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Testoril - Longer lasting and harder erections!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Testoril)
Sat Oct 19 19:04:53 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Testoril" <Testoril@hoareowdrll.us>
Date: Sat, 19 Oct 2013 16:04:50 -0700

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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!

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aid. If one goes offline, 
others fail. Employees don't even have fuses, said Lara. "They have to 
cobble together their own to keep things running.""There's no money to buy 
parts for something that breaks," said Giovanni Rinaldi, a 15-year employee 
at a hydroelectric plant in the eastern city of Ciudad Guayana, which 
he said is plagued by four or five power outages a week 
despite being in the region that generates more than 70 percent of 
Venezuela's electricity.He was fired this week after posting photos on Twitter 
of a state utility company vehicle plastered with Maduro campaign material."We 
had put our own money into keeping those vehicles running because the 
company didn't," Rinaldi, a 40-year-old father of two, said by phone. "It's 
not right."The government hasn't adequately spent to expand and strengthen 
the power grid, critics say.They also blame problems on Cuban, Iranian and 
Uruguayan technicians brought in to run by Chavez to run the system. 
Accidents are up tenfold, and there are places in remote states that 
suffer outages for as long as three to five days, says Lara.Maduro, 
who was sworn in as interim president the day of Chavez's funeral, 
promises better performance but blames the recent surge in outages on sabotage 
by sympathizers of his challenger Sunday, opposition leader Henrique Capriles.The 
government has "militarized" the electric grid and said Tuesday that at 
least 17 alleged saboteurs have been detained but offered n
ess," he said. "Failure to commit to this kind of open 
process is tantamount to an admission that the bill is not workable 
and will not stand up to public scrutiny."Sessions and Lee have been 
among the most skeptical Republican lawmakers when it comes to ongoing efforts 
to draft an immigration overhaul.Those talks have largely been confined 
to the so-called "Gang of Eight," which includes four Democrats and four 
Republicans. A key member of that group is Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., 
who has along with Sessions and others urged Senate Democrats not to 
rush the process.Separately, Sessions and two other Republican senators 
on Wednesday sent a letter to the Republican members of the "Gang 
of Eight" asking for specific details on the projected cost of the 
immigration bill.Though a recent agreement between big labor and big business 
on the issue of temporary worker cards was highly touted, the senators 
have tried to draw attention to what is arguably the bill's most 
controversial component -- the path to citizenship for up to 11 million 
illegal immigrants."A primary concern related to a large-scale legalization 
of illegal immigrants is the long-term cost for taxpayers," the lawmakers 
said in the letter Wednesday. The letter was signed by Sessions, Sen. 
Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan.Voicing concern that 
illegal immigrants who eventually obtain a green card and later citizenship 
would at some point be eligible for a host of 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> smartphone and walked away with the cash."It's something that is 
new," said Fink, 24, who described the deal to The Associated Press 
over Skype. "And it's working."It's transactions like these -- up to 70,000 
of them each day over the past month -- that have propelled 
bitcoins from the world of Internet oddities to the cusp of mainstream 
use, a remarkable breakthrough for a currency that made its online debut 
only four years ago.When they first began pinging across the Internet, bitcoins 
could buy you almost nothing. Now, there's almost nothing that bitcoins 
can't buy. From hard drugs to hard currency, songs to survival gear, 
cars to consumer goods, retailers are rushing to welcome the virtual currency 
whose unofficial symbol is a dollar-like, double-barred B.Advocates describe 
Bitcoin as the foundation stone of a Utopian economy: no borders, no 
change fees, no closing hours, and no one to tell you what 
you can and can't do with your money.Just days ago the total 
value of bitcoins in circulation hit $2 billion, up from a tiny 
fraction of that last year. But late Wednesday, Bitcoin crashed, shedding 
more than 60 percent of its value in the space of a 
few hours before recouping some of its losses. Critics say the roller 
coaster currency movements are just another sign that Bitcoin is a bubble 
waiting to burst.Amid all the hype, Bitcoin's origins are a question mark.The 
mechanics of the virtual currency were first outlined in a research p
 April 10, 2013: A rack of AR-15 rifles stand to be individually 
packaged as workers move a pallet of rifles for shipment at the 
Stag Arms company in New Britain, Conn.APNEW BRITAIN, Conn.  A Connecticut 
gun-maker announced on Wednesday it intends to leave the state, just six 
days after passage of restrictive gun control legislation, while two other 
manufacturers said they are considering relocation offers from other states.Manufacturers 
also plan to lobby the state's congressional delegation next week "to make 
sure they hear from our side," said Mark Malkowski, president of Stag 
Arms in New Britain.Bristol-based PTR said in a statement posted on its 
website that it has not decided where it will move, but has 
commitments from most employees to relocate. The company makes military-style 
rifles and employs more than 40 people. PTR Vice President John McNamara 
said the company expects to make a more formal announcement about a 
move within six weeks."Along with other companies in the trade, we were 
deeply apprehensive at the hurried process to develop new gun laws and 
fearful that it would generate unintended consequences for our industry," 
the company said.With the legislation signed into law by Gov. Dannel P. 
Malloy on April 4, "our worst fears were confirmed," the company said. 
"What emerged was a bill fraught with ambiguous definitions, insufficient 
considerations for the trade, conflicting mandates and disastrous consequences 
for the fu
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