Amending the Constitution to allow extensions of the types of military is the way it should have been done.
The need for a standing army became obvious with the sacking of Washington D.C. during the War of 1812. A standing army shouldn't change the Constitutional requirement that the military be funded for no more than 2 years, which reduces the likelihood of a military coup.
Here in south central New Hampshire fall started early with a mild freeze September 3. Some trees started turning, but the warm fall has kept the yellows and oranges in the trees for over a month.
That these officers were found not guilty by a jury indicates that the charges against them were false. Have any of these fool protesters ever served on a jury?
Many in professional sports fought in WWII, although the cases I'm familiar with are baseball, not football.
You type: "I'm going to kill you." And then follow that with a paragraph of how you're going to accomplish that. Before you're done with the paragraph, you recover your temper and backspace over the whole thing. No harm done.
You think: "I'm going to kill you," Before you even begin the descriptive paragraph, your Personal Computer Bodyguard (tm) kills the person you're angry at.
The technology would need a lot of safeguards, and they're not going to be in place initially.
TFA is unclear; but it's possible that the titanium-niobium oxide anode is not consumed in use and only needs to be thick enough to coat whatever structure it's plated onto. This is implied in the summary: "titanium niobium oxide, which Toshiba was able to arrange into a crystal structure that can store lithium ions more efficiently."
You appear to have confused millimeters with inches, although I can't access your citation. 20 millimeters should be enough for 1000 amperes, even with cruddy plastic insulation and continuous duty. https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/wire-gauges-d_419.html
Either the fuel to make electricity has to be transported to the power plant (coal, natural gas) or the electricity has to be transmitted (with losses).
It's really nice having oxygen around, and 73% of the mass of CO2 is oxygen. Those cylinders aren't going to be light. It's going to take a lot of energy to rocket those cylinders into the sun, and in the process of making suitable fuel we'll make a lot of CO2. Lose - lose.
If it's thin, it's going to be a solar sail. Keeping it in orbit will be a problem. Keeping it from being shredded by debris and meteors will be a problem.
I've spent hours 2 feet away from a cooling chamber fed by liquid CO2, breathing the evaporated CO2 and not having breathing or panic problems. The primary nuisance is that the CO2 forms carbonic acid on contact with tears, and it stings a little.
When Motorola introduced the MC68060 (1994) they announced that it was the end of the 68000 line. They might as well have shot both themselves and their customers in the head, they were effectively saying "There's no future here."
What bugs? CP/M 2.2 (circa 1980) which I used for many years had no problems for me that could be traced to flaws in the OS.
CP/M's a 7k program consisting of 3 parts, the transient CCP (command control procesor), the BDOS and the BIOS. Manufacturers had to write their own BIOS based on a sample provided by Digital Research. Was he fixing defective BIOSs?
Try avoiding buried power lines, phone and cable lines, and pipes with a backhoe. Try getting a backhoe through a gate barely wide enough to walk through.
Two approaches come to mind, both of which are probably too massive to actually be undertaken. One is to cool the magma, by drilling a grid of holes and pumping water into them. (Use the heated water or steam for electric power plants.) The other is to break up the surface to a depth of several miles (underground nuclear bombs), so that any eruption will be just magma flows rather than an explosion.
Could either work? I don't even pretend to know. Would either attempt cause more problems than it solved? I wouldn't be surprised. At least some examination of possibilities should be done.
CO2 starts becoming toxic at a concentration of about 3%, which is almost 100 times the normal concentration in the atmosphere. Lower concentration can irritate the eyes, as CO2 forms carbonic acid on contact with tears.
The 5 youngest presidents were Theodore Roosevelt, John Kennedy, Bill Clinton, Ulysses S. Grant, and Barack Obama. All of those administrations had disasters or general bad judgement that were based at least in part on immaturity. We would be better with a higher minimum age than with a cap. With age comes wisdom.
On the other hand, 2 of the 6 oldest presidents died in office for medical reasons.
Amending the Constitution to allow extensions of the types of military is the way it should have been done.
The need for a standing army became obvious with the sacking of Washington D.C. during the War of 1812. A standing army shouldn't change the Constitutional requirement that the military be funded for no more than 2 years, which reduces the likelihood of a military coup.
Here in south central New Hampshire fall started early with a mild freeze September 3. Some trees started turning, but the warm fall has kept the yellows and oranges in the trees for over a month.
"Please stand for our national anthem" has been standard at least since the late 1950s.
That these officers were found not guilty by a jury indicates that the charges against them were false. Have any of these fool protesters ever served on a jury?
Many in professional sports fought in WWII, although the cases I'm familiar with are baseball, not football.
There was a young man named Dave...
Governments have a monopoly on the legal use of force, except for the emergency use of defensive force which anyone is entitled to use.
You type: "I'm going to kill you." And then follow that with a paragraph of how you're going to accomplish that. Before you're done with the paragraph, you recover your temper and backspace over the whole thing. No harm done.
You think: "I'm going to kill you," Before you even begin the descriptive paragraph, your Personal Computer Bodyguard (tm) kills the person you're angry at.
The technology would need a lot of safeguards, and they're not going to be in place initially.
TFA is unclear; but it's possible that the titanium-niobium oxide anode is not consumed in use and only needs to be thick enough to coat whatever structure it's plated onto. This is implied in the summary: "titanium niobium oxide, which Toshiba was able to arrange into a crystal structure that can store lithium ions more efficiently."
You appear to have confused millimeters with inches, although I can't access your citation. 20 millimeters should be enough for 1000 amperes, even with cruddy plastic insulation and continuous duty. https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/wire-gauges-d_419.html
Either the fuel to make electricity has to be transported to the power plant (coal, natural gas) or the electricity has to be transmitted (with losses).
It's really nice having oxygen around, and 73% of the mass of CO2 is oxygen. Those cylinders aren't going to be light. It's going to take a lot of energy to rocket those cylinders into the sun, and in the process of making suitable fuel we'll make a lot of CO2. Lose - lose.
If it's thin, it's going to be a solar sail. Keeping it in orbit will be a problem. Keeping it from being shredded by debris and meteors will be a problem.
I've spent hours 2 feet away from a cooling chamber fed by liquid CO2, breathing the evaporated CO2 and not having breathing or panic problems. The primary nuisance is that the CO2 forms carbonic acid on contact with tears, and it stings a little.
The world population has been in excess of 500 million for over 500 years. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_population
You first.
Soil is nice, but not essential. Hydroponics works.
Plants can grow in sand. Just add water and fertilizer.
When Motorola introduced the MC68060 (1994) they announced that it was the end of the 68000 line. They might as well have shot both themselves and their customers in the head, they were effectively saying "There's no future here."
What bugs? CP/M 2.2 (circa 1980) which I used for many years had no problems for me that could be traced to flaws in the OS.
CP/M's a 7k program consisting of 3 parts, the transient CCP (command control procesor), the BDOS and the BIOS. Manufacturers had to write their own BIOS based on a sample provided by Digital Research. Was he fixing defective BIOSs?
Try avoiding buried power lines, phone and cable lines, and pipes with a backhoe. Try getting a backhoe through a gate barely wide enough to walk through.
Creatures so different that they aren't in the same family, genus, or species cannot reasonably be classified by race.
Danica is a car racer.
Two approaches come to mind, both of which are probably too massive to actually be undertaken. One is to cool the magma, by drilling a grid of holes and pumping water into them. (Use the heated water or steam for electric power plants.) The other is to break up the surface to a depth of several miles (underground nuclear bombs), so that any eruption will be just magma flows rather than an explosion.
Could either work? I don't even pretend to know. Would either attempt cause more problems than it solved? I wouldn't be surprised. At least some examination of possibilities should be done.
This is a GUI framework that's 100% configurable: gcc + vi. Some assembly required.
CO2 starts becoming toxic at a concentration of about 3%, which is almost 100 times the normal concentration in the atmosphere. Lower concentration can irritate the eyes, as CO2 forms carbonic acid on contact with tears.
The 5 youngest presidents were Theodore Roosevelt, John Kennedy, Bill Clinton, Ulysses S. Grant, and Barack Obama. All of those administrations had disasters or general bad judgement that were based at least in part on immaturity. We would be better with a higher minimum age than with a cap. With age comes wisdom.
On the other hand, 2 of the 6 oldest presidents died in office for medical reasons.