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#1485108 - 01/06/09 07:54 PM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA * [Re: energyhazard]
Mr Hand Offline
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Registered: 05/26/04
Posts: 6291

Man Made Global Warming Mishap leaves skier dangling pantsless from Vail chairlift... www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2009/0106091vail1.html

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#1485172 - 01/06/09 11:39 PM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: Mr Hand]
davidmalmolevine Offline
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Registered: 09/17/99
Posts: 21454
Loc: BC

You and Ben have been surfing the web looking at pictures of men's asses, no doubt:


http://forums.cannabisculture.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=1482078&fpart=8
_________________________
"making the earth a common treasury for all, both rich and poor." Gerrard Winstanley; April 20, 1649

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#1485227 - 01/07/09 07:19 AM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: davidmalmolevine]
Mr Hand Offline
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Registered: 05/26/04
Posts: 6291
 Originally Posted By: davidmalmolevine

You and Ben have been surfing the web looking at pictures of men's asses, no doubt:

Another ass photo!



SNOW RAGE IN SPOKANE; GLOBAL WARMER SHOOTS AT SNOWPLOW OPERATOR...

Spokane, Wash., residents cope with record snow




Jan 7, 5:36 AM (ET)

By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS








SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - More than 6 feet of snow in the past three weeks has left Spokane residents frustrated. Tempers are so frayed that a man was arrested for shooting at a snow plow operator.

This unusually harsh winter has disrupted schools, traffic, garbage pickup and mail service in the city of 200,000.

Roofs are collapsing, streets are clogged with ice and slush and locals are starting to refer to this as Sno-maggedon.

Even visitors are impressed.


(AP) Tow truck driver Fred Burnham shovels around a vehicle before towing it to make room for snowplows...
Full Image


"This is the most snow I've ever seen," Tennessee women's basketball coach Pat Summitt said when her team played at Gonzaga University on Dec. 30. "It's beautiful."

Spokane has received more than 78 inches of snow - about the height of Michael Jordan - since mid-December. That's far above its average of less than 50 inches for an entire winter. Normally about 16 inches would have fallen at this point.

The local record for an entire winter is 93.5 inches set in 1949-50. That is likely to be shattered soon.

As many as 200 members of the Washington National Guard were being dispatched to the Spokane area to help with snow removal Wednesday, particularly on school rooftops, Laura Lockard, a spokeswoman for Gov. Chris Gregoire, said Tuesday.

Snow rage is getting to some.

One man was arrested by Spokane police after gunshots were fired Monday morning at a private snow plow operator who was clearing a parking lot. Police said the motorist apparently got upset when the plow operator honked his horn.

"It's safe to say that fuses are short, people are frustrated and we are having an increase in neighborhood disputes regarding snow-related issues," said Jennifer DeRuwe, a police spokeswoman.

Hot lines at Spokane Mental Health are getting twice the number of calls from people seeking help, said Staci Cornwell of the agency. Some are from elderly people who need help picking up medications, or with shoveling. Other callers are just agitated.

"In our community, people are getting upset, angry, stressed out because of all this snow," Cornwell said. "There's a pending fear of what else is to come."

Jeff Hastings, a mental health counselor, said people's emotional reserves are becoming drained.

"Then people get angry and irritable and depressed and feel anxiety," Hastings said. "They feel overwhelmed."

Treacherous roads are a major complaint. Many are covered with ice, heavily rutted and reduced to one lane by piles of plowed snow.

Mayor Mary Verner said the city is spending an estimated $150,000 a day to operate plows around the clock.

Downtown, snow has been piled in the middle of streets in hills that are taller than adults and give the impression of driving in giant slots.

Driving conditions are so bad that most of the region's malls closed early the weekend before Christmas because employees and customers could not reach them. Employers continued to have problems on Tuesday, especially big box stores with flat roofs. Several checked by The Associated Press were closed on Tuesday.

The winter break for schoolchildren started two days early, on Dec. 17, because of snow, and school had been scheduled to resume on Monday before Spokane County Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich - pointing to a "once in a lifetime winter" - took the unprecedented step of recommending schools remain closed because children could not travel safely.

To the relief of parents, classes did resume on Tuesday, creating gridlock on the streets as school buses, private vehicles and walkers competed for space on roads because sidewalks remain buried.

Weight on roofs is a major problem. The National Weather Service has estimated that the existing snow is placing a load of about 25 pounds per square foot roof on roofs designed to hold 30 to 40 pounds. Rain forecast to follow the snow this week will add significant new weight, the agency said.

That has created a brisk market for day laborers willing to go up on roofs and shovel snow off for at least $15 per hour.

Rising temperatures were already melting snow and creating rivers of water Tuesday afternoon, promising some relief.

"I'm sick of it and ready for it to melt," said Joe Olney, 19, a store clerk.

But two women who work at the Chocolate Apothecary in downtown Spokane have found a coping mechanism.

"We are surrounded by chocolate," said owner Susan Davis. "It's all good in here."


apnews.myway.com/article/20090107/D95I8DF00.html

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#1485298 - 01/07/09 10:09 AM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: davidmalmolevine]
benjamin Offline
Ganja God
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Registered: 01/30/06
Posts: 5748
Loc: Grande Ronde Valley, NE Oregon...
 Originally Posted By: davidmalmolevine

You and Ben have been surfing the web looking at pictures of men's asses, no doubt:


http://forums.cannabisculture.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=1482078&fpart=8


Lots of clowns too. Yep, go to jail sounds best for everyone to me too.
_________________________
Little Miss Muffet sat on her tuffet, eating her curds and whey.
Along came a spider which sat down beside her and said,"Load a bowl, BBB bitch?!"


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#1485316 - 01/07/09 10:36 AM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: energyhazard]
Mr Hand Offline
Ganja God
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Registered: 05/26/04
Posts: 6291
These photos of Geneva were taken just before man made global warming caused the mountain tops to burst into flames!


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#1485329 - 01/07/09 11:27 AM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: davidmalmolevine]
benjamin Offline
Ganja God
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Registered: 01/30/06
Posts: 5748
Loc: Grande Ronde Valley, NE Oregon...
 Quote:
"master baiter"
Ganja God


Registered: 09/17/99
Posts: 17360
Loc: BC Well put, Slarti!

The same people distract themselves with images of suicide bombers taking out busloads of little children in order to ignore the level of desperation and injustice required to create suicide bombers ...


Oh yes, put the injustice label outside the culture which created the suicide bomber. Thirty percent unemployment among Saudi young men. Nothing to live for, nowhere to go; stuck in a Monarchy who spends all the money on what? Then they are recruited by Islam. God only knows how the bulk of Saudi men make a living;only a few go on to be martyrs, others go to military training camps.Then there`s the weaponry...the Saudi family pays for that too; along with worldwide charities who front for Muj. As for murder suicide bombings, only a fanatic would consider it; unless life on Earth was unbearable. Their family has often been paid a King`s ransom by Sadaam Husein in the past. Perhaps even many families encourage their unemployed kinfolk, it gets `em out of the home!
The politics of Ishmael.

By the way, the price of oil took a nose dive. Another Oil War;
oh goodie goodie! I can hardly wait to see who goes broke first.

By BRIAN BASKIN
NEW YORK -- Crude-oil futures plunged on a report that U.S. oil and product inventories grew substantially last week, underscoring weak demand.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery traded $3.50, or 7.2%, lower at $45.08 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange traded $2.48 lower at $48.05 a barrel.

Oil inventories jumped by 6.7 million barrels, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, far exceeding the average analyst forecast of a 700,000-barrel build. Stocks at Cushing, Okla., the Nymex contract's delivery point, surged to a record 32.2 million barrels.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123133846670260775.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
_________________________
Little Miss Muffet sat on her tuffet, eating her curds and whey.
Along came a spider which sat down beside her and said,"Load a bowl, BBB bitch?!"


Top
#1485338 - 01/07/09 11:52 AM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: benjamin]
davidmalmolevine Offline
Ganja God
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Registered: 09/17/99
Posts: 21454
Loc: BC


"Thirty percent unemployment among Saudi young men."

As of December 2006, unemployment has risen from 23% in 2005[1] to over 50%. Two-thirds of Palestinians are living below the poverty line.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_the_Palestinian_territories


In September 2007, the Israeli government declared the Strip a "hostile entity" in response to continued rocket attacks on southern Israel, and said it would start cutting fuel imports. Israel maintains the blockade has at no point caused a humanitarian crisis - but in early 2008, a group of aid agencies described the situation as exactly that, and the worst situation in the strip since Israel occupied it in 1967.

Click here to return

FOOD
About three-quarters of Gaza's residents rely on some form of food aid. Aid agencies operating in Gaza say they have largely been able to continue to transport basic supplies such as flour and cooking oil into the territory - except during a few short periods when all the crossings have been closed. Israel says it only closes crossings in response to Palestinian militant attacks or for other security reasons.


GAZA CROSSING POINTS
Gaza crossings map
1. Erez: Closed to all but diplomats, aid workers and medical cases with special permits. Hit by mortars and rockets more than 200 times in past year (IDF).
2. Nahal Oz: Fuel crossing - closed for a few days in April 2008 after attack on nearby fuel depot
3. Karni: Main commercial crossing. Closed for much of 2008, apart from conveyor belt for grain and animal feed.
4. Sufa: Small crossing, used for all truck deliveries while Karni and Kerem Shalom closed
5. Kerem Shalom: Closed from 19 April, when a suicide attack damaged crossing and injured 13 soldiers, until autumn 2008.
6. Rafah: Crossing to Egypt, currently closed. A 2005 agreement to allow Egypt and the PA to manage it with EU monitors no longer operating. The crossing is now controlled by Egypt and Hamas. Special cases, usually medical, are sporadically allowed through. Hundreds of thousands of people are thought to have crossed when it was breached in January 2008.

While most basic foodstuffs have generally been allowed into Gaza, a joint survey by three UN agencies in May 2008 found that all Gaza retailers had run out of flour, rice, sugar, dairy products, milk powder and vegetable oil on at least three occasions since June 2007.

Some 750,000 people rely on food aid from the UN agency for Palestinian refugees Unrwa for their staple foods. The rations provide about two-thirds of their daily nutritional needs, and must be supplemented by dairy products, meat, fish and fresh fruit and vegetables bought on the open market.

While availability of some of these has dropped - for example, according to the UN, commercial food imports were less than half the need in December 2007 - the main problem for Gazans is paying for them.

The bureaucracy of the import process and fuel shortages for transport, together with rising global prices, have pushed up costs, at the same time as the decline of the economy and rising unemployment have squeezed household budgets.

The UN survey found more than half Gaza's households had sold their disposable assets and were relying on credit to buy food, three-quarters of Gazans were buying less food than in the past, and almost all of them were eating less fresh fruit, vegetables and animal protein to save money.

And some items, the report said, including baby food, olive oil, nuts, chocolate, spices, juices and carbonated drinks had been in short supply since the early days of the closure.

Israel says food imports have generally been restricted by its ability to continue to operate the crossings in the face of Palestinian attacks targeting them, rather than Israeli-imposed limits on any particular products.

Click here to return
FUEL AND POWER

Israel began restricting fuel imports in late October 2007. As well as shortages for drivers, many of whom have begun running their vehicles on cooking oil, the consequences have been far reaching:
Graph - Gaza fuel imports

* Gaza's electricity supply is made up of 144MW from Israel, 17MW from Egypt and the rest from an EU-run power plant in Gaza which can generate up to 80MW. For much of 2008 it only received enough fuel to generate 55MW, although this increased to 65MW after the truce was agreed in July 2008. The plant has also shut down completely three times because it ran out of fuel. Power cuts - ranging from two to about 10 hours, remain common across much of Gaza.
* Power cuts and shortages of fuel for back-up generators have affected Gaza's three sewage plants. Gaza's sewage body said less than 40% of the fuel required was available in the first half of 2008, and estimated it was releasing 50-70m litres of raw or poorly-treated sewage into the sea daily.
* Aid agencies say water pumping stations have also struggled with power and fuel shortages, as well as a lack of spare parts. In May, 15% of people had access to water 4-6 hours a week, 25% had it every four days, and 60% had it every other day.
* 70% of agricultural water wells require diesel for their pumps and many farmers have lost crops due to lack of irrigation, according to aid agencies. Other food production has also been affected - for example, rising fishermen's fuel costs pushed up the price of sardines, and one poultry farmer had to slaughter 165,000 chicks because he did not have the fuel for the incubators to keep them alive.

In January 2008, Israel's Supreme Court dismissed a challenge by human rights groups to the practice of restricting fuel supplies.

The court set minimum thresholds that fuel deliveries should not fall below - compared with before the restrictions, these were 63% of industrial diesel supplies, 18% of petrol and 57% of diesel imports.

But figures monitored by international agencies show fuel deliveries dropped even below these minimums at several points in the first half of 2008.

Israel has also closed off fuel supplies completely in response to specific attacks - once after a Palestinian militant attack on a fuel depot near the Nahal Oz fuel crossing point, again after mortar attacks on a crossing itself and in November 2008 after a barrage of rockets in the wake of an Israeli incursion. All three times, the UN came close to suspending food aid deliveries.

The first time Gaza's power plant was shut down, in January 2008, Israel said there was enough fuel in Gaza and accused Hamas of faking a crisis, but officials from the EU, which runs the plant, said at the time that fuel supplies were "very low".

Israel has also accused Hamas of exacerbating fuel shortages, as fuel workers have at times refused to distribute any fuel in protest at the limited levels of imports.

Click here to return

OTHER IMPORTS

Few items other than food and medicine have entered Gaza in the past year, according to aid agencies. Restrictions on construction materials, particularly cement, and spare parts for machinery have had a big impact on projects ranging from water treatment to grave digging.

Israel says many of these items are considered "dual use" and could be used for weapons manufacture. There are concerns, for example, that water pipes and fertiliser could be used to make rockets, and cement used for constructing smuggling tunnels.

* UN refugee agency Unwra says a lack of construction materials has prevented it providing accommodation for 38,000 people living in inadequate conditions
* All factories making construction materials have shut down (13 making tiles, 30 concrete, 145 marble and 250 making bricks)
* The construction and maintenance of roads, water and sanitation infrastructure, medical facilities, schools and housing/re-housing projects have largely been on hold.
* Lack of paper and printing materials meant school books were distributed four months late for the 2007-8 school year, Unrwa says, although Israel says it has facilitated access for school supplies and blamed delays on the Palestinian side.

Small amounts of cement and spare parts for specific projects have been allowed in at certain points during the year. After the truce, trucks of cement and gravel began to enter Gaza, as well as shipments of items such as clothes, shoes and refrigerators. Aid agencies said the range and volume of products had increased, but the total volume of goods was only 28% of that entering before the Hamas takeover.

Click here to return

EXPORTS

The closures have devastated the private sector of Gaza's economy. Nothing, apart from a small number of trucks of strawberries and flowers, has been exported since June 2007.

Combined with the lack of raw materials, and agricultural inputs such as fertilisers, this has left approximately 95% of Gaza's industrial facilities closed or operating at minimal levels.

Before the closure, up to about 750 trucks of furniture, food products, textiles and agricultural produce left Gaza each month. This was worth half a million US dollars a day.

By December 2007, 75,000 of Gaza's 110,000 private sector workers had been laid off and 3,500 of its 3,900 factories had closed, according to a UN report.

Some 25,000 tonnes of potatoes and 10,000 tonnes of other crops have perished or been sold at a fraction of their value, it said. Farmers burned and fed to livestock the flowers they could not export for Valentine's Day.

The UN says the economy has suffered "irreversible damage", and that 37% of breadwinners are now unemployed, with on average 8.6 dependants per employed person.

Click here to return

MEDICAL

Medicines have generally been allowed into Gaza, but Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) say the health system is "collapsing" and has suffered a "severe deterioration" under the pressure of shortages of equipment and spare parts, fuel and trained staff.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Gaza health authorities said in April 2008 that 85 urgently needed drugs and 52 lines of medical supplies (items such as swabs) were out of stock. The WHO says that the shortages cannot be directly attributed to the Israeli restrictions, but other humanitarian organisations say the bureaucracy of gaining permission for imports has affected the supply chain.

Aid agencies say medical institutions have been largely unable to import spare parts for equipment. The UN said that by December 2007, the majority of diagnostic equipment, such as X-ray machines and MRI scanners, in municipal facilities was no longer functioning. But Israel says it has never limited access to spare parts for medical equipment and blames any lack of equipment on funding shortages on the Palestinian side.

PHR says the inability to send staff outside Gaza for training is also a problem, giving the example of a new radiotherapy facility that could not be used because there were no trained staff to use it.

Fuel shortages have also affected hospitals, with ambulances running out of fuel at points in early 2008, and back-up generators - needed during power cuts - running low on fuel and lacking spare parts.

Patients in need of urgent medical care are allowed through Erez crossing points, but PHR says the proportion of patients being granted permits dropped from 89% in January 2007 to just over half in June 2008.

Rafah crossing has been closed since June 2007, although special cases are sporadically allowed to pass through it. According to figures from the Israeli rights group Gisha, about 4,600 people in total, including 2,200 pilgrims to Mecca for the Muslim Hajj, have left Gaza through the crossing in a year - compared to about 20,000 people a month when it has previously been open regularly.

PHR says 200 patients died while waiting for permits in the past year. The WHO attributes at least 20 such deaths, in a two-month period, to the fact the patients could not leave the Strip for treatment.

Israel says extensive security screening is necessary, as it says three people with permits to leave for medical reasons have been found to be planning attacks in Israel. It also says it has offered to facilitate passage through Israel to Jordan for Palestinians it refuses permits to on security grounds.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7545636.stm



If someone tried to starve me I'd send some rockets rather than die quietly too. I think most people would.
_________________________
"making the earth a common treasury for all, both rich and poor." Gerrard Winstanley; April 20, 1649

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#1485374 - 01/07/09 12:55 PM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: davidmalmolevine]
benjamin Offline
Ganja God
**

Registered: 01/30/06
Posts: 5748
Loc: Grande Ronde Valley, NE Oregon...
After Israel denied passage of workers IS what boosted unemployment numbers sky high in Phillistine territory. Can`t let men with explosives wrapped around their bodies in. Even Egypt sealed its border with Gaza, prefering to keep the peace with Israel. Murder suicide freaks blew up Israeli tourists in Egypt. They also killed Egyptians. Pretty much anything you say about the occupied territories is consolidated into what the World wants; these attacks on civillians to spread, or be halted? This petty butchery has happened too often in the name of Palestine(Roman occupied Israel) for my comfort. It makes me jittery to think that this mentality could one day unleash devastating ruin to large sectors of civillians. The WMD. I suppose there are other scenarios which could lead to WMD being deployed, but none I know of scares me more than a mad man behind the trigger.

Gibran Tueni was killed today , anti-syrian accuse syria … some pro-syrian lebanese accuse Israel …. some Lebanese accuse usa and some accuse Wahabies (Extremists follower of Ibn taymia)

Lebanon is a Big Mess !!!


Scene of Gibron Tueni`s death.

_________________________
Little Miss Muffet sat on her tuffet, eating her curds and whey.
Along came a spider which sat down beside her and said,"Load a bowl, BBB bitch?!"


Top
#1485380 - 01/07/09 01:14 PM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: benjamin]
davidmalmolevine Offline
Ganja God
***

Registered: 09/17/99
Posts: 21454
Loc: BC
"After Israel denied passage of workers IS what boosted unemployment numbers sky high in Phillistine territory."

So Gaza was the land of milk and honey with low unemployment until Israel shut down the border?

You're making stuff up. Gaza has been poor ever since Israel bombed the harbor:

"An important hindrance to economic development is the lack of a sea harbour. A harbour was built in Gaza city with help from France and the Netherlands, but was regularly bombed by Israel. As a result, any international transports (both trade and aid) have to go through Israel, which are hindered by the imposition of generalized border closures. These also disrupted previously established labor and commodity market relationships between Israel and the Strip. A serious negative social effect of this downturn was the emergence of high unemployment.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaza_Strip


United Press International
08-24-1999
Holland promises to build Gaza Harbor

GAZA, Aug. 24 (UPI) _ Visiting Foreign Minister of the Netherlands
Jozias Van Aartsen says Holland, which is financing construction of the
Gaza Harbor, hopes the project will start soon.

Speaking to reporters today in a joint press conference after meeting
with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, Aartsen said the harbor is of
great importance for both the Palestinians and Holland.

Aartsen who is in Gaza for two days will visit Wednesday the site of
the project that according to an agreement between Israeli and
Palestinian negotiators reached on Monday will be operational October
1.

http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-22914113.html



Gaza harbour after Israeli bombing

http://www.flickr.com/photos/29205195@N02/3112541281/sizes/o/
_________________________
"making the earth a common treasury for all, both rich and poor." Gerrard Winstanley; April 20, 1649

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#1485382 - 01/07/09 01:20 PM Re: Compact fluorescent light bulbs 300 times EPA [Re: davidmalmolevine]
benjamin Offline
Ganja God
**

Registered: 01/30/06
Posts: 5748
Loc: Grande Ronde Valley, NE Oregon...
 Quote:


Registered: 09/17/99
Posts: 17364
Loc: BC "After Israel denied passage of workers IS what boosted unemployment numbers sky high in Phillistine territory."

So Gaza was the land of milk and honey with low unemployment until Israel shut down the border?

You're making stuff up. Gaza has been poor ever since Israel bombed the harbor:

"An important hindrance to economic development is the lack of a sea harbour. A harbour was built in Gaza city with help from France and the Netherlands, but was regularly bombed by Israel. As a result, any international transports (both trade and aid) have to go through Israel, which are hindered by the imposition of generalized border closures. These also disrupted previously established labor and commodity market relationships between Israel and the Strip. A serious negative social effect of this downturn was the emergence of high unemployment.



Attachments
lg_044x.jpg (23 downloads)
Description: See, I am correct. There is no palestine


_________________________
Little Miss Muffet sat on her tuffet, eating her curds and whey.
Along came a spider which sat down beside her and said,"Load a bowl, BBB bitch?!"


Top
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