[8613] in linux-announce channel archive
Boost your testosterone with Testoril today - more info!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Testoril)
Tue Nov 5 20:37:11 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Testoril" <Testoril@takcitinc.us>
Date: Tue, 5 Nov 2013 17:37:09 -0800
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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!
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e, Maine. Proulx said he once chased Christopher
Knight. Knight, known as the North Pond Hermit, was arrested Thursday,
April 4, 2013, while stealing food from another camp in Rome. Authorities
said he may be responsible for more than 1,000 burglaries. (AP Photo/Robert
F. Bukaty))The Associated PressROME, Maine Cottage owners on a central
Maine lake are expressing relief that a so-called hermit is no longer
at large.Law enforcement officials say 47-year-old Christopher Knight lived
in the woods for 27 years and may be responsible for more
than 1,000 burglaries of food and other items. Authorities arrested Knight
last week after he tripped a surveillance sensor while allegedly stealing
food from a camp for special needs people.Authorities are sorting through
Knight's lair in the woods, but the land's owner is turning away
others who have hiked there to get a look.Among them was Frank
Ten Broeck, a retired New Jersey police official who has a cottage
nearby. Ten Broeck says it's "mind-boggling" that Knight could survive through
Maine's severe winters for so long.
.The bill would still allow the
applicants' children to receive benefits through a designated third party."My
intent was never to harm the children," Nelson said.She said many Texas
employers require pre-employment drug testing and said her bill may help
people find jobs and get off welfare."We're not only going to help
them get off drugs," Nelson said. "We're going to help them get
a job."The Senate is also considering a separate bill that would require
similar screening and drug testing for those who apply for unemployment
benefits. Gov. Rick Perry has expressed support for both drug testing bills."Welfare
should never subsidize the irresponsible choices of otherwise capable people
who instead elect to stay at home, play video games, and get
high with their friends," Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst said.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">In President Obama's push to crack down on the abundance of firearms
in America, proposed gun-control legislation may be having the opposite
effect.Updated FBI statistics show that background checks in the first three
months of the year far outpace the number of checks in early
2012. The stats show that from January through March, gun owners went
through 7 million background checks -- compared with just 4.8 million in
the first three months of last year.The spike in checks, coupled with
mounting anecdotal claims that ammunition is hard to come by, comes amid
concern by gun owners that new proposals at the state and federal
level could limit access to firearms.Though supporters of the legislation
say that is not the case, the assurances haven't stopped what statistics
suggest is a run on weapons. The purchases have picked up ever
since Obama's election in 2008. Since 2009, there have been 71 million
background checks logged in the federal system. The annual number has risen
every year.The recorded checks only apply to sales from licensed dealers.The
most recent spike further adds to the underlying challenge facing lawmakers
-- how do you regulate weapons when there are already 300 million
of them, and rising, in circulation?While some lawmakers have proposed clawing
back currently owned assault-style weapons, most proposed assault-weapons
bans only apply to future purchases. And at the federal level, the
chance of such a ban passing has
it to the now-unfathomable craze that
saw 17th-century Dutch speculators trade spectacular sums of money for a
single flower bulb."It is rare that we get to see a bubble-like
phenomenon trade tick for tick in real time," he said in a
note to clients.One Bitcoin supporter with a unique perspective on the boom
might be Mike Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer based in suburban
Utah. Caldwell is unusual insofar as he mints physical versions of bitcoins
at his residence, cranking out thousands of homemade tokens with codes protected
by tamper-proof holographic seals -- a retro-futuristic kind of prepaid
cash.Caldwell acknowledges that the physical coins were intended as novelty
items, minted for the benefit of people "who had a hard time
grasping a virtual coin."But that hasn't held back business. Caldwell said
he'd minted between 16,000 and 17,000 coins in the year and a
half that he's been in business. Demand is so intense he recently
announced he was accepting clients by invitation only.Some may wonder whether
Caldwell's coins will one day be among the few physical reminders of
an expensive fad that evaporated into the ether -- perhaps the result
of a breakdown in its electronic architecture, or maybe after a crackdown
by government regulators.When asked, Caldwell acknowledged that bitcoin
might be in for a bumpy ride. But he drew the analogy
between the peer-to-peer currency enthusiasts who hope to shake the finance
world in the
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