Slap the GPS tracker on another vehicle as unrelated to yours as possible, say a Finnish tour bus parked in the area. In the following weeks, the security forces would trace the vehicle to an obscure suburb of Helsinki, then to Cappadocia or Palermo, at which point they would spring their SWAT trap on...nothing.
Here's some detail on the problem with doing everyday banking when working overseas, from that notorious right-wing scare site, The Guardian: http://www.theguardian.com/mon...
And if you people had paid more attention to some of your own prophetic writers (Jean Raspail, Michel Houellebecq, et. al.) a few years ago, your ancient continent wouldn't be the jihadist colony it is becoming today.
There is another problem. Since the start of the Obama Dark Ages, the US has started requiring that foreign banks doing business with Americans living overseas file special new reports. This has resulted in banks rejecting business from Americans because it isn't worth the hassle to file such reports for the benefit of one foreign country. So if you live overseas today, you have to deal in piles of cash for all your everyday transactions.
By fining Google half a billion dollars for allowing discount Canadian pharmacies to advertise on it. I'm hoping that the Paul administration makes the federosaurus pay Google back every dime they stole on behalf of Big Pharma, with penalty interest.
Our local nuke, Palo Verde, uses dry desert air as a heat sink, and cranks out power for 2 cents/KWh. There are a lot of dry places that could use reactors like this.
I see two possible outcomes for Germany: either the currently operating nukes will be kept running, or the nation's baseload will to totally converted over to lignite, in which case the Greens will declare a great victory. Carbon matters for Greens when it suits them.
This is precisely the opposition's strategy. They couldn't defeat nuclear on science, and when the great meltdown finally happened, the effect on the environment away from the plants was too small to be measured, so their plan now is to make it too expensive by imposing as many artificial delays as their legal teams can manage.
Look to China, which is the one rich nation not so encumbered, for the nuclear technology of the future.
Any valid health study is surely going to use a large enough set of patients that good science can be derived from their de-identified history data. If you do run a study on such a small set of patients that individual identity confidentiality would be a problem, then you're basing your study on anecdotal lore, rather than good data.
I'm active in a hiking club where the membership starts at about age 60, in a mountainous area with a lot of steep and rocky terrain. There are a lot of members still active in their eighties and edging into the nineties. This is a cohort of people who were always athletic in various ways
The geographic distribution of origins is interesting. I see a pronounced bias toward the upper Midwest. About half our membership of 400 seems to come from Wisconsin and Minnesota alone.
And I thought environmentalists liked trains! In the US we have the problem that few people are used to riding them now, so the market for new passenger trains is conjectural. But UK trains are packed all the time (I recently did a trip involving a large selection of trains up the west coast to Wiltshire and Cumbria and down the east coast from Yorkshire, followed by London-Geneva on bullet trains), so the market is solid.
Envision a cylindrical or cone-shaped strainer with the pointy end facing the incoming water, like the intake behind a dam. With a large effective surface area compared to the water inlet, fish can easily swim away and driftwood, etc, just migrates to the low-flow end of the filter and falls away.
We're not talking about "those who disagree" in the western world, but ISIS itself. This is war; rather than just canceling ISIS accounts, our intelligence agencies should be faking traffic to set one ISIS faction against others, causing them to misinterpret coalition counterattack information, and disrupting their funding and supply networks. It's what we're paying the NSA and CIA to do.
Greens love any renewable energy project that doesn't exist yet, but you can bet that as soon as construction actually begins on this thing, they will find a reason to oppose it every step of the way. How difficult can it actually be to filter out the fish from the inrushing water? Do this for the rising tide cycle, and the descending-tide cycle is already taken care of.
Such a deal, too: if UK users will put up with paying GBP 168/KWh for the first installation, the company promises to bring in its second lagoon at GBP 90, the same as they are already paying for nuclear. Since the power output will be far less than from nukes, and will still be fluctuating-though-predictable, what would the point be? Tidal lagoons would be good for islands and other off-grid coastal areas with a usably high tidal range. The place to build something like this would be Labrador.
WE need that freedom. An implacable enemy that we're at war with, not so much. Turning off ISIS tweets just a small operation in that war. Compare it, if you wish, to kidnappings and beheadings.
Who's standing in the way? The issue is that in several states, cable companies, after invited state legislatures out for squab and cigars, have had laws passed with expressly forbid exactly the kind of competition you cite. They love being the only game in town.
So long as localities get to vote on this sort of situation, I see a much smaller problem than if the cable companies are able to lobby a state legislature into getting government to give them a lock on the entire state. That is the situation the FCC just ruled against.
Didn't it previously orbit Vesta?
Slap the GPS tracker on another vehicle as unrelated to yours as possible, say a Finnish tour bus parked in the area. In the following weeks, the security forces would trace the vehicle to an obscure suburb of Helsinki, then to Cappadocia or Palermo, at which point they would spring their SWAT trap on...nothing.
Here's some detail on the problem with doing everyday banking when working overseas, from that notorious right-wing scare site, The Guardian:
http://www.theguardian.com/mon...
"You're too stupid to exist."
And if you people had paid more attention to some of your own prophetic writers (Jean Raspail, Michel Houellebecq, et. al.) a few years ago, your ancient continent wouldn't be the jihadist colony it is becoming today.
There is another problem. Since the start of the Obama Dark Ages, the US has started requiring that foreign banks doing business with Americans living overseas file special new reports. This has resulted in banks rejecting business from Americans because it isn't worth the hassle to file such reports for the benefit of one foreign country. So if you live overseas today, you have to deal in piles of cash for all your everyday transactions.
But in what way is this News for Nerds?
By fining Google half a billion dollars for allowing discount Canadian pharmacies to advertise on it.
I'm hoping that the Paul administration makes the federosaurus pay Google back every dime they stole on behalf of Big Pharma, with penalty interest.
Our local nuke, Palo Verde, uses dry desert air as a heat sink, and cranks out power for 2 cents/KWh. There are a lot of dry places that could use reactors like this.
"That's exactly what they said when they were building the old reactors."
And compared to the imported coal they replaced, they were right. Every generation of power tech is safer than its predecessors.
I see two possible outcomes for Germany: either the currently operating nukes will be kept running, or the nation's baseload will to totally converted over to lignite, in which case the Greens will declare a great victory. Carbon matters for Greens when it suits them.
"nuclear power is prohibitively expensive."
This is precisely the opposition's strategy. They couldn't defeat nuclear on science, and when the great meltdown finally happened, the effect on the environment away from the plants was too small to be measured, so their plan now is to make it too expensive by imposing as many artificial delays as their legal teams can manage.
Look to China, which is the one rich nation not so encumbered, for the nuclear technology of the future.
Any valid health study is surely going to use a large enough set of patients that good science can be derived from their de-identified history data. If you do run a study on such a small set of patients that individual identity confidentiality would be a problem, then you're basing your study on anecdotal lore, rather than good data.
You're thinking of "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet."
Stationed in the Canal Zone, I thought.
I'm active in a hiking club where the membership starts at about age 60, in a mountainous area with a lot of steep and rocky terrain. There are a lot of members still active in their eighties and edging into the nineties. This is a cohort of people who were always athletic in various ways
The geographic distribution of origins is interesting. I see a pronounced bias toward the upper Midwest. About half our membership of 400 seems to come from Wisconsin and Minnesota alone.
And I thought environmentalists liked trains! In the US we have the problem that few people are used to riding them now, so the market for new passenger trains is conjectural. But UK trains are packed all the time (I recently did a trip involving a large selection of trains up the west coast to Wiltshire and Cumbria and down the east coast from Yorkshire, followed by London-Geneva on bullet trains), so the market is solid.
Envision a cylindrical or cone-shaped strainer with the pointy end facing the incoming water, like the intake behind a dam. With a large effective surface area compared to the water inlet, fish can easily swim away and driftwood, etc, just migrates to the low-flow end of the filter and falls away.
We're not talking about "those who disagree" in the western world, but ISIS itself. This is war; rather than just canceling ISIS accounts, our intelligence agencies should be faking traffic to set one ISIS faction against others, causing them to misinterpret coalition counterattack information, and disrupting their funding and supply networks. It's what we're paying the NSA and CIA to do.
Greens love any renewable energy project that doesn't exist yet, but you can bet that as soon as construction actually begins on this thing, they will find a reason to oppose it every step of the way. How difficult can it actually be to filter out the fish from the inrushing water? Do this for the rising tide cycle, and the descending-tide cycle is already taken care of.
Such a deal, too: if UK users will put up with paying GBP 168/KWh for the first installation, the company promises to bring in its second lagoon at GBP 90, the same as they are already paying for nuclear. Since the power output will be far less than from nukes, and will still be fluctuating-though-predictable, what would the point be? Tidal lagoons would be good for islands and other off-grid coastal areas with a usably high tidal range. The place to build something like this would be Labrador.
Did you get your sour grapes from California, or do they have to be flown in from Chile this time of year?
" On the sex front, expect your standards for what is "hot enough to do" to fall straight through the floor."
As a fellow chrono-American, let me add that you dating ritual will eventually include the early bird special.
WE need that freedom. An implacable enemy that we're at war with, not so much. Turning off ISIS tweets just a small operation in that war. Compare it, if you wish, to kidnappings and beheadings.
Who's standing in the way? The issue is that in several states, cable companies, after invited state legislatures out for squab and cigars, have had laws passed with expressly forbid exactly the kind of competition you cite. They love being the only game in town.
So long as localities get to vote on this sort of situation, I see a much smaller problem than if the cable companies are able to lobby a state legislature into getting government to give them a lock on the entire state. That is the situation the FCC just ruled against.
And just accept payments in something like Bitcoin. Oh come on, you can spare a little out of your Mt. Pedo account for the pirated content you crave.