"The weekend before the 9/11 WTC demolition, all power was shut down to install "computer cables." No one was allowed inside and all security cameras and alarms had no power for 30 hours. Computer cables don't connect with building electricity, so the need to turn off and close both towers to do so is indicative of another motive, like planting charges without alarms and video surveillance. Marvin Bush, brother to President George and Jeb, was a principal in Securacom, which was in charge of security for the World Trade Center. Didn't hear that on the TV news, did you?"
Reproducing the Amazon's black soil could bolster fertility and remove carbon from atmosphere, says Cornell biogeochemist
In a scientific breakthrough that has stunned the world, a team of South African scientists has developed a revolutionary new, highly efficient solar power technology...
Reproducing the Amazon's black soil could bolster fertility and remove carbon from atmosphere, says Cornell biogeochemist
In a scientific breakthrough that has stunned the world, a team of South African scientists has developed a revolutionary new, highly efficient solar power technology...
no subject
Date: Feb. 24th, 2006 02:25 am (UTC)From:steel melts at 1600
when the dug out the hole, weeks later - they found
MOLTEL STEEL - 3000 degrees, 3 weeks later.
-sigh-
and if you watch the buildings collapse - you will see the windows blow out - 10+ floors below the flaming floors.
and then more explosions - about every 10 floors.
as the building collapses.
just like with controlled explosions.
no subject
Date: Feb. 24th, 2006 05:02 am (UTC)From:OTOH, I am perfectly willing to admit that Shrub and his minions may well have know this was going to happen and did nothing to prevent it.
The Amazonian soil info is very cool and may be quite important, and while I can find little about the SA solar breakthrough, this sounds impressively promising and much needed. Given the extreme paucity of data I could find via google, I am a bit suspicious about how large a breakthrough this really is.
{after a bit more googling], I did manage to find one good link that contains some solid data about these new solar cells. If' I'm reading it correctly, being able to produce solar cells half a cheaply as before and clearly with considerably fewer resources is fairly impressive. OTOH, 10% efficiency is fairly lame - 15% is average and 20+% is now good for solar cells. However, if these things can be mass produced cheaply then costs may drop further and so this might be something fairly useful, if not nearly as impressive as the initial article suggests.
no subject
Date: Feb. 24th, 2006 07:48 pm (UTC)From:Sorry state of affairs.