ok, so starving people today is not a compelling example that food sharing doesn't happen, how about this: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06...
Hoarding Nations Drive Food Costs Ever Higher
trust me, if there is a world wide crisis that affects agriculture, things will change very quickly. A drought in California is regional, so people wouldn't get to excited about that. Also, food sharing doesn't work all that well right now. there are lots of people starving in different places the world. I tried to look up info on max exporters, US is number 1 and has in the past 60+ years been the only one that really affects international prices. France is listed as 2, but that's because of the high value wine, cheese they sell. Brazil and Argentina are emerging big exporters of basic food crops, and they are increasing fast, the limiting factor seems to be infrastructure to get crops from fields to ships. I grew up on a farm and read quite a bit about world food supply, its not nearly as elastic as you are saying.
My impression is this would be a world wide event. Kansas and other areas would be similarly bad off, its just they didn't have good information about what was going on there in 1815. Also, I wouldn't want to depend too much on 'sharing'. I suspect a lot of countries will go into hoarding mode.
Good News:, I did some further investigating. The Tambora volcano was a 10,000 year event on the VEI, Volcanic Eruptions Index. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Eruptive Volume: 100 km3 (20 cu mi)
Type: Ultra Plinian
Frequency: 10,000 years
Example; Tambora (1815)
Every so often I like to look over this list just so see what kinds of things can go wrong with the planet https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
This one has always gotten my attention, I have heard about from multiple sources.
10 deadliest volcanic eruptions --1815 eruption of Mount Tambora-- 92,000 dead -- Year Without a Summer
It just boggles my mind that there is a real potential for global disaster like this. I believe there is only a 40-90 day world wide food surplus available. I remember in the 1970s there were some discussions on the talking head shows about it. I think it was after Vietnam and the talking heads were scraping the barrel for things to get people excited about. A few economists said it was too big of a capital expenditure on something with a speculative return. But the possibility of an event is not 0... gives me something to ponder when I don't have anything else to worry about.
I can tell you how to kill your sweet tooth quick. at least it works for me. first thing in the morning eat about 1/2 or less of a pickle. You can even run it under the water a bit to get rid of some of the taste if its too strong. eat it slowly and suck the vinegar out. It seems like first thing in the morning your taste buds need to be calibrated and this makes your palate more sour than sweet. I've noticed quite a bit Asian and eastern European diets are rather sour and seems to keep them slim. I've also noticed when I used to drink beer, I had little interest in sweets. now I don't drink beer anymore, not much alcohol either. I can make and excellent milk shake out of some whole milk, frozen banana, and some vanilla flavoring. a regular milkshake would be so sweet it wouldn't be enjoyable. I'm avoiding all processed foods that have added sugar. I make my own bbq sauce - ketchup from tomato paste and pineapple. I make my own salad dressing, starting with blended chickpeas (hummus), then adding horseradish, or mustard, or buffalo wing sauce (the one I like has no sugar in it, thank goodness). I've been watching a lot of BBC history shows and I can tell from portraits that people started to gain weight around the tudor times, basically HenryVIII. Apparently that's when sugar got popular. Some people blackened their teeth on purpose to make it look like they could afford to eat sugar regularly. it was a status symbol.
I have two synology 211's I got off of Ebay for 100$ ea. I have 5x 3TB WD Red drives. There are two in each configured as Raid 1. One station has misc stuff on it, (classic public drive), the other had critical stuff on it. The fifth is the transit drive. when one fails, the fifth one replaces the failed one and failed one is in transit (as we speak) to be replaced under warranty. I've bought the drives new from Best Buy, on sale for 99-105$, with 3 yr warranty, The nice thing about synology is there are lights on the front that show disk status and it beeps when one fails so I immediately know. Also, I have quite a few old drives that I can put in Sata swap racks in one of my pc to make periodic backups. Some of those drive are off site. The past spring I put the system together, had 1 drive fail recently and had no loss of data, just a short period of downtime. Just saying what I finally did. Its a big relief knowing my precious data is safe from the most typical failures.
don't you need unobtanium to create gravatrons? probably the last bit of unobtanium will be under the last rino-elephant reserve in Africa. I wonder what will happen then. that might make a good movie plot.
Personally I think big fauna is doomed anyway. Rino, Elephant, Tiger all take up too much space. Over the next 100-200 years Africa will be turned into a giant palm oil, soy, corn field, or just open pit mines and industrial waste. All we can do is freeze a few tissue samples for some future generations then stick a fork in it, its done. PS, keep this between us, this is kind of open secret that most people who need to know, already know. Don't tell any young people about this, they need a few years of naïve optimism.
I couldn't agree more. Its ridiculous how much salt and sugar is in everything. I have started buying cans of diced tomatos and black beans that don't have salt in them, and I put a can of that in everything I eat. I'm to the point now that potato chips, nacho etc taste like the spoonfuls of salt that they are. Also, anything that has sugar or fructose in them get tossed. I make my own bbq sauce from pineapple and tomato paste. I don't buy bread anymore, I make my own out of whole wheat and chick pea flour, although I have started to use whole wheat wraps to make sandwiches for the convenience. I'm also trying som near beers or fermented drinks like Kombucha 'tea', Belgian lambic or Russian Kvass (or maybe even just Odules) to get me more used to sour foods. I've been eating pickles lately and found if I eat just a slice first thing in the morning it kills my appetite for sweets.
Your point is completely invalid. the instant mi said this:
'Oh, and they are unconstitutional [goodreads.com] too, but that stopped bothering anybody long ago.'
mi is CLEARLY sarcastically expressing an opinion about all taxes.
That opens the whole libertarian can of worms that makes me laugh in total disgust.
I've always liked rock with strong guitar sound. problem is It all died out in the 90s. there's been some pretty good jokes about that on the family guy cartoon.
I know where the 1300$ went to. when they tried to get one aspirin out of the bottle, one dropped on the floor and had to be thrown away. I think theres a code for that.
I'm afraid that when push come to shove, more people will always more care about shopping and upgrading their kitchen and driving a nicer car then they care about wild animals. You might be able to convince some people that there is tourist revenue possible from preserving nature, but I don't think it will work in the long run. real estate is just to valuable to let wild animals be wild animals.
I think its more like the modern day hippies are smart enough to know the neo-conservatives will use troops like cannon fodder for whatever military misadventure they can come up with. if a republican wins the presidency in 2016, I'm sure it will be a matter of days until we are invading Iran.
I thought of that counter argument just as posted, I should have stuck to what the OP said, its a sport, not a hobby. Its also not a race to the bottom, anything goes, just make it cheaper and faster type of economic venture, if it was it would morph into something completely unrecognizable and not fun anymore. you don't have to cap the word 'NONE', I can read .
I agree completely. in a few years it will be possible to custom build DNA or 3d print a new horse and then what. Once you open the barn door...... ummm I'm sure there is some old country saying to cover this. At this point breeding a raising horses is a hobby, not an economic venture. I'd like to see places where tradition wins over whatever works. Like somebody said earlier that If you don't like it, start your own registry.
I pretty much understood what it was when I read the headline. maybe it would have been more accurate to say articulating in place of working but that would have been pretty awkward. when it comes to transmission and engine and things like that, its not *really* working unless you can put 100,000+ miles on it, under load without any breakdown. and its not ready for production unless you can multiple that by 100,000 units manufactured at a competitive price. I often think about the old Rickover story where people are trying to sell some gadget to the navy. in the story he's on the 6th floor and he tosses it out the window and tells the guy he can come back up and talk about it, if it still works.
I like the first example in the article. the professors were lecturing about post-apocalyptic culture while the students were anonymously jeering them on yukyuk(my name). There was a book written 60+ years ago exactly about it, 'Lord of the Flies'. Once the veneer of civilization is gone, anything can happen. Sounds like a good episode for Black Mirror.
No more H1B visas from now on. Zero, is that careful enough?
ok, so starving people today is not a compelling example that food sharing doesn't happen, how about this:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06...
Hoarding Nations Drive Food Costs Ever Higher
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/new...
Food hoarding by governments keen to keep prices low is pushing prices higher
http://www.scmp.com/business/c...
Memories of 2008 food crisis push Asian countries to hoard grain
trust me, if there is a world wide crisis that affects agriculture, things will change very quickly. A drought in California is regional, so people wouldn't get to excited about that. Also, food sharing doesn't work all that well right now. there are lots of people starving in different places the world. I tried to look up info on max exporters, US is number 1 and has in the past 60+ years been the only one that really affects international prices. France is listed as 2, but that's because of the high value wine, cheese they sell. Brazil and Argentina are emerging big exporters of basic food crops, and they are increasing fast, the limiting factor seems to be infrastructure to get crops from fields to ships. I grew up on a farm and read quite a bit about world food supply, its not nearly as elastic as you are saying.
My impression is this would be a world wide event. Kansas and other areas would be similarly bad off, its just they didn't have good information about what was going on there in 1815. Also, I wouldn't want to depend too much on 'sharing'. I suspect a lot of countries will go into hoarding mode.
Good News:, I did some further investigating. The Tambora volcano was a 10,000 year event on the VEI, Volcanic Eruptions Index.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Eruptive Volume: 100 km3 (20 cu mi)
Type: Ultra Plinian
Frequency: 10,000 years
Example; Tambora (1815)
Every so often I like to look over this list just so see what kinds of things can go wrong with the planet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
This one has always gotten my attention, I have heard about from multiple sources.
10 deadliest volcanic eruptions --1815 eruption of Mount Tambora-- 92,000 dead -- Year Without a Summer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
It just boggles my mind that there is a real potential for global disaster like this. I believe there is only a 40-90 day world wide food surplus available. I remember in the 1970s there were some discussions on the talking head shows about it. I think it was after Vietnam and the talking heads were scraping the barrel for things to get people excited about. A few economists said it was too big of a capital expenditure on something with a speculative return. But the possibility of an event is not 0... gives me something to ponder when I don't have anything else to worry about.
>>average diet of a libertarian is The eat carcinogens and poop out flowers and butterflies.
I can tell you how to kill your sweet tooth quick. at least it works for me. first thing in the morning eat about 1/2 or less of a pickle. You can even run it under the water a bit to get rid of some of the taste if its too strong. eat it slowly and suck the vinegar out. It seems like first thing in the morning your taste buds need to be calibrated and this makes your palate more sour than sweet. I've noticed quite a bit Asian and eastern European diets are rather sour and seems to keep them slim. I've also noticed when I used to drink beer, I had little interest in sweets. now I don't drink beer anymore, not much alcohol either. I can make and excellent milk shake out of some whole milk, frozen banana, and some vanilla flavoring. a regular milkshake would be so sweet it wouldn't be enjoyable. I'm avoiding all processed foods that have added sugar. I make my own bbq sauce - ketchup from tomato paste and pineapple. I make my own salad dressing, starting with blended chickpeas (hummus), then adding horseradish, or mustard, or buffalo wing sauce (the one I like has no sugar in it, thank goodness). I've been watching a lot of BBC history shows and I can tell from portraits that people started to gain weight around the tudor times, basically HenryVIII. Apparently that's when sugar got popular. Some people blackened their teeth on purpose to make it look like they could afford to eat sugar regularly. it was a status symbol.
I do use Drop Box and Google Drive for some stuff, but I use DSL and my upload speeds are horrible so its only really small stuff in this system.
I have two synology 211's I got off of Ebay for 100$ ea. I have 5x 3TB WD Red drives. There are two in each configured as Raid 1. One station has misc stuff on it, (classic public drive), the other had critical stuff on it. The fifth is the transit drive. when one fails, the fifth one replaces the failed one and failed one is in transit (as we speak) to be replaced under warranty. I've bought the drives new from Best Buy, on sale for 99-105$, with 3 yr warranty, The nice thing about synology is there are lights on the front that show disk status and it beeps when one fails so I immediately know. Also, I have quite a few old drives that I can put in Sata swap racks in one of my pc to make periodic backups. Some of those drive are off site. The past spring I put the system together, had 1 drive fail recently and had no loss of data, just a short period of downtime. Just saying what I finally did. Its a big relief knowing my precious data is safe from the most typical failures.
don't you need unobtanium to create gravatrons? probably the last bit of unobtanium will be under the last rino-elephant reserve in Africa. I wonder what will happen then. that might make a good movie plot.
Personally I think big fauna is doomed anyway. Rino, Elephant, Tiger all take up too much space. Over the next 100-200 years Africa will be turned into a giant palm oil, soy, corn field, or just open pit mines and industrial waste. All we can do is freeze a few tissue samples for some future generations then stick a fork in it, its done. PS, keep this between us, this is kind of open secret that most people who need to know, already know. Don't tell any young people about this, they need a few years of naïve optimism.
I couldn't agree more. Its ridiculous how much salt and sugar is in everything. I have started buying cans of diced tomatos and black beans that don't have salt in them, and I put a can of that in everything I eat. I'm to the point now that potato chips, nacho etc taste like the spoonfuls of salt that they are. Also, anything that has sugar or fructose in them get tossed. I make my own bbq sauce from pineapple and tomato paste. I don't buy bread anymore, I make my own out of whole wheat and chick pea flour, although I have started to use whole wheat wraps to make sandwiches for the convenience. I'm also trying som near beers or fermented drinks like Kombucha 'tea', Belgian lambic or Russian Kvass (or maybe even just Odules) to get me more used to sour foods. I've been eating pickles lately and found if I eat just a slice first thing in the morning it kills my appetite for sweets.
Your point is completely invalid. the instant mi said this:
'Oh, and they are unconstitutional [goodreads.com] too, but that stopped bothering anybody long ago.'
mi is CLEARLY sarcastically expressing an opinion about all taxes.
That opens the whole libertarian can of worms that makes me laugh in total disgust.
you could move to a paradise country with no taxes. I think Somalia doesn't have a national tax.
Don't bother sheetrocking the interior, just mount bezel less lcd panels on all the wall. Then you can project anything you want on it.
I've always liked rock with strong guitar sound. problem is It all died out in the 90s. there's been some pretty good jokes about that on the family guy cartoon.
I know where the 1300$ went to. when they tried to get one aspirin out of the bottle, one dropped on the floor and had to be thrown away. I think theres a code for that.
I'm afraid that when push come to shove, more people will always more care about shopping and upgrading their kitchen and driving a nicer car then they care about wild animals. You might be able to convince some people that there is tourist revenue possible from preserving nature, but I don't think it will work in the long run. real estate is just to valuable to let wild animals be wild animals.
I think its more like the modern day hippies are smart enough to know the neo-conservatives will use troops like cannon fodder for whatever military misadventure they can come up with. if a republican wins the presidency in 2016, I'm sure it will be a matter of days until we are invading Iran.
I thought of that counter argument just as posted, I should have stuck to what the OP said, its a sport, not a hobby. Its also not a race to the bottom, anything goes, just make it cheaper and faster type of economic venture, if it was it would morph into something completely unrecognizable and not fun anymore. you don't have to cap the word 'NONE', I can read .
I agree completely. in a few years it will be possible to custom build DNA or 3d print a new horse and then what. Once you open the barn door...... ummm I'm sure there is some old country saying to cover this. At this point breeding a raising horses is a hobby, not an economic venture. I'd like to see places where tradition wins over whatever works. Like somebody said earlier that If you don't like it, start your own registry.
they didn't test the right medical condition.
I pretty much understood what it was when I read the headline. maybe it would have been more accurate to say articulating in place of working but that would have been pretty awkward. when it comes to transmission and engine and things like that, its not *really* working unless you can put 100,000+ miles on it, under load without any breakdown. and its not ready for production unless you can multiple that by 100,000 units manufactured at a competitive price. I often think about the old Rickover story where people are trying to sell some gadget to the navy. in the story he's on the 6th floor and he tosses it out the window and tells the guy he can come back up and talk about it, if it still works.
its 500,000 jobs that each last about 4 hrs, half a day of work. string enough together and you have a job.
I like the first example in the article. the professors were lecturing about post-apocalyptic culture while the students were anonymously jeering them on yukyuk(my name). There was a book written 60+ years ago exactly about it, 'Lord of the Flies'. Once the veneer of civilization is gone, anything can happen. Sounds like a good episode for Black Mirror.