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SEE the video: Deep sea mineral drastically lowers high blood pressure

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Marine D3)
Wed Jul 31 00:04:21 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2013 21:04:18 -0700
From: "Marine D3" <MarineD3@rfclawkdall.info>

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Blood Pressure Myth Exposed...?

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 rsation about how to get China to 
join the United States in putting pressure on Pyongyang, according to a 
senior administration official who was present. The debate encapsulates 
America's struggle to come up with a strategy   based on 
sticks, carrots or a combination of both    to convince 
China to police its own backyard.As Kerry heads to East Asia for 
his first time as America's top diplomat, some progress has been made 
in convincing Beijing, North Korea's biggest benefactor, to start getting 
tough with its neighbor. The question is whether it will make a 
difference.North Korea's government agency said Thursday that it has "powerful 
striking means" on standby for a launch, amid speculation in Seoul and 
Washington that North Korea will test-fire a mid-range missile designed 
to reach the U.S. territory of Guam in the Pacific Ocean. It 
was the latest warning from the North, which launched a long-range rocket 
in December and conducted an underground nuclear test in February.For years, 
Washington has been putting its hopes in Beijing to rein in the 
provocative behavior and combative rhetoric from North Korea. China has 
more leverage over the North than any other country, having massively boosted 
trade ties with the isolated regime in recent years and maintaining close 
military relations.But the U.S. has been frustrated by the reaction from 
a government that in many ways has different priorities. China, analysts 
and officials often say, f
 l on Sunday.Land invasions are nothing new 
in Venezuela. What's different now is that people are invading valuable 
properties in city centers.All the squatting riles Rosa Contrera, a 57-year-old 
housewife who walked past the invaders, shaking her head. The day before, 
people from the apartment block adjacent to hers attacked the invaders with 
Molotov cocktails."This is what Chavismo has created: people who expect 
handouts," said Contrera, a Capriles supporter. "A country doesn't advance 
with that mentality."The government says Venezuela's poverty rate dropped 
from more than 50 percent to 21 percent under Chavez's leadership, though 
there is still plenty of misery.Lake Valencia has been rising few feet 
a year and swallowed up Antonio Rojas' home last year."We filled out 
all the forms but in the end we didn't get a house," 
said the wiry 67-year-old, who works at a nursery earning the equivalent 
of $17 a day at the official exchange rate and $5 on 
the black market.At a squatter's settlement outside Tacarigua, a town on 
Valencia's southern outskirts built around a sugar cane mill, Rojas and 
his wife share a dirt-floor, aluminum shack with their 7-year-old son, Gregorio. 
The boy doesn't go to school because there are none nearby.They have 
neither water nor sewage service. Dirty dishes are piled on a kitchen 
table. Burned garbage litters the yard.When a reporter visited, the family 
hadn't had power for a week. They siphon it off a nearby 
tr

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> 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
 The White House says President Obama would veto a Republican bill that 
would effectively shut down the National Labor Relations Board until certain 
conditions are met.Republicans have claimed the board is illegitimate since 
an appeals court panel ruled in January that Obama violated the Constitution 
when he bypassed the Senate to fill vacancies on the board.House Republicans 
are expected to vote this week to prevent the board from conducting 
business until the Senate confirms new members constituting a quorum or 
the Supreme Court decides the board has the authority to act. The 
bill isn't expected to gain traction in the Senate.The White House says 
that the bill would hurt the middle class and jeopardize workers' rights. 
The administration argues Obama's appointments were constitutional and valid.
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