Notices by exador23 (exador23), page 2
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No, but the New Yorker did take over The Borowitz Report - a long running satire blog.
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doing a few repairs, so I can continue to put twenty-somethings in their place by saying: "Dude, my bong is older than you."
about 3 months ago from web -
#filing this because it keeps coming up. http://occupycorporatism.com/massive-media-fumble-dhs-21-6-million-rounds-purchase-a-lie/
about 3 months ago from web -
pondering what a Mobius Striptease would consist of.
about 3 months ago from web -
!q we are not going to give up on destroying the health care system for the American people. ~ Paul Ryan.
about 3 months ago from web -
Let's Save Great Ideas from the Ideas Industry http://www.readability.com/articles/bg1sdfhh !idea #idea #TED
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!q the search for a radio signal from an extra-terrestrial source is as culture-bound an assumption as to search the galaxy for a good Italian restaurant. ~ Terence McKenna
about 4 months ago from web -
!q It was like being at a fucking Scientology summer camp. It was horrible. ~ Eddie Huang on his experience at #TED
about 4 months ago from web -
glad to be of assistance. now get back to resisting.
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!q To create is to resist and to resist is to create. ~ Stéphane Hessel
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I say let's just implement these and call it a day on the whole time wasting gun debate with it's predictable stirring of the retarded hornets nest. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2013/02/americans-support-range-of-proposals-to-reduce-gun-violence.html
about 4 months ago from web -
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#q ... When resource prices rise, the impact is felt almost immediately. Salaries don’t rise at the same time oil prices rise, so consumers have to cut back on some purchases of discretionary goods and services. The initial impact is layoffs in discretionary sectors of the economy. Within a few years, however, the layoff problems are transformed into central government debt problems. This happens because governments need to pay benefits to laid-off workers at the same time they are collecting less in taxes.
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#q Ultimately, these investment sinkholes seem likely to cause huge problems. In some sense, they mean the economy is becoming less efficient, rather than more efficient. From an investment point of view, they can expect to crowd out other types of investment. From a consumer’s point of view, they lead to a rising cost of essential products that can be expected to squeeze out other purchases.
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#q These higher investment costs lead to higher end product costs of goods using these resources. These higher costs eventually transfer to other products that most of us consider essential: food because it uses much oil in growing and transport; electricity because it is associated with pollution controls; and metals for basic manufacturing, because they also use oil in extraction and transport.
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The Fossil Fuel Investment Sinkhole: #q This takes several forms: water limits that require deeper wells or desalination plants; oil and gas limits that require more expensive forms of extraction; and pollution limits requiring expensive adjustments to automobiles or to power plants.
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in case there's still a question... http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=cNk-bV40XMc
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How the dorner situation really ended: http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/conscience-realist/2013/feb/13/lapd-radio-transcript-reveals-police-used-burners-/
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his manifesto is pretty good too. ends with a shout out to Bill Cosby. http://www.crimefilenews.com/2013/02/fired-lapd-officer-obama-lover-and.html
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so far the suspect has shot 3 people, and the LAPD has shot 4 innocents in the ensuing manhunt.
about 4 months ago from web