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When Bats Look for Meals Near Wind Power, Bats Die

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Monster Hunter Run Pro – soufiane cherraj

Monster Hunter Run Pro soufiane cherraj Genre: Games Price: $0.99 Release Date: November 7, 2016 © © 2016

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2048 Advance Pro – classic famous puzzle game – JianFeng Yao

2048 Advance Pro – classic famous puzzle game JianFeng Yao Genre: Games Price: $0.99 Release Date: November 7, 2016 © © rrstudio

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Currency Converter Swap – Live Exchange Rates Pro – Q2 Mobile Labs LLC

Currency Converter Swap – Live Exchange Rates Pro Q2 Mobile Labs LLC Genre: Travel Price: $3.99 Release Date: November 7, 2016 © © 2016 Q2 Mobile Labs LLC

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bolita – David Del Olmo

bolita David Del Olmo Genre: Games Price: $0.99 Release Date: November 7, 2016 © © apple

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Angry Clear Pro – Slide The Color Dot – GuoDong Ren

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Shakespeare Insults – Khara Hanlon

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Stickers Bigli Migli – Thanh Duong

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calabacita – David Del Olmo

calabacita David Del Olmo Genre: Games Price: $0.99 Release Date: November 7, 2016 © © apple

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When Bats Look for Meals Near Wind Power, Bats Die

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Bill Mollison, co-originator of permaculture, dies

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Listen Chinese – Learn a new language – Mai Ha Ngoc Nhu

Listen Chinese – Learn a new language Mai Ha Ngoc Nhu Genre: Education Price: $19.99 Release Date: September 30, 2016 © © M2 Dev Team

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Cartagena Tourism Guide – POLIMERA VARALAXMI

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Escape the Adventure Pro – Fireboy Softwares

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Gran Canaria. Road map. AGT Geocentre Genre: Travel Price: $4.99 Release Date: September 30, 2016 © © Berndtson GmbH/AGT Geocenter

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Halloween Monster Masks Photo Sticker Maker – Ha Nguyen

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Bingo World Bash Pro – Play Bingo Games – Ateeq UR Rehman

Bingo World Bash Pro – Play Bingo Games Ateeq UR Rehman Genre: Games Price: $2.99 Release Date: September 30, 2016 © © Ateeq UR Rehman

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Optometry Course & Exam Prep 9200 Flashcards Quiz – Fathia Najar

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Animaru Stickers – Bare Tree Media Inc

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Loan Track Pro- Mortgage Payoff Reminder – Yongqiang Yuan

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Heroes of Heropolis Pro – Vidhi Chauhan

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Bill Mollison, co-originator of permaculture, dies

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Can Future Global Warming Matter Today?

Scientists studying past and current climate conditions mull the challenges in making future warming matter today. Originally posted here:   Can Future Global Warming Matter Today? ; ; ;

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Can Future Global Warming Matter Today?

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He gave them a raise. They gave him a Tesla.

He gave them a raise. They gave him a Tesla.

By on Jul 18, 2016Share

A CEO of a credit card processing company made waves last year by raising the minimum wage at his company to $70,000, and paying for it by cutting his own $1.1 million salary to $70,000.

Gravity Payments CEO Dan Price’s act of generosity was not without its rewards: The feel-good story went viral (reporters from the New York Times and NBC News were on hand when he gave his employees the good news), and Price was widely lauded as the world’s best boss. It was as though Jesus himself had come back to run a credit card processing company — same hair and everything. In the months that followed, Price signed with the talent agency William Morris, inked a half-million dollar book deal, and now charges as much as $20,000 for speaking engagements. (He also lists his house on Airbnb for $950 a night, in case you’re looking for a cheap rental in Seattle.)

Last week, Gravity Payments made news again when Price’s employees rewarded him with a Tesla Model S, worth $70,000. Price wrote on Facebook:

The new car isn’t Price’s only reason to celebrate.

In June, he beat a lawsuit from his brother and co-founder Lucas, who accused Price of overpaying himself in the years before Price lowered his compensation. According to Bloomberg, the suit was not without merit: $1.1 million was exceptionally high for the size and revenue of the company.

Judging from the Tesla, Gravity workers seem not to care. “Yes, he probably could have bought it on his own but he’s always putting us ahead of himself,” marketing director Ryan Pirkle told Grist. “He didn’t have to raise our wages, and we didn’t have to do this. We could have gotten him a bottle of wine or given him a hug, but this is something we wanted to do.”

If his employees waited, they could have gotten him an electric car that’s half as much: The Tesla Model 3. At $35,000, it’s the company’s first entry into manufacturing a car that’s not entirely a status symbol of the rich. Then, they could’ve donated the balance to people who can’t afford Teslas — or even homes.

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He gave them a raise. They gave him a Tesla.

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The Average Presidential Candidate’s House Is Twice as Big as the Average American’s

Mother Jones

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You don’t have to have a big or expensive house to run for the White House, but it is one thing that most of the Republicans and Democrats currently running for president do have in common. The average value of their homes is $5.4 million (or $1.5 million if you factor out Donald Trump.) More stats on the properties the candidates call home (and second home):

Sources: Property records and reported estimates of home values. Price of US house: Census Bureau
Does not include governors’ mansions. Gov. Bobby Jindal’s house is still under construction.

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The Average Presidential Candidate’s House Is Twice as Big as the Average American’s

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Why Bernie Sanders Was Talking About "Fifty Shades of Grey" on "Meet the Press"

Mother Jones

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This wasn’t the way Bernie Sanders expected to conclude the first week of his presidential campaign—comparing a 1972 essay he wrote for the Vermont Freeman to E.L. James’ Fifty Shades of Grey. But the article, first reported in Mother Jones, quickly caught fire because of its description of a woman who “fantasizes being raped,” and by the weekend, Sanders had taken steps to renounce it.

Per Bloomberg:

“This is a piece of fiction that I wrote in 1972, I think,” the Vermont Senator said, appearing on Meet the Press. “That was 43 years ago. It was very poorly written and if you read it, what it was dealing with was gender stereotypes, why some men like to oppress women, why other women like to be submissive, you know, something like Fifty Shades of Grey.”

But if the 1972 essay ruined his media tour, it didn’t do anything to suppress the enthusiasm of the progressive activists Sanders aims to make his base. Sanders spent his first week of the campaign speaking to overflow crowds across the Midwest (3,000 people in Minneapolis) and New Hampshire. And, evidently, he’s turned some heads. Here’s the New York Times:

DES MOINES — A mere 240 people live in the rural northeast Iowa town of Kensett, so when more than 300 crowded into the community center on Saturday night to hear Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, many driving 50 miles, the cellphones of Democratic leaders statewide began to buzz.

Kurt Meyer, the county party chairman who organized the event, sent a text message to Troy Price, the Iowa political director for Hillary Rodham Clinton. Mr. Price called back immediately.

“Objects in your rearview mirror are closer than they appear,” Mr. Meyer said he had told Mr. Price about Mr. Sanders. “Mrs. Clinton had better get out here.”

Clinton’s strategy, to this point, has been to act as if her other prospective Democratic primary opponents don’t exist. Sanders might have just changed that calculus.

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Why Bernie Sanders Was Talking About "Fifty Shades of Grey" on "Meet the Press"

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3 Graphs That End The ‘Food vs. Fuel’ Debate

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3 Graphs That End The ‘Food vs. Fuel’ Debate

Posted 22 October 2013 in

National

Critics of renewable fuel (chiefly the oil industry) love to claim that growing our own fuel means higher food prices for American consumers. They’re dead wrong, and there’s still a lot of misinformation out there regarding the relationship between corn and the price of food in the grocery store. Let’s take a look:

  1. The price of corn is the lowest it’s been in three years, yet food prices have not come down. This year USDA is forecasting a record breaking corn crop in the US – just this week they updated their inventory estimate by an increase of 25%! Accordingly we have reached a three year low drop in corn prices- corn traded this month at$4.41 a bushel compared to the 2012 peak of $8.49.

Source: NASDAQ.com

 

  1. Only 16% of grocery costs can be traced back to farm inputs, like corn or wheat. The rest goes to costs like energy, transportation, packaging, marketing and labor.

Source: USDA.com, foodpolitics.com

 

  1. Oil, not corn, has been driving up global food prices. While the price of corn is one of many, complicated factors that go into grocery costs, researchers at the World Bank identified crude oil as the number one determinant of global food prices. The cost of energy from oil is integral to so much of the 84% we discussed in #2 (above) that when the price of oil goes up, food prices follow closely behind.

The facts could not be more clear: the agricultural inputs that become renewable fuel simply do not have enough influence on food prices to make a meaningful difference. The only way to spare consumers pain at the grocery store is to end our oil dependence and protect policies that promote alternatives, like the Renewable Fuel Standard.

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3 Graphs That End The ‘Food vs. Fuel’ Debate

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Love Your Body – Louise L. Hay

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Love Your Body
Louise L. Hay

Genre: Self-Improvement

Price: $0.99

Publish Date: October 14, 1998

Publisher: Hay House

Seller: Hay House, Inc.


In this wonderful little book, bestselling author Louise L. Hay brings you 54 affirmation treatments designed to help you create a beautiful, healthy, happy body. If you are challenged by a particular part of your body, use the corresponding affirmations daily until you realize positive results.

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Love Your Body – Louise L. Hay

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Nuclear Plants, Old and Uncompetitive, Are Closing Earlier Than Expected

Even reactors still licensed to operate may close, because the price of the electricity they generate doesn’t warrant costly repairs and maintenance. Original article –  Nuclear Plants, Old and Uncompetitive, Are Closing Earlier Than Expected ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: Talking Climate Online With David Roberts of GristTons of Coal, Destination UnknownA Fight Over Coal Exports and the Industry’s Future ;

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Nuclear Plants, Old and Uncompetitive, Are Closing Earlier Than Expected

Posted in Citadel, eco-friendly, FF, G & F, GE, Monterey, ONA, solar, solar power, Uncategorized, wind power | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Nuclear Plants, Old and Uncompetitive, Are Closing Earlier Than Expected