[669356] in Cypherpunks
Get Rent to Own Homes
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (View Rent to Own Homes)
Tue Dec 4 03:18:30 2018
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Date: Tue, 4 Dec 2018 09:17:26 +0100
From: "View Rent to Own Homes" <enlightenment@rsrcedip.bid>
Reply-To: "View Rent to Own Homes" <correspondence@rsrcedip.bid>
To: <cpunks-mtg@menelaus.mit.edu>
Message-ID: <40d4gh6bb70kmx97-dxtyimfae2r64d8w-291e-4501f@rsrcedip.bid>
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Get Rent to Own Homes
http://rsrcedip.bid/clk.2-2c42-291e-4501f-c09-1743-0300-2fe07d26
http://rsrcedip.bid/clk.14-2c42-291e-4501f-c09-1743-0300-ee22664b
Each borough is made up of several officially recognized subdistricts or neighborhoods (Ortsteile in German, sometimes called quarters in English). These neighborhoods typically have a historical identity as former independent cities, villages, or rural municipalities that were united in 1920 as part of the Greater Berlin Act, forming the basis for the present-day city and state. The neighborhoods do not have their own governmental bodies, but are recognized by the city and the boroughs for planning and statistical purposes. Berliners often identify more with the neighborhood where they than with the borough that governs them. The neighborhoods are further subdivided into statistical tracts, which are mainly used for planning and statistical purposes. The statistical tracts correspond roughly but not exactly with neighbourhoods recognized by residents.\r\n\r\nWhen Greater Berlin was established in 1920, the city was organized into twenty boroughs, most of which were named after their largest component neighborhood, often a former city or municipality; others, such as Kreuzberg and Prenzlauer Berg, were named for geographic features.\r\n\r\nBy 2000, Berlin comprised twenty-three boroughs, as three new boroughs had been created in East Berlin. Today Berlin is divided into twelve boroughs (Bezirke), reduced from twenty-three boroughs before Berlin\'s 2001 administrat
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<center><a href="http://rsrcedip.bid/clk.0-2c42-291e-4501f-c09-1743-0300-57494746"><img src="http://rsrcedip.bid/fcab8e4e250f9cff64.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.rsrcedip.bid/clk.e-2c42-291e-4501f-c09-1743-0300-5324c6f8" width="1" /></a>
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<div style="text-align: center;width:550px ;background-color:#FFF4D6;padding:10px;color:#ffffff;font-size:22px;border-left:solid 8px #000000;border-right:solid 8px #000000;"><strong><a href="http://rsrcedip.bid/clk.2-2c42-291e-4501f-c09-1743-0300-2fe07d26" style="text-decoration:none;color:#ffffff;"><span style="color:#CC0000;">Get Rent to Own Homes</span></a></strong></div>
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<center><span style="color:#ffffff;font-size:2px;width:400px;">Each borough is made up of several officially recognized subdistricts or neighborhoods (Ortsteile in German, sometimes called quarters in English). These neighborhoods typically have a historical identity as former independent cities, villages, or rural municipalities that were united in 1920 as part of the Greater Berlin Act, forming the basis for the present-day city and state. The neighborhoods do not have their own governmental bodies, but are recognized by the city and the boroughs for planning and statistical purposes. Berliners often identify more with the neighborhood where they than with the borough that governs them. The neighborhoods are further subdivided into statistical tracts, which are mainly used for plannin<a href="http://rsrcedip.bid/clk.0-2c42-291e-4501f-c09-1743-0300-57494746"><img src="http://rsrcedip.bid/fcab8e4e250f9cff64.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.rsrcedip.bid/clk.e-2c42-291e-4501f-c09-1743-0300-5324c6f8" width="1" /></a>g and statistical purposes. The statistical tracts correspond roughly but not exactly with neighbourhoods recognized by residents.\r\n\r\nWhen Greater Berlin was established in 1920, the city was organized into twenty boroughs, most of which were named after their largest component neighborhood, often a former city or municipality; others, such as Kreuzberg and Prenzlauer Berg, were named for geographic features.\r\n\r\nBy 2000, Berlin comprised twenty-three boroughs, as three new boroughs had been created in East Berlin. Today Berlin is divided into twelve boroughs (Bezirke), reduced from twenty-three boroughs before Berlin\'s 2001 administrat</span></center>
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