There are a limited amount of people who may occupy the South Pole at any one time due to humans' impact on the environment down there. Why waste a bed on a sysadmin when you could have more important people doing more important work?
Wow, an old nerve gas shell from the iran/iraq war that someone forgot about. That's a really big fucking deal. You're grasping at straws, just like shrub.
How to pay and other information
The colour TV licence costs just over £10 per month - about 33p per day for each household. It is free if you are over 75, half-price if you are registered blind.
(IAAUP - I am an Urban Planner, or at least I played one at University)
Per dwelling unit, per acre, or per person, any way you decide to calculate it, it is more expensive for people to live in the suburbs than in the city. The costs of living in the suburbs are usually offloaded onto the local, state, and federal government (think interstates, costs of sprawl, etc). The downside of this situation is that these governments pay for the increased costs by allowing the construction of strip malls and "big box" stores which cause more congestion and sprawl.
The closer that people live together, costs per person or dwelling unit go down significantly.
Err, how does this differ from listening to the game on the radio?
There are a limited amount of people who may occupy the South Pole at any one time due to humans' impact on the environment down there. Why waste a bed on a sysadmin when you could have more important people doing more important work?
Wow, an old nerve gas shell from the iran/iraq war that someone forgot about. That's a really big fucking deal. You're grasping at straws, just like shrub.
And every example you list there are old-ass examples. Try something from this century, please.
How to pay and other information The colour TV licence costs just over £10 per month - about 33p per day for each household. It is free if you are over 75, half-price if you are registered blind.
Sure, it's routine, but I don't see you going off into space on a reusable vehicle.
(IAAUP - I am an Urban Planner, or at least I played one at University)
t _74-a.pdf
Per dwelling unit, per acre, or per person, any way you decide to calculate it, it is more expensive for people to live in the suburbs than in the city. The costs of living in the suburbs are usually offloaded onto the local, state, and federal government (think interstates, costs of sprawl, etc). The downside of this situation is that these governments pay for the increased costs by allowing the construction of strip malls and "big box" stores which cause more congestion and sprawl.
The closer that people live together, costs per person or dwelling unit go down significantly.
For more information on this phenomena, refer to Transportation Research Board's final report on the cost of sprawl:
http://gulliver.trb.org/publications/tcrp/tcrp_rp