The shooting was well away from the road, on a sidewalk that ran between (behind) two rows of houses.
Makes it awfully difficult to say that Martin followed Zimmerman to the car, unless the confrontation somehow moved around to the back of the houses (in which case someone would have had to be retreating, making the 'in fear of my life' claim dubious).
Yes and no. Air quality is certainly better. But we're using a lot of chemicals in food production and other applications. HFCS, bovine hormones, pesticides (DDT wasn't harmful to humans, but was harmful to birds and mosquitoes had developed immunity), brominated fire retardants, antibiotics, PFOA (non-stick pans), phthalates, etc.
Your interactions with the government must be fairly limited. The ability to access large amounts of data from anywhere has been a large improvement to many citizens.
Yesterday it took me all of 5 minutes to get the USDA test results for e.coli in beef processing for all of 2011. How long would that have taken in a manual system?
The other day, I searched a database of agency decisions going back to 1970. Being able to narrow the search results meant that I only had to manually go through 15 records instead of 20,000.
Instant access to USGS and FEMA maps, tax forms and instructions, legislative history, the US code, the CFR, economic data, transportation data, energy data, agriculture data, etc etc etc.. all of which would previously have required a trip to the library (or DC) and then manually going through records. Even if you don't do this stuff personally, people are doing it and these systems save time, which saves money, which generally results in lower costs.
The question is: "I am going to name some institutions in this country. As far as the people running these institutions are concerned, would you say you have a great deal of confidence, only some confidence, or hardly any confidence at all in them? Scientific Community:"
The reality of the matter, though, is that quite often, my Garmin or my TomTom will tell me either to get ready to exit or to take an exit, and I look at the exit structure and see two or three different possible ways to interpret that sentence because of two or three different exits.
And that is why any time you get automated directions, be it google on the desktop or GPS in the car, you should review them step-by-step prior to starting the journey. This takes all of 2 minutes and identifies any tricky turns, interchanges, possible errors, etc.
CRTs are no longer sold or manufactured commercially because the economics no longer work (mainly a lack of demand). There is no environmental prohibition on CRTs that I am aware of in any jurisdiction.
If he died that quickly it wouldn't have made a difference.. or are you really expecting us to believe that all the people in the theater just stared at their phones and not one thought to get the AED or alert the theater which could use a landline (or be outside the jammed area)?
That might work if the rules were enforced. But the bus drivers don't want to start shit with people (I don't blame em), and can't physically remove anyone from the bus. If the cops have to get called it delays the whole bus which pisses everyone off.
In my experience, unless you're parallel parking, you really shouldn't be looking at the screen while backing up. You check that the rear area is clear, and then look rearward as usual because the camera doesn't see to the side.
If you have a problem looking away from a screen, you have a problem.
Er, no, that's just not how it works. Congress is an independent branch of the government. The President has tools to persuade them to do things, but they only go so far. If Congress doesn't want to do something, the President has no real recourse.
I would like him to use the bully pulpit more as well, but let's not fool ourselves into thinking that it would magically get the GOP voting for his proposals. With the current rules and makeup of Congress, that is required to do anything.
Your conclusion is correct but the example is wrong. Reasonable doubt comes from English common law, and you'll note that the phrase does not appear in the Constitution.
Long term studies have shown no decrease in lung function. It's not yet known why this is, if there is something in tobacco that is very bad, or something in MJ that somehow has a protective factor, or if it's just the habits or what.
Obama has not been friendly to the states on MMJ because he realizes that if he lets a state opt-out of one federal law, that opens the door for all of them. This would result in the healthcare bill being taken apart by red states.
You can do that in theory. However the car should be programmed to avoid this condition. A Prius (which doesn't have a real neutral that disconnects the wheels from the transmission) in this situation will waste away the excess battery power by spinning the engine. Don't know if the Tesla transmission has an actual neutral position (oddly I could not find much info about it at all, and most of it was from 2006-2007 before they had finalized all the transmission stuff).
Two things.. 1) Sure the frame, engine and other large components will be recycled but what do you think the scrapper is doing with all the wire and other plastic pieces? and 2) It was probably cheaper for the manufacturer and not at all related to biodegradability.
It's really only vodka that the filtering works for, as a perfect vodka is pure alcohol (in solution, of course). Other boozes have many other factors going into their production.. if you filter a cheap gin, you'll have a filtered cheap gin. A brita won't add botanicals that cheap producers skimp on (or use chemical substitutes for). It may even remove desired flavors. For other boozes, aging comes into play. You're not going to get a 25-year scotch by filtering a cheap 3-year.
The oft-cited supermajority was on paper only. There are very few examples where Democrats were actually a united bloc and used the supermajority. In fact ARRA only passed because of 2 GOP crossovers (this is counting Specter as a dem even though he hadn't switched yet).
And regardless, the existence of a supermajority doesn't excuse GOP filibusters or render them meaningless. Fact is that you can point to actions that a majority of Democrats wanted to take, but were not able to because of GOP filibusters that were supported by one or two Dems.
The only union dues that a worker can be forced to pay are those that go towards collective bargaining. You can never be forced to pay money that is used for political contributions.
Ignoring the fact that Salinger did publish things after Catcher, your reasoning makes no sense. Salinger would have made plenty of money off of 20 years, certainly enough to live on for the rest of his life since it wasn't like he was traveling the world or anything.
And you consider simply adding a new foreword as a new work? Absurd.
The shooting was well away from the road, on a sidewalk that ran between (behind) two rows of houses.
Makes it awfully difficult to say that Martin followed Zimmerman to the car, unless the confrontation somehow moved around to the back of the houses (in which case someone would have had to be retreating, making the 'in fear of my life' claim dubious).
Yes and no. Air quality is certainly better. But we're using a lot of chemicals in food production and other applications. HFCS, bovine hormones, pesticides (DDT wasn't harmful to humans, but was harmful to birds and mosquitoes had developed immunity), brominated fire retardants, antibiotics, PFOA (non-stick pans), phthalates, etc.
Your interactions with the government must be fairly limited. The ability to access large amounts of data from anywhere has been a large improvement to many citizens.
Yesterday it took me all of 5 minutes to get the USDA test results for e.coli in beef processing for all of 2011. How long would that have taken in a manual system?
The other day, I searched a database of agency decisions going back to 1970. Being able to narrow the search results meant that I only had to manually go through 15 records instead of 20,000.
Instant access to USGS and FEMA maps, tax forms and instructions, legislative history, the US code, the CFR, economic data, transportation data, energy data, agriculture data, etc etc etc.. all of which would previously have required a trip to the library (or DC) and then manually going through records. Even if you don't do this stuff personally, people are doing it and these systems save time, which saves money, which generally results in lower costs.
The question is: "I am going to name some institutions in this country. As far as the people running these institutions are concerned, would you say you have a great deal of confidence, only some confidence, or hardly any confidence at all in them? Scientific Community:"
They're not that expensive. It's ~$2,000 to buy one from a Toyota dealer, so we can assume that their cost is well below that.
And that is why any time you get automated directions, be it google on the desktop or GPS in the car, you should review them step-by-step prior to starting the journey. This takes all of 2 minutes and identifies any tricky turns, interchanges, possible errors, etc.
CRTs are no longer sold or manufactured commercially because the economics no longer work (mainly a lack of demand). There is no environmental prohibition on CRTs that I am aware of in any jurisdiction.
The first step in a WTO dispute is negotiations, btw.
There's a report problem link at the bottom, right next to the copyright info.
If he died that quickly it wouldn't have made a difference.. or are you really expecting us to believe that all the people in the theater just stared at their phones and not one thought to get the AED or alert the theater which could use a landline (or be outside the jammed area)?
I know, I know.. IHBT.
That might work if the rules were enforced. But the bus drivers don't want to start shit with people (I don't blame em), and can't physically remove anyone from the bus. If the cops have to get called it delays the whole bus which pisses everyone off.
In my experience, unless you're parallel parking, you really shouldn't be looking at the screen while backing up. You check that the rear area is clear, and then look rearward as usual because the camera doesn't see to the side.
If you have a problem looking away from a screen, you have a problem.
"Generally employers don't have different policies for different people leaving the company."
Bullshit they don't. You think the CEO gets escorted out by security?
Er, no, that's just not how it works. Congress is an independent branch of the government. The President has tools to persuade them to do things, but they only go so far. If Congress doesn't want to do something, the President has no real recourse.
I would like him to use the bully pulpit more as well, but let's not fool ourselves into thinking that it would magically get the GOP voting for his proposals. With the current rules and makeup of Congress, that is required to do anything.
Your conclusion is correct but the example is wrong. Reasonable doubt comes from English common law, and you'll note that the phrase does not appear in the Constitution.
Long term studies have shown no decrease in lung function. It's not yet known why this is, if there is something in tobacco that is very bad, or something in MJ that somehow has a protective factor, or if it's just the habits or what.
Obama has not been friendly to the states on MMJ because he realizes that if he lets a state opt-out of one federal law, that opens the door for all of them. This would result in the healthcare bill being taken apart by red states.
You can do that in theory. However the car should be programmed to avoid this condition. A Prius (which doesn't have a real neutral that disconnects the wheels from the transmission) in this situation will waste away the excess battery power by spinning the engine. Don't know if the Tesla transmission has an actual neutral position (oddly I could not find much info about it at all, and most of it was from 2006-2007 before they had finalized all the transmission stuff).
Two things.. 1) Sure the frame, engine and other large components will be recycled but what do you think the scrapper is doing with all the wire and other plastic pieces? and 2) It was probably cheaper for the manufacturer and not at all related to biodegradability.
It's really only vodka that the filtering works for, as a perfect vodka is pure alcohol (in solution, of course). Other boozes have many other factors going into their production.. if you filter a cheap gin, you'll have a filtered cheap gin. A brita won't add botanicals that cheap producers skimp on (or use chemical substitutes for). It may even remove desired flavors. For other boozes, aging comes into play. You're not going to get a 25-year scotch by filtering a cheap 3-year.
The oft-cited supermajority was on paper only. There are very few examples where Democrats were actually a united bloc and used the supermajority. In fact ARRA only passed because of 2 GOP crossovers (this is counting Specter as a dem even though he hadn't switched yet).
And regardless, the existence of a supermajority doesn't excuse GOP filibusters or render them meaningless. Fact is that you can point to actions that a majority of Democrats wanted to take, but were not able to because of GOP filibusters that were supported by one or two Dems.
You're both wrong, it's 8.3%, seasonally adjusted; 8.8% unadjusted.
The only union dues that a worker can be forced to pay are those that go towards collective bargaining. You can never be forced to pay money that is used for political contributions.
Ignoring the fact that Salinger did publish things after Catcher, your reasoning makes no sense. Salinger would have made plenty of money off of 20 years, certainly enough to live on for the rest of his life since it wasn't like he was traveling the world or anything.
And you consider simply adding a new foreword as a new work? Absurd.
I can attest that it is cool. I've been doing it on my android for 18 months now.