To combat global warming because of C02, you want to put as much carbon into non-biodegrading landfills (no oxygen flow thru them to break them down) as possible.
So, burying yard waste in such landfills is GOOD, not BAD. That yard waste, diapers, newspapers, are causing large landfills and we are running out of room is not true whatsoever. (No argument about badly placed landfills near urban areas, though.) Run the numbers yourself, not that anybody does.
Remember: every time you compost, you're doing evil.
Please, do NOT introduce the Battlestar Galactica "Balthazar" traitor-to-the-human-race concept.
If you do, make it clever, like they are hackers in a 2199 virtual world, with computers duplicating reality, who think they are trying to stop some kind of robot intruders, like role-reversed.
We had a DVD device in the development version of our product, and when we put in a CDR, it would burn out its laser because the firmware would ratchet up the power until it could read the disc, which was just too much for that particular laser model. Needless to say we went with a different model for the actual product.
I disagree. It's precisely because they, like the USSR, have no intention of bringing it back, or even killing it humanely, that they don't let you know it's Rover.
Exactly, just like the housing situation in San Francisco itself. The socialist keeps throwing his fist out at capitalism and it keeps boomeranging back to hit himself in the face. It makes him punch even harder next time, much like a child who punches a sofa he just stubbed his toe against.
Supermarkets will be more than happy to kick you out if all you do is go in and write down prices of things, so just because the info is there, and you're open to the public, doesn't necessarily mean it can be used any which way. (Not that I agree with that.)
Moreover, the issue isn't you walking into a store just to look around with no intention of buying, it's as if you had 30 thousand you's go into the store, clogging every square foot, just looking with no intention of buying.
To combat global warming because of C02, you want to put as much carbon into non-biodegrading landfills (no oxygen flow thru them to break them down) as possible.
So, burying yard waste in such landfills is GOOD, not BAD. That yard waste, diapers, newspapers, are causing large landfills and we are running out of room is not true whatsoever. (No argument about badly placed landfills near urban areas, though.) Run the numbers yourself, not that anybody does.
Remember: every time you compost, you're doing evil.
Please, do NOT introduce the Battlestar Galactica "Balthazar" traitor-to-the-human-race concept.
If you do, make it clever, like they are hackers in a 2199 virtual world, with computers duplicating reality, who think they are trying to stop some kind of robot intruders, like role-reversed.
We had a DVD device in the development version of our product, and when we put in a CDR, it would burn out its laser because the firmware would ratchet up the power until it could read the disc, which was just too much for that particular laser model. Needless to say we went with a different model for the actual product.
I disagree. It's precisely because they, like the USSR, have no intention of bringing it back, or even killing it humanely, that they don't let you know it's Rover.
Exactly, just like the housing situation in San Francisco itself. The socialist keeps throwing his fist out at capitalism and it keeps boomeranging back to hit himself in the face. It makes him punch even harder next time, much like a child who punches a sofa he just stubbed his toe against.
> Being Canadian, you line up nice and neatly, and
> patiently await your turn to vote.
Supermarkets will be more than happy to kick you out if all you do is go in and write down prices of things, so just because the info is there, and you're open to the public, doesn't necessarily mean it can be used any which way. (Not that I agree with that.)
Moreover, the issue isn't you walking into a store just to look around with no intention of buying, it's as if you had 30 thousand you's go into the store, clogging every square foot, just looking with no intention of buying.