New Jobs Available in Government:
Moles to find whistle-blowers
Abilities specific to this particular job:
Moles must push information they have excavated from their deep runways into the shallow offices.
Saturday, July 13, 2013
Friday, July 12, 2013
How government works
How government works
Government keeps power in the hands of unaccountable staff.
A staff who ignores the law and doesn't report unlawful conduct to law enforcement.
Government defends staff supremacy to keep the public completely in the dark.
Government keeps power in the hands of unaccountable staff.
A staff who ignores the law and doesn't report unlawful conduct to law enforcement.
Government defends staff supremacy to keep the public completely in the dark.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
The difference between the individual liberty and a government-led social justice.
The difference between the individual liberty and a government-led social justice.
A government-led social justice is a complexity of requirements expanding outward, too big to avoid endangering the public and a collapsing constellation of massive and drifting bureaucracies.
The individual liberty is the act of making choices free from external restraint and outside of governmental control .
A government-led social justice is a complexity of requirements expanding outward, too big to avoid endangering the public and a collapsing constellation of massive and drifting bureaucracies.
The individual liberty is the act of making choices free from external restraint and outside of governmental control .
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Why the Fed will not end its $85 billion-per-month bond-buying.
Why the Fed will not end its $85 billion-per-month bond-buying.
The Fed buys bonds previously sold by the U.S. Treasury to “members of the public” (to some extent to individuals, but mostly to financial firms, in the United States and abroad) and to the central banks of other countries.
The government will need to borrow more, and the U.S. Treasury will need to sell more bonds.
The Fed buys bonds previously sold by the U.S. Treasury to “members of the public” (to some extent to individuals, but mostly to financial firms, in the United States and abroad) and to the central banks of other countries.
The government will need to borrow more, and the U.S. Treasury will need to sell more bonds.
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Why does Wyoming has the smallest share of its population on food stamps — 7% - and registered double-digit year-over-year jump in use?
Population, 2012 estimate 576,412
High school graduate or higher, percent of persons age 25+, 2007-2011 91.9%
Home-ownership rate, 2007-2011 70.5%
Housing units in multi-unit structures, percent, 2007-2011 15.7%
Median household income, 2007-2011 $56,380
Persons below poverty level, percent, 2007-2011 10.1%
Land area in square miles, 2010 97,093.14
Women-owned firms, percent, 2007 25.5%
High school graduate or higher, percent of persons age 25+, 2007-2011 91.9%
Home-ownership rate, 2007-2011 70.5%
Housing units in multi-unit structures, percent, 2007-2011 15.7%
Median household income, 2007-2011 $56,380
Persons below poverty level, percent, 2007-2011 10.1%
Land area in square miles, 2010 97,093.14
Women-owned firms, percent, 2007 25.5%
Monday, July 8, 2013
What is the difference between an average student and a gifted student?
What is the difference between an average student and a gifted student?
An average student will not expect that even if she/he works hard, she/he still won’t do well.
A gifted student knows that if she/he works hard, she/he will do extraordinary well.
Sunday, July 7, 2013
Why a plane crashes on landing
Why a plane crashes on landing:
The landing gear gets stuck.
The plane lands on its belly.
Faulty landing gear
The plane overshot the runway
Landing on heavy wind.
An emergency landing.
Plane skidded past the landing strip.
Trim the plane for maximum glide.
Pilot inexperience and excessive speed.
Landing gear failed to deploy.
The engine stopped working.
Attempting to land during a rainstorm.
Aborted landing.
Attempting landing without gear.
Electronic interference and airplane dysfunction
The best ways to survive a plane crash is to choose the right seat to avoiding smoke inhalation.
A look at real-world crash stats, however, suggests that the farther back you sit, the better your odds of survival. Passengers near the tail of a plane are about 40 percent more likely to survive a crash than those in the first few rows up front.
The landing gear gets stuck.
The plane lands on its belly.
Faulty landing gear
The plane overshot the runway
Landing on heavy wind.
An emergency landing.
Plane skidded past the landing strip.
Trim the plane for maximum glide.
Pilot inexperience and excessive speed.
Landing gear failed to deploy.
The engine stopped working.
Attempting to land during a rainstorm.
Aborted landing.
Attempting landing without gear.
Electronic interference and airplane dysfunction
The best ways to survive a plane crash is to choose the right seat to avoiding smoke inhalation.
A look at real-world crash stats, however, suggests that the farther back you sit, the better your odds of survival. Passengers near the tail of a plane are about 40 percent more likely to survive a crash than those in the first few rows up front.
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