That's why the Democrats are nominating Oprah. Trump just ignores science because it's for nerds rather than the people he golfs with, while the guests on Oprah's show will actively work to ban it.
Unfortunately, the lesson that Bitcoin diehards are taking from this string of exchange hacks is: buy Bitcoin and then never sell it. That way, you only take the exchange risk once, right?
It's one wrong fucking word. Which of course invalidates everything I said, eh?
A wrong word, fucking or otherwise, can have serious consequences. Consider the translation of the Japanese word mokusatsu: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
There is a very simple rule about this: If it's hot, that is climate. If it's cold, that is just weather.
That was the old rule. Now it's : If it's hot this summer, manmade carbon is at fault. If it's cold this winter, manmade carbon is at fault. If we have a big hurricane year or a fifteen-year stretch of no hurricanes, same thing. Got it now?
Actually, I'm seeing smartphone autocorrect patch up a lot of bad grammar. Then sometimes, just for fun, it twists an ordinary phrase into something totally unrecognizable.
Given a Google fleet of 1100 bikes, losing 200 per week is a blisteringly high rate of loss. And they can't be counting the ones that are are just borrowed overnight, like the example of the woman who works at Oracle and rides to the train station, because these would not be missed unless the count were to take place at the time the bike is not at Google. The articles describe many of these thefts as pure vindictiveness, like throwing them in the creek or stashing dozens of them in a garage because somehow, Google having its employees ride carpool buses is an excuse for class resentment. This is the pure class warfare, like those inner city kids who grab tablets from subway commuters just to smash in front of the victim.
Perhaps it's time for some major Silicon Valley companies to move to places where their jobs and money are more welcome.
7. Professing concern for climate as the world's most urgent problem, yet automatically coming out against any industrial-scale solution to your industrial-scale problem. When the pinwheels and mirrors you fiddle with are shown to be inadequate as a replacement for the fossil fuel we consume, advocate ditching heavy and large cities and returning to an Amish existence.
A repeat criminal who has had many contacts with the police is not going to just open the door to a SWAT raid and stand there waving his arms with his mouth open. He knows all about assuming the position and never doing anything that might be construed by a badly trained, roided-up donut muncher as being a reach for his waistband.
Give my regards to Osmotherley, where I hiked through in '14. If you want to replace Drax with something more useful, I would add a nuclear plant at the Windscale reprocessing facility, where my hike started and where the nuclear bullet has already been bitten. Every little town we passed through in Cumbria and Yorkshire was fighting the NIMBY battle over its own three-turbine wind installation. Time to replace that whole assemblage of ugly junk with one big old zero-carbon generating station.
Early 70s here. I have a smartphone, high-end tablet and large desktop. All debts are paid. I buy into whatever interests me the most, whether or not they interest anyone else. I use social media to keep up with what other people are thinking about a variety of topics, such as this one right here. I live in a small rural town and have more friends than I ever had time for when I was working corporate consulting. I still run my residential IT service business as a sideline, helping my fellow chrono-Americans keep up with the new century. And yes, I'm still handling IT for my mother, who at age 95 runs a business of her own with her MacBook Pro.
I have always been an optimist, but what seems different right now is a strong sense of living in the future that comes from contrasting life as we live it now with life as it was lived when I was a child. In those days China and India were famous purely for starvation and everyone assumed, whatever their politics, that Communism and the Cold War would be around forever. Conservatives back then admired Muslim societies because of their rigorous punishment of criminals, applauding whenever the Saudis cut off some thief's hands. Meanwhile liberals, and I swear I'm not making anything up, were in favor of sex, with both their men and their women believing that we should have more of it. In those days the Republican Party had principles, such as balanced budgets, and the Democrats had vision. I find it difficult to explain to young people how public thought has changed since then.
Drax, Yorkshire. It used to be a coal-buring hellmouth, and Greens were mighty proud when they converted the massive plant to wood pellets. Unfortunately, all the trees in Yorkshire were burned for firewoood centuries ago, so the fuel comes from pulpwood trees in the American South, brought in by a fleet of diesel-belching bulk cargo ships. Yessiree, the Greens are totally proud of this accomplishment.
Cancel all science....
That's why the Democrats are nominating Oprah. Trump just ignores science because it's for nerds rather than the people he golfs with, while the guests on Oprah's show will actively work to ban it.
He was a coward and a thief. He's burning if hell right now if you believe in that sorta thing.
And you're alone and shivering under a bridge in midwinter, reviled by all. Which one is the loser here?
Which is a contraction of ‘Association football’.
Unfortunately, the lesson that Bitcoin diehards are taking from this string of exchange hacks is: buy Bitcoin and then never sell it. That way, you only take the exchange risk once, right?
Actually, the one word that is common to every language is “football.”
Only the conservative ones are forced to actually address the event.
I can think of a certain POTUS that stands as a counterexample.
And who has now been immortalized for geologic eons:
https://www.pinterest.ca/pin/2...
...a minimal amount of time on a simple, neutral alternative.
Such a language already exists, and is the most widely distributed lingua franca: Spanish.
It's one wrong fucking word. Which of course invalidates everything I said, eh?
A wrong word, fucking or otherwise, can have serious consequences. Consider the translation of the Japanese word mokusatsu:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Prove it, keep the gas in the ground and drive an electric car and stop shilling for big oil on slashdot.
So when will you people start allowing us to generate more non-fossil electricity?
Tax dollars at work. Unless the armies of attorneys are doing the work for free out of the goodness of their hearts.
New York State has no business commenting on carbon emissions until it opens Shoreham.
...Where a cellphone-unlocking fingerprint sensor can be called "traditional."
The difference is that Texas has a functioning government.
There is a very simple rule about this: If it's hot, that is climate. If it's cold, that is just weather.
That was the old rule. Now it's : If it's hot this summer, manmade carbon is at fault. If it's cold this winter, manmade carbon is at fault. If we have a big hurricane year or a fifteen-year stretch of no hurricanes, same thing. Got it now?
Actually, I'm seeing smartphone autocorrect patch up a lot of bad grammar. Then sometimes, just for fun, it twists an ordinary phrase into something totally unrecognizable.
It's a satellite. I am tired of everything being redefined in the last few decades to appeal to the masses.
That's no moon. It's another pointless pseudogrammatical argument.
Given a Google fleet of 1100 bikes, losing 200 per week is a blisteringly high rate of loss. And they can't be counting the ones that are are just borrowed overnight, like the example of the woman who works at Oracle and rides to the train station, because these would not be missed unless the count were to take place at the time the bike is not at Google. The articles describe many of these thefts as pure vindictiveness, like throwing them in the creek or stashing dozens of them in a garage because somehow, Google having its employees ride carpool buses is an excuse for class resentment. This is the pure class warfare, like those inner city kids who grab tablets from subway commuters just to smash in front of the victim.
Perhaps it's time for some major Silicon Valley companies to move to places where their jobs and money are more welcome.
And on 747 upstairs, your carryon space is beside you, not overhead or underfoot.
So now what are the chicks going to do when there's a spider in the bathtub?
7. Professing concern for climate as the world's most urgent problem, yet automatically coming out against any industrial-scale solution to your industrial-scale problem. When the pinwheels and mirrors you fiddle with are shown to be inadequate as a replacement for the fossil fuel we consume, advocate ditching heavy and large cities and returning to an Amish existence.
A repeat criminal who has had many contacts with the police is not going to just open the door to a SWAT raid and stand there waving his arms with his mouth open. He knows all about assuming the position and never doing anything that might be construed by a badly trained, roided-up donut muncher as being a reach for his waistband.
And for, if nothing else, carbon fiber as a construction material.
Give my regards to Osmotherley, where I hiked through in '14. If you want to replace Drax with something more useful, I would add a nuclear plant at the Windscale reprocessing facility, where my hike started and where the nuclear bullet has already been bitten. Every little town we passed through in Cumbria and Yorkshire was fighting the NIMBY battle over its own three-turbine wind installation. Time to replace that whole assemblage of ugly junk with one big old zero-carbon generating station.
Early 70s here. I have a smartphone, high-end tablet and large desktop. All debts are paid. I buy into whatever interests me the most, whether or not they interest anyone else. I use social media to keep up with what other people are thinking about a variety of topics, such as this one right here. I live in a small rural town and have more friends than I ever had time for when I was working corporate consulting. I still run my residential IT service business as a sideline, helping my fellow chrono-Americans keep up with the new century. And yes, I'm still handling IT for my mother, who at age 95 runs a business of her own with her MacBook Pro.
I have always been an optimist, but what seems different right now is a strong sense of living in the future that comes from contrasting life as we live it now with life as it was lived when I was a child. In those days China and India were famous purely for starvation and everyone assumed, whatever their politics, that Communism and the Cold War would be around forever. Conservatives back then admired Muslim societies because of their rigorous punishment of criminals, applauding whenever the Saudis cut off some thief's hands. Meanwhile liberals, and I swear I'm not making anything up, were in favor of sex, with both their men and their women believing that we should have more of it. In those days the Republican Party had principles, such as balanced budgets, and the Democrats had vision. I find it difficult to explain to young people how public thought has changed since then.
Drax, Yorkshire. It used to be a coal-buring hellmouth, and Greens were mighty proud when they converted the massive plant to wood pellets. Unfortunately, all the trees in Yorkshire were burned for firewoood centuries ago, so the fuel comes from pulpwood trees in the American South, brought in by a fleet of diesel-belching bulk cargo ships. Yessiree, the Greens are totally proud of this accomplishment.