Indeed. I think we can stipulate it's a long fracking time.
Let's do a plane metaphor for clarity:
It's like the amount of time it takes for your mother-in-law to get tired of talking about the boy your wife should've married, on a flight from New York to Singapore, while you endure a category 6 hangover during a category 5 hurricane, with a paper cut on your left pinkie.
assumption: 1. a thing that is accepted as true or as certain to happen, without proof.
I'm with you. Opinions should be derived not from personal feedback from environment experience, but from situations you believe are quite unlikely to occur, yet provably so.
The answer lies in the assumption that the control readout needs to be at room temperature to satisfy some human need to be present when robotic representation makes infinitely more sense.
I'm not sure of the name of the shape, but when we were younger, my wife could sit on my face so that I couldn't breathe... nowadays, I can't hear the stereo.
Rothschild said something to the effect "If I have control of a nations money, I don't care who controls its laws."
One of the earliest separation of powers involved making the governors answer to the financiers. I'm not convinced this method was the best use of checks and balances, but it was an early inception of checks and balances against unbridled power.
Powerful corporations issuing their own company store-like script is likely to become fractured and unwieldy, and destabilizing central banks' powerful grip on the economy is bound to meet some stiff resistance.
TBL is not the old man yelling at the cloud. He's a highly intelligent person who cannot believe, with all this internet-provided freedom of information, people still make such ignorant decisions. Common failure of the reasonably well educated.
"...what are your counter-evidence that farmed salmon spend a considerable time swimming in antibiotics? And what is your evidence that use of said fish-specific antibiotic is detrimental to human health?"
Well, first... it seems unlikely fish not swimming in antibiotics would need to be defended and/or prosecuted to the standard of not detrimental to human health.
I can taste the difference in farmed and wild caught salmon. Perhaps I could be less skeptical of your position if your first link wasn't to Alltech, an aquaculture proponent site, and your 2nd link wasn't to a fish farm management site.
While taste is a consideration, it is not the only one. I consume some healthy things that do not satisfy the taste buds nearly as well as many of the things thought to be most unhealthy. Wild caught salmon seem to have spent less time marinading in a broth of antibiotic soup than their farmed cousins.
Chances are, a job in an Amazon warehouse is no worse than a similar vocation at Walmart or Dollar General, and orders of magnitude better than workers at Ali Express or Foxconn.
Off the record, for fear of reprisal, we interviewed four or five migrant ditch diggers and farm workers who would love that inside job instead of what they do now. Oh, and they'll do it for $13.50 an hour.
Well, we can also add the countless voices and protestors who demonstrate openly for increased minimum wages at $15/hr.
Of course. For many this represents a huge pay increase, though still not a living wage in many markets, but the story is about the implementation of the raise along with, allegedly, fewer hours.
This is a news article that generally only needs a few sources. Notice that Amazon and Whole Foods refused to comment at all?
What, exactly, would that press release be like?
There are some workers, amongst our half a million employees, who have worked fewer hours since the pay raise.
A beautiful woman walks into a doctor's office one day and the doctor is bowled over by her stunningly good looks and all his professionalism goes right out the window.
He tells her to take off her pants, she does, and he starts rubbing her thighs.
"Do you know what I am doing?" asks the doctor?
"Yes, checking for abnormalities." she replies.
He tells her to take off her shirt and bra, she takes them off. The doctor begins rubbing her breasts and asks, "Do you know what I am doing now?", she replies, "Yes, checking for cancer."
Finally, he tells her to take off her panties, lays her on the table, gets on top of her and starts having sex with her. He says to her, "Do you know what I am doing now?"
She replies, "Yes, getting herpes - that's why I'm here!"
The Guardian article mentions speaking to a single worker in Illinois, one in Oregon, a disgruntled slave wage in Maryland, and another in California... none of who can be independently verified because of fear of repercussion. If you speak to enough hourly employees in any industry, you will find a few disgruntled individuals willing to speak negatively of their chosen employer, especially off the record.
Not to explicitly assume a small sample size, but it's a more interesting narrative if the great evil corporation is putting it to the little man.
It also provides objective evidence if there's a ref or ump who's clearly doing a bad job. Which baseball badly needs since there are some umpires who have a reputation for calling a small strike zone, some for calling a large strike zone.
I rather enjoy the additional variables the different strike zones add to the gamesmanship. Savvy, seasoned players, and pitchers especially, consider it an instrumental part of their preparation to learn the different umpire crews' tendencies.
First, let's stipulate you will never remove all the inaccurate calls, so then it follows that "bad" calls are part of the game. Unless you're a hopelessly biased fan, you would also observe that these egregious travesties of justice go against all teams. It's fair in that everyone takes a fracking, every now and then.
"There's a perception that scooter-related injuries occur at night. Well that's not true," Taylor said. "Our study will show they occur during all times of the day. People may also perceive there's typically a car involved. But our study finds most of the time the rider may hit a bump in the road or they simply lose their balance."
What we might infer from this, if the claims were slightly less improbable:
Scooter-related accidents, clearly complicated technical industry terminology, do not occur at night. They simply occur all times of the day. Unfair bumps and unbalanced
The Society for Flat Earth initiated a press release today about their growing numbers. "Membership is up all over the Globe."
Warren has to say something to separate herself from the throngs of Democratic Presidential hopefuls, and elevate her campaign into the limelight, but she doesn't really have a clue what her proposal would do.
Internet neutrality is poorly understood by Washington, and there would be throngs of salivating international competitors for the void created if the US government handicaps their domestic tech industry.
It's fair to say the American nation isn't the envy of the World it once used to be, but the fact the Chinese can sue in American courts with a decent chance to win still says a lot about the differences between the two juggernaut nations.
“Congress acted unconstitutionally as judge, jury and executioner,” Huawei executive Guo Ping said Thursday after announcing the court action.
Guo Ping's evidently been binge-watching some Mandarin-dubbed spaghetti westerns.
Indeed. I think we can stipulate it's a long fracking time.
Let's do a plane metaphor for clarity:
It's like the amount of time it takes for your mother-in-law to get tired of talking about the boy your wife should've married, on a flight from New York to Singapore, while you endure a category 6 hangover during a category 5 hurricane, with a paper cut on your left pinkie.
Can of corn, piece of cake, easy as PIE.
Lobbying, at its most basic, is peddling monetary influence in exchange for political influence.
All these target markets for influence, and nothing for Bleecker Street. The saddest part of it all is the American President out-thought you there.
...as I believe it is below the standards of this website.
Whew. Your bluff was spot on until right then.
assumption: 1. a thing that is accepted as true or as certain to happen, without proof.
I'm with you. Opinions should be derived not from personal feedback from environment experience, but from situations you believe are quite unlikely to occur, yet provably so.
Naw, just came here to post this.
I have 5 Great Danes, 2 Pit Bulls, 4 German Shepherds, 3 Rottweilers and 2 Cane Corsos
(In your best Australian accent) That's not a dog. This is a dog.
I'm not sure of the name of the shape, but when we were younger, my wife could sit on my face so that I couldn't breathe... nowadays, I can't hear the stereo.
Rothschild said something to the effect "If I have control of a nations money, I don't care who controls its laws."
One of the earliest separation of powers involved making the governors answer to the financiers. I'm not convinced this method was the best use of checks and balances, but it was an early inception of checks and balances against unbridled power.
Powerful corporations issuing their own company store-like script is likely to become fractured and unwieldy, and destabilizing central banks' powerful grip on the economy is bound to meet some stiff resistance.
TBL is not the old man yelling at the cloud. He's a highly intelligent person who cannot believe, with all this internet-provided freedom of information, people still make such ignorant decisions. Common failure of the reasonably well educated.
"...what are your counter-evidence that farmed salmon spend a considerable time swimming in antibiotics? And what is your evidence that use of said fish-specific antibiotic is detrimental to human health?"
Well, first... it seems unlikely fish not swimming in antibiotics would need to be defended and/or prosecuted to the standard of not detrimental to human health.
2ndly through fourthly: Farmed salmon full of antibiotics
wild salmon vs farmed
Salmon farming in crisis: 'We are seeing a chemical arms race in the seas'"
I can taste the difference in farmed and wild caught salmon. Perhaps I could be less skeptical of your position if your first link wasn't to Alltech, an aquaculture proponent site, and your 2nd link wasn't to a fish farm management site.
While taste is a consideration, it is not the only one. I consume some healthy things that do not satisfy the taste buds nearly as well as many of the things thought to be most unhealthy. Wild caught salmon seem to have spent less time marinading in a broth of antibiotic soup than their farmed cousins.
Indeed.
Here's to hoping technological advances, or happenstance, bail us out of this without catastrophic regression.
Chances are, a job in an Amazon warehouse is no worse than a similar vocation at Walmart or Dollar General, and orders of magnitude better than workers at Ali Express or Foxconn.
Off the record, for fear of reprisal, we interviewed four or five migrant ditch diggers and farm workers who would love that inside job instead of what they do now. Oh, and they'll do it for $13.50 an hour.
Well, we can also add the countless voices and protestors who demonstrate openly for increased minimum wages at $15/hr.
Of course. For many this represents a huge pay increase, though still not a living wage in many markets, but the story is about the implementation of the raise along with, allegedly, fewer hours.
This is a news article that generally only needs a few sources. Notice that Amazon and Whole Foods refused to comment at all?
What, exactly, would that press release be like?
There are some workers, amongst our half a million employees, who have worked fewer hours since the pay raise.
A beautiful woman walks into a doctor's office one day and the doctor is bowled over by her stunningly good looks and all his professionalism goes right out the window.
He tells her to take off her pants, she does, and he starts rubbing her thighs.
"Do you know what I am doing?" asks the doctor? "Yes, checking for abnormalities." she replies.
He tells her to take off her shirt and bra, she takes them off. The doctor begins rubbing her breasts and asks, "Do you know what I am doing now?", she replies, "Yes, checking for cancer."
Finally, he tells her to take off her panties, lays her on the table, gets on top of her and starts having sex with her. He says to her, "Do you know what I am doing now?"
She replies, "Yes, getting herpes - that's why I'm here!"
The Guardian article mentions speaking to a single worker in Illinois, one in Oregon, a disgruntled slave wage in Maryland, and another in California... none of who can be independently verified because of fear of repercussion. If you speak to enough hourly employees in any industry, you will find a few disgruntled individuals willing to speak negatively of their chosen employer, especially off the record.
Not to explicitly assume a small sample size, but it's a more interesting narrative if the great evil corporation is putting it to the little man.
What did people think would happen?
People are generally long on good intentions, and short on consequences and repercussions.
The sweet blue-haired lady who feeds the stray feral cats until their population growth outstrips her ability to dump out enough friskies.
The folks who thought Amazon was a goin' to take the wage increase out of their piggy bank, and bear the burden of it heroically.
VPN's are the tech equivalent of burglar bars and a safe.
You may not have anything of value in there, but it looks like you do.
It also provides objective evidence if there's a ref or ump who's clearly doing a bad job. Which baseball badly needs since there are some umpires who have a reputation for calling a small strike zone, some for calling a large strike zone.
I rather enjoy the additional variables the different strike zones add to the gamesmanship. Savvy, seasoned players, and pitchers especially, consider it an instrumental part of their preparation to learn the different umpire crews' tendencies.
First, let's stipulate you will never remove all the inaccurate calls, so then it follows that "bad" calls are part of the game. Unless you're a hopelessly biased fan, you would also observe that these egregious travesties of justice go against all teams. It's fair in that everyone takes a fracking, every now and then.
When the human umpire makes an error, it's only sometimes attributed to favoritism... most often it is because he's an idiot, and/or a blind man.
When the umpire machine is in error, it'll be a short hop to conspiracy theory.
Of course, you can theoretically rig either system; electronic oversight will just up the skill set required.
Then go swim in a pool without it. Survival of the fitness
The fittest amoeba? There's a reason pools are treated with sordid chemicals.
Naegleria fowleri
"There's a perception that scooter-related injuries occur at night. Well that's not true," Taylor said. "Our study will show they occur during all times of the day. People may also perceive there's typically a car involved. But our study finds most of the time the rider may hit a bump in the road or they simply lose their balance."
What we might infer from this, if the claims were slightly less improbable:
Scooter-related accidents, clearly complicated technical industry terminology, do not occur at night. They simply occur all times of the day. Unfair bumps and unbalanced
The Society for Flat Earth initiated a press release today about their growing numbers. "Membership is up all over the Globe."
Warren has to say something to separate herself from the throngs of Democratic Presidential hopefuls, and elevate her campaign into the limelight, but she doesn't really have a clue what her proposal would do.
Internet neutrality is poorly understood by Washington, and there would be throngs of salivating international competitors for the void created if the US government handicaps their domestic tech industry.
It's fair to say the American nation isn't the envy of the World it once used to be, but the fact the Chinese can sue in American courts with a decent chance to win still says a lot about the differences between the two juggernaut nations.
“Congress acted unconstitutionally as judge, jury and executioner,” Huawei executive Guo Ping said Thursday after announcing the court action.
Guo Ping's evidently been binge-watching some Mandarin-dubbed spaghetti westerns.