The Elephants are Still Thirsty
by Run 75411 The Elephants are Still Thirsty In my earlier post on Carrying Water for Elephants I explained how the $716 billion in planned reductions to Medicare was calculated,…
by Run 75411 The Elephants are Still Thirsty In my earlier post on Carrying Water for Elephants I explained how the $716 billion in planned reductions to Medicare was calculated,…
…I will explain then much later provide evidence. It is agreed by all salt water economists that the Fed can normally stimulate demand in the short run by causing a…
…Paul are carrying water for the big banks–suggesting that Treasury shouldn’t be implementing the “FATCA” legislation passed as part of the HIRE act because it might cost the big banks…
…“drowning” in risk or losses. We of the 99% are lacking in the substance that reduces risk. One can certainly drown from too much water, but the natural risk in…
…copy). The most interesting part so far: the authors only considered the documented costs of air pollution—not land, not water—in deriving the (embarrassingly negative) ROI figures for coal and oil….
…days, so helped spur reflection on neighbors, basic water needs and food stuffs, and in some cases emergencies (not our area). Still, fire and ambulance vehicle access was blocked because…
…Personally, I feel this new info just further supports my position that people are not drowning (debt is not money and thus not water), they are dehydrating. We need more…
…a current of water. The human running looks like bouncing off the bottom and not like sliding along the bottom (like an octopus) or swimming through the water (like an…
…like the water through a hydroelectric dam – it generates electricity whether that electricity is used or not. 3. There are two great domains of human wealth – story, and…
…Have reduced the cost of water purification to about $0.01/liter—a “dime a day” to provide clean water for a family of four. What should all the leaders of countries be…