...they got rid of pollution. Easily the most annoying aspect of Civ3. The ability to select multiple cities is also good news. Can't wait for my copy to arrive!
Global Warming, whether it exists or not, cannot be conclusively proven to be related to human activity. There simply isn't enough of a data record to make any conclusions. Doesn't stop anybody, of course, but that's what you get when you politicize science. Why did it get so cool in the seventies? Why was it so damn hot in the thirties? No one knows.
I saw the same thing in Ireland; senior citizens were all over the place. I would definitely agree that there are defined boundaries between seniors and everybody else (senior's communities, nursing homes, etc.) here in North America, and I'm not sure that's a good thing. I am happy that my grandmother has e-mail, though, because she's 700 miles away, and we only see each other every couple of years. So, in that situation, my grandmother is using the Net to contact her loved ones, thus relieving her loneliness.
...they got rid of pollution. Easily the most annoying aspect of Civ3. The ability to select multiple cities is also good news. Can't wait for my copy to arrive!
Global Warming, whether it exists or not, cannot be conclusively proven to be related to human activity. There simply isn't enough of a data record to make any conclusions. Doesn't stop anybody, of course, but that's what you get when you politicize science. Why did it get so cool in the seventies? Why was it so damn hot in the thirties? No one knows.
I saw the same thing in Ireland; senior citizens were all over the place. I would definitely agree that there are defined boundaries between seniors and everybody else (senior's communities, nursing homes, etc.) here in North America, and I'm not sure that's a good thing. I am happy that my grandmother has e-mail, though, because she's 700 miles away, and we only see each other every couple of years. So, in that situation, my grandmother is using the Net to contact her loved ones, thus relieving her loneliness.