All of the Presidential candidates remain hacks except for Bernie Sanders who remains the shining light.
Yesterday Bernie gave a speech about fracking and there's one thing you know for sure about such a speech: you will never hear it from other candidates who couldn't care less what the earthquakes from fracking mean or how much significance they may have.
Hillary Clinton defends fracking while at the same time saying she will put coal miners out of work due to the shift to alternative fuel sources. Hot tip to the Bubble Babbler: oil products from fracking are not an alternative fuel source.
The Establishment hacks could fade gracefully away but that was never their nature and the different ways they disgrace themselves really isn't that interesting because much of it has nothing to with any real issue beyond the deeply cynical transmogrification of the electoral system such that it means it became the rich man's or rich woman's toy.
Surely people see their rights being stolen but asking people to wake up makes no difference when they would already see it if their eyes were open and such people are not likely to come here anyway.
The interest is high for the Hyperloop in terms if not this then what. OK, there's quite an excellent what and hopefully that gets big, big boosts now. Elon Musk is a five-star genius and it looks like he has this vision well in-hand. We want the future; we have wanted it since watching the rocket launches to the Moon in the sixties and the many NASA launches prior to them. There are many things of the past we do not want to abandon and there must always be a careful balance such that the old things do not overwhelm the new things and the new does not crush the old pointlessly.
When looking at the future and the response for any conditional is no money, can't do it, the future of the world goes up in smoke because people won't think far enough for solutions and immediately bag any potential solution with problems which no-one tries to fix and, in fact, have sometimes been actively exacerbated (e.g. VA, Post Office, etc).
Short-range thinking only extends a problem whereas long-range looks for solutions to it.
Yesterday there was a video of what looked like at least a two-family house made out of bamboo and all the stuff to build houses in distant places. It looked like everyone in the village got underneath these houses which were on some kind of stilts. On the signal, every single one of them lifted and the houses lifted up into the air so then, together, they could move it to another location.
That's the only way the future ever comes. We get together and make it happen. We don't listen to people who say it's impossible because not a small few have vested interests in seeing things fail. Examples above with the VA and the Post Office.
Yesterday Bernie gave a speech about fracking and there's one thing you know for sure about such a speech: you will never hear it from other candidates who couldn't care less what the earthquakes from fracking mean or how much significance they may have.
Hillary Clinton defends fracking while at the same time saying she will put coal miners out of work due to the shift to alternative fuel sources. Hot tip to the Bubble Babbler: oil products from fracking are not an alternative fuel source.
The Establishment hacks could fade gracefully away but that was never their nature and the different ways they disgrace themselves really isn't that interesting because much of it has nothing to with any real issue beyond the deeply cynical transmogrification of the electoral system such that it means it became the rich man's or rich woman's toy.
Surely people see their rights being stolen but asking people to wake up makes no difference when they would already see it if their eyes were open and such people are not likely to come here anyway.
The interest is high for the Hyperloop in terms if not this then what. OK, there's quite an excellent what and hopefully that gets big, big boosts now. Elon Musk is a five-star genius and it looks like he has this vision well in-hand. We want the future; we have wanted it since watching the rocket launches to the Moon in the sixties and the many NASA launches prior to them. There are many things of the past we do not want to abandon and there must always be a careful balance such that the old things do not overwhelm the new things and the new does not crush the old pointlessly.
When looking at the future and the response for any conditional is no money, can't do it, the future of the world goes up in smoke because people won't think far enough for solutions and immediately bag any potential solution with problems which no-one tries to fix and, in fact, have sometimes been actively exacerbated (e.g. VA, Post Office, etc).
Short-range thinking only extends a problem whereas long-range looks for solutions to it.
Yesterday there was a video of what looked like at least a two-family house made out of bamboo and all the stuff to build houses in distant places. It looked like everyone in the village got underneath these houses which were on some kind of stilts. On the signal, every single one of them lifted and the houses lifted up into the air so then, together, they could move it to another location.
That's the only way the future ever comes. We get together and make it happen. We don't listen to people who say it's impossible because not a small few have vested interests in seeing things fail. Examples above with the VA and the Post Office.
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