that Ghost was canceled was yesterday in the article linked to in this slashdot topic. Previously it had been on hold indefinitely with the last official statement coming in 2008. So sometime in the past six years it was cancelled without much fanfare. Of course, it had been considered vaporware for some time before the 2008 announcement.
Eisenhower (5 star) is an interesting President. Unfortunately, we don't have many Presidents to compare him against with there only being 44 individuals. Of those 44 only two others would have had anywhere close to a similar experience as Eisenhower. The first would be the George Washington (7-star) and the second would be Ulysses S. Grant (4 star, O-10). While there are other Presidents who have been generals, none have had such a large command over so many people and dictated the course of action like those three. Now if you want to count any president with an officer rank that's been involved in a conflict since the beginning of the 20th century you can add Harry Truman (O-6), Lyndon Johnson (O-5), Richard Nixon (O-5), Gerald Ford (O-4), John Kennedy (O-3), Jimmy Carter (O-3), Ronald Reagan (O-3), George Bush (O-2), George W. Bush (O-2).
It is a common trait among the greats that they do not like sending boys into combat. Some of the generals known to be bloody thirsty, such as Patton or Lemay, were also among those most concerned for the lives and safety for the men under their command and were strict about training their men to help them come home alive. Eisenhower was no different. Having read the speech I believe therein lies the reason for his statements and no particular conspiracy of note. Remember, he was fighting in a war that the US was brought into due to aggression and expansion by the Japanese empire that was driven by militarist and business factions. He witnessed in Europe what it can lead it and the numbers of men that had to die needlessly for it. The stress and anxiety he must have felt giving the order to launch Operation Overlord must have been intense knowing that even in retreat and withdrawal there would have been untold lives lost. He did, after all, draft a letter that he shoved in his pocket for incase the invasion had failed.
For the army forces, artillery was mostly owned by the continental army. The continental navy was minimal and many naval functions were performed by privateers who owned their ships and the armament on it, which included cannon.
It's probably an experiment and you're fucked.
I think they expressly designed their hardware and software to auto-sodomize you.
Depends on when the author dies and the reins are given to Brandon Sanderson to finish it up once and for all.
The character's look gives me a Christopher Llyod vibe.
All cloud services are run by outside companies. That's what makes them cloud services. The cloud is everything you don't have direct control over.
I was a bit mistaken about the access permitted to national forests. I was also not talking libre not gratis when I wrote free. The appalachian trail, however, is definitely under the jurisdiction of the NPS.
It's managed by the NPS and the other organizations partner with them to help, including the USFS, but as far as policy and legal aspects go it's under NPS jurisdiction.
http://www.nps.gov/appa/parkmg...
Well, since you missed my point. Your comment was off topic as is this pointlessly long response that I didn't read in its entirety because it was quite obvious that you missed the point and are just looking for even the slightest reason to go off on some rant about some cause that you feel is near and dear to you. This slashdot topic is discussing the US Forest Service and a stupid policy they're trying to implement. Bringing in national parks has no bearing what-so-ever since they are under the dominion and control of the US National Park Service which is completely distinct and separate from the US Forest Service.
The Appalachian Trail is managed by the US National Park Service and not the US Forest Service. Most of the lands you are going onto as an outdoorsman are managed by the NPS and not the FS. In fact, if you're on the lands managed by the FS and you don't have a permit you're likely there illegally. It's the national parks that you have free access to.
The US Forest Service manages national forests while the US National Park Service manages national parks. I'm not sure why you bring that up because the aggressive logging is in national forests and not national parks.
Possibly, I was under the impression that Ansel Adams took most of his photos of national parks and not wilderness areas. This fine is levied by the US Forest Service which does not manage or have jurisdiction over national parks which the US National Park Service has jurisdiction. The US Forest Service is the same bunch of fools that thought bring what qualifies as essentially SWAT teams to the Bundy standoff was a brilliant idea. This fine, I have no doubt, is directly related to their bungling of how to handle that situation and the media circus that was created. This way they can greatly clamp down on any coverage of similar future standoffs.
Your plan is flawed. National parks are not managed by the US Forest Service. They are managed by the US National Park Service. Two different organizations.
Their handling of the standoff with Bundy was a fiasco. This is their response for future engagements.
Lucky for you that the national parks are under the management of the US National Park Service and not the US Forest Service. Thus the fine, even if implemented, would not apply to you.
Thank you Martin Blanke.
The US Forest Service is a separate organization from the US national Park Service and they manage separate land.
Also, the US Forest Service manages 193,000,000 acres to the National Park Service's 84,000,000.
The National Park Service was established in 1916 to oversee federal parks. It reports to the Secretary of the Interior. The US Forest Service was establish in 1876 and reports to the USDA. They regulate different land.
Yeah! Like slashdot beta.
there is NO NED for 6 litres in a car that's made for a market with a 55mph national speed limit
There is no 55 mph national speed limit. There are highways as fast as 75 mph in the USA. That still supports your argument, but do try to get the facts right.
There's no national speed limit. Texas is weird in that it's not as uniform as other states. It does have an area with an 85 mph limit but it's mostly 75 mph. There's three states with an 80 mph limit and 13 with a limit of 75 mph. Eleven states have a cap of 65 mph and one state has a cap of 60 mph. The remaining 22 have a cap of 70 mph.
There was a law passed in 1974 in response to the oil crisis that set a national speed limit of 55 mph. It was upped to 65 mph in 1987 but finally repealed in 1995.
The first time it was officially announced that Ghost was canceled was yesterday in the article linked to in this slashdot topic. Previously it had been on hold indefinitely with the last official statement coming in 2008. So sometime in the past six years it was cancelled without much fanfare. Of course, it had been considered vaporware for some time before the 2008 announcement.
Auto Assault?
Eisenhower (5 star) is an interesting President. Unfortunately, we don't have many Presidents to compare him against with there only being 44 individuals. Of those 44 only two others would have had anywhere close to a similar experience as Eisenhower. The first would be the George Washington (7-star) and the second would be Ulysses S. Grant (4 star, O-10). While there are other Presidents who have been generals, none have had such a large command over so many people and dictated the course of action like those three. Now if you want to count any president with an officer rank that's been involved in a conflict since the beginning of the 20th century you can add Harry Truman (O-6), Lyndon Johnson (O-5), Richard Nixon (O-5), Gerald Ford (O-4), John Kennedy (O-3), Jimmy Carter (O-3), Ronald Reagan (O-3), George Bush (O-2), George W. Bush (O-2).
It is a common trait among the greats that they do not like sending boys into combat. Some of the generals known to be bloody thirsty, such as Patton or Lemay, were also among those most concerned for the lives and safety for the men under their command and were strict about training their men to help them come home alive. Eisenhower was no different. Having read the speech I believe therein lies the reason for his statements and no particular conspiracy of note. Remember, he was fighting in a war that the US was brought into due to aggression and expansion by the Japanese empire that was driven by militarist and business factions. He witnessed in Europe what it can lead it and the numbers of men that had to die needlessly for it. The stress and anxiety he must have felt giving the order to launch Operation Overlord must have been intense knowing that even in retreat and withdrawal there would have been untold lives lost. He did, after all, draft a letter that he shoved in his pocket for incase the invasion had failed.
Id say realistically I saw somewhere in the neighborhood of a sold out yankees game.
About 50,000.