The reason the butterfly population is down is because of urban sprawl in Washington and Oregon destroying their habitat. This is a direct case of cities causing extinction of other species.
Farms, by their very nature, cannot eliminate all weeds, and the milkweed these butterflies need to feed on is plentiful in the countryside, but is considered a noxious weed by urban rules.
Are you kidding me? The TPS security hole is damn easy for the police to exploit, so easy that I'm downright sure most police departments are. It certainly explains my last few speeding tickets.
Was always a ponzi scheme. As proven by the fact the first people to register for it, got more paid out than they paid in. The ponzi point really happened around 1970. From there on out, ALL retirees will pull out less, adjusted for inflation, than they put in.
The process you cite only accelerated the problem, putting bankruptcy at 2048 instead of 2070. But I'd also add that the Boomers shot themselves in the foot by killing off 1/6th of the next generation's workforce with abortion, accelerating the end still quicker (because far fewer GenX, Gen Y, Millennial, and post-millennial workers will be paying in).
And you're missing the point where I point out that Republicans are liberals *because they value liberty over conservation*. As are most Americans except maybe the Green Party or the Constitution Part, both of which are economic localists, the first because shipping stuff through ports uses fossil fuels and increases global warming, the second because international supply lines in general are dangerous to the autarky of the economy.
Conservatives are conservationists. Think more Darrell Castle than Adam Smith.
Conservatives need to Conserve. Only Liberals need Liberty.
They call themselves conservatives, but their love of liberty and freedom shows that they are simply NOT conservatives.
By Hotbeds of liberalism, I refer to New Orleans with their downright blasphemous mardi gras, and Houston is considered to be as liberal as Austin or Portland- Keep Houston weird!
And like I said, I don't consider Republicans to be conservative, so voting red doesn't mean very much.
Real conservatives are localists- they don't need ports.
it's been ~10 years for the last 30 when I started hearing about global warming.
And while you require less carbon per captia in cities, ALL of the carbon you use is fossil, where most of the carbon the suburbs and rural areas actually *need* to use can be grown and regrown every year, (if we'd switch to woodgas and methane instead of gasoline, it all could be, for net zero carbon usage).
It's too late to change the rise in temperature, because the melting tundra will produce more Carbon emissions in a day than the human race produces in a year.
Exactly right. If they believed their hype, the following would all be true: 1. The most expensive land would be far from the ocean, deep inland. 2. Long distance travel would be banned in favor of telecommunication instead. 3. Cities, the major source of carbon pollution, would be disbanded and the population dispersed.
Macros are software for the most part, though some keyboards do have internal memory and a processor to run macro software. But thanks for the tip, I'll look into AutoIT. There should be no reason why I can't get to the HID identifier in addition to the keycode for a given HID device.
I use not one, but two keyboards at the same time. Both are RedDragon cheap mechanical keyboards off of Amazon. On my left hand, an 82-key keyboard with no numeric keypad. On my right, a 102-key keyboard with a numeric keypad. One on the left is a rainbow keyboard with multicolored lighting, the one on the right has red led lighting.
I'm posting this in this thread to ask the community for an equal recommendation:
Does anybody know of Windows 10 compatible macro key software that can recognize keyboard IDs? I'd love to use the keys in between my hands for macros, but to do so, I need USB HID macro software. I was unable to get LuaMacros to work for me under Windows 10, and so am looking for options.
Neither. It was expensive, but the concept existed just fine in 1915.
Big Dumb Throwaway rockets were CHEAPER was the reason governments did it that way.
Same with the pneumatic subway (hyperloop), the electric car (had those in the early days, but gasoline beat out batteries back then for energy density), and everything else Musk supposedly "invents".
I don't suspect that Elon Musk has ever designed anything in his life. He just renames old tech and pretends he invented it. Sounds like every other useless pot-head I know.
Yep, Milkweed is considered a noxious weed.
The reason the butterfly population is down is because of urban sprawl in Washington and Oregon destroying their habitat. This is a direct case of cities causing extinction of other species.
Farms, by their very nature, cannot eliminate all weeds, and the milkweed these butterflies need to feed on is plentiful in the countryside, but is considered a noxious weed by urban rules.
Are you kidding me? The TPS security hole is damn easy for the police to exploit, so easy that I'm downright sure most police departments are. It certainly explains my last few speeding tickets.
As long as you keep aborting the children, the next generation will always be smaller.
Was always a ponzi scheme. As proven by the fact the first people to register for it, got more paid out than they paid in. The ponzi point really happened around 1970. From there on out, ALL retirees will pull out less, adjusted for inflation, than they put in.
The process you cite only accelerated the problem, putting bankruptcy at 2048 instead of 2070. But I'd also add that the Boomers shot themselves in the foot by killing off 1/6th of the next generation's workforce with abortion, accelerating the end still quicker (because far fewer GenX, Gen Y, Millennial, and post-millennial workers will be paying in).
And you're missing the point where I point out that Republicans are liberals *because they value liberty over conservation*. As are most Americans except maybe the Green Party or the Constitution Part, both of which are economic localists, the first because shipping stuff through ports uses fossil fuels and increases global warming, the second because international supply lines in general are dangerous to the autarky of the economy.
Conservatives are conservationists. Think more Darrell Castle than Adam Smith.
Conservatives need to Conserve. Only Liberals need Liberty.
The root word of liberal and liberty is the same. Pay attention to etymology next time before you mouth off.
For a true conservative, there is no need to have a market further away than you can walk.
They call themselves conservatives, but their love of liberty and freedom shows that they are simply NOT conservatives.
By Hotbeds of liberalism, I refer to New Orleans with their downright blasphemous mardi gras, and Houston is considered to be as liberal as Austin or Portland- Keep Houston weird!
And like I said, I don't consider Republicans to be conservative, so voting red doesn't mean very much.
Real conservatives are localists- they don't need ports.
No, got there by the forests that grew in the Tundra the last time atmospheric carbon was this high....
it's been ~10 years for the last 30 when I started hearing about global warming.
And while you require less carbon per captia in cities, ALL of the carbon you use is fossil, where most of the carbon the suburbs and rural areas actually *need* to use can be grown and regrown every year, (if we'd switch to woodgas and methane instead of gasoline, it all could be, for net zero carbon usage).
There's nothing conservative about a "Free market".
And the two biggest ports in Louisiana and Texas are in fact, hotbeds of liberalism.
Nothing is made there, only shipped through.
Good. Coastal cities are slimebeds of globalist trade. Let them wash away.
It's too late to change the rise in temperature, because the melting tundra will produce more Carbon emissions in a day than the human race produces in a year.
Yep, that is the correct way to deal with the problem.
Exactly right. If they believed their hype, the following would all be true:
1. The most expensive land would be far from the ocean, deep inland.
2. Long distance travel would be banned in favor of telecommunication instead.
3. Cities, the major source of carbon pollution, would be disbanded and the population dispersed.
Macros are software for the most part, though some keyboards do have internal memory and a processor to run macro software. But thanks for the tip, I'll look into AutoIT. There should be no reason why I can't get to the HID identifier in addition to the keycode for a given HID device.
I use not one, but two keyboards at the same time. Both are RedDragon cheap mechanical keyboards off of Amazon. On my left hand, an 82-key keyboard with no numeric keypad. On my right, a 102-key keyboard with a numeric keypad. One on the left is a rainbow keyboard with multicolored lighting, the one on the right has red led lighting.
I'm posting this in this thread to ask the community for an equal recommendation:
Does anybody know of Windows 10 compatible macro key software that can recognize keyboard IDs? I'd love to use the keys in between my hands for macros, but to do so, I need USB HID macro software. I was unable to get LuaMacros to work for me under Windows 10, and so am looking for options.
Neither. It was expensive, but the concept existed just fine in 1915.
Big Dumb Throwaway rockets were CHEAPER was the reason governments did it that way.
Same with the pneumatic subway (hyperloop), the electric car (had those in the early days, but gasoline beat out batteries back then for energy density), and everything else Musk supposedly "invents".
Don't buy into the hype machine.
I don't suspect that Elon Musk has ever designed anything in his life. He just renames old tech and pretends he invented it. Sounds like every other useless pot-head I know.
If by functional you mean pretending to be an engineer while renaming 100 year old technology and pretending that it is brand new and exciting, sure.
If by functional you mean actually doing something worthwhile with his life instead of scamming the stock market, well, not so much.
That explains Elon's tendency to rebrand ancient old tech in new ways and pretend he invented it. Sounds like every junkie I've ever known.
So, fish sauce?
That is truly sad. I must be as old as you are.
In other news, since when is using current waste products to generate biogas described as "fossil" in any way, shape, or form?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GotA_1dIRhs
I find bus tickets to be significantly more expensive than owning a used Prius.