Comment Re:You wanted Socialism? (Score 1) 157
When you're scrabbling in the dirt looking for a rat to eat, remember I warned you, even included Venezuela as an example.
Bon appetit, prole
When you're scrabbling in the dirt looking for a rat to eat, remember I warned you, even included Venezuela as an example.
Bon appetit, prole
If slavery was competitive, the South wouldn't have lost against the North in the Civil War. And slavery would still be everywhere.
Societies have the morality they can afford. Capitalism enables societies to become wealthy, at which point they outlaw the evil of slavery.
People commenting seem to think the story is about preventing aluminum particles from ending up in the atmosphere after a satellite burns. That's wrong. As it says in the article, what's of concern is alumina, or corundum, which doesn't make a lot of sense, given that alumina doesn't react chemically very well, is extremely hard, and has a melting point of 3700 degrees F.
The only thing alumina may harm is the ozone layer, but that's iffy given that scientists detected alumina mixed with other chemicals burning in the exhaust of solid rocket boosters in the stratosphere, but no evidence it was the alumina that was eroding the ozone. It's unlikely that alumina is a problem at all.
"Why are you anti-progress?"
Why are you so quick to judge?
Just because it makes you warm and fuzzy doesn't make it immune to skepticism. It's reasonable to question the efficacy of keeping alumina from the outer atmosphere, although there's no evidence that it's harmful. In fact, it seems unlikely that it would have any impact:
[Alumina]: "These products exhibit the properties for which alumina is well known, including low electric conductivity, resistance to chemical attack, high strength, extreme hardness (9 on the Mohs hardness scale, the highest rating being 10), and high melting point (approximately 2,050 C, or 3,700 F)."
Resistant to chemical attack, extremely hard and it takes 3700 F to melt it (a space shuttle during reentry experienced up to 3000 F). So I don't see the problem here. Whatever alumina ends up in the upper atmosphere will float around, unchanged, until it is eventually rained out.
Keeping CFCs from being released by burning sats might have a positive effect by preventing damage to the ozone layer, but CFCs aren't even mentioned in the article, nor does it seem likely that a wooden satellite would not need CFCs for maneuvering.
As part of the agreement, Mr. Obama announced that the United States would emit 26 percent to 28 percent less carbon in 2025 than it did in 2005. That is double the pace of reduction it targeted for the period from 2005 to 2020.
China’s pledge to reach peak carbon emissions by 2030, if not sooner, is even more remarkable. To reach that goal, Mr. Xi pledged that so-called clean energy sources, like solar power and windmills, would account for 20 percent of China’s total energy production by 2030.
This is a good deal?! China already pumps out 25% of the world's CO2 compared to the US's 16%.
A fair deal would have had China pledging to reduce their emissions, not continue raising them!
Probably that cardshark Obama tried his "don't call my bluff!" threat again. That would explain it.
MS-DOS no longer exists in Windows. I don't think it was compatible with the NT kernel. The "Command Prompt" is confusingly similar though, but I don't think they share code.
Never buy from a rich salesman. -- Goldenstern