Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Jeramy Hammond... I would rather die by a bullet NOW than to starve my soul forever

 "The bank of justice is not bankrupt"









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TODAY's New LINKS:
Hot Neptunes: http://iopscience.iop.org/0004-637X/7...
TRMM: http://trmm.gsfc.nasa.gov
Bruce Gary on ISON: http://www.brucegary.net/ISON/

Background:
How to Watch the Sun: Spaceweather 101 - http://youtu.be/ld5ecZuHECA
Ice Age Soon? http://youtu.be/UuYTcnN7TQk
An Unlikely but Relevant Risk - The Solar Killshot: http://youtu.be/X0KJ_dxp170









2minews......is cannot find enough living to manage the site?



A Thousand Li of Rivers and Mountains
A Thousand Li of Rivers and Mountains (千里江山)





wrc

South Africa, Top GMO-Producer in Africa
22 October 2013
Nono, an elderly maize farmer in Qunu, South Africa, pours maize into a bucket. Much of the maize in the country is now genetically modified. (Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images) - South Africa’s government is increasingly opening the door to genetically modified organisms (GMOs), along with the issues that arise as GMOs sweepingly change the country’s agriculture industry.

Many African nations are wary of welcoming GMOs. South Africa, however, is now the world’s eighth-largest GMO producer, with 2.9 million hectares (4.9 million acres) of GM maize, soybeans, and cotton grown in 2012.

One of the major problems South Africa has encountered is the increasing resistance of pests to the GM crops. A misuse of the technology is to blame, say some researchers. Pests have been a big problem in South Africa for decades, and GM crops, when first introduced, were seen by many as a new and much-needed solution to the problem.



 Deadly Frankenchicken, Justice for Maryville Rape, A World Without Sand






I bought a sharpie. Warning must be 18!!




ohps

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This is Amerika man. We strive hard to do things as inefficiently as possible around here.





Shit!  let's get a defibrillator, I know CPR, we could kill him ten more times, maybe he could stand in for some of our more illustrious leaders, perhaps....am I right? Or getting left down the rabbit hole again.

 note to self........stop chasing wite wabbets, housenfeffers..kosmic




Oh canaDUH? fucking hosers








Gitmo military tribunal: A look from within






German Backed Austerity Regime Inequality Across EU and At Home.......la monde, der speigel.............et-to bruta?







me


"Poverty is the parent of revolution and crime."


There are people in the world so hungry, that God cannot appear to them except in the form of bread."Mahatma Gandhi

  
"We are not rich by what we possess but by what we can do without." -  Immanuel Kant


"Poverty is the parent of revolution and crime." Aristotle


















Who's More Productive, Introverts Or Extroverts?

Yes. Everyone's a little introverted. Everyone's a little extroverted. And everyone can work better by embracing both qualities.

"There is no such thing as a pure introvert or extrovert," observed Carl Jung, the psychologist who popularized the terms. "Such a person would be in the lunatic asylum."
That may be true, but if you work with, are friends with, or are in a relationship with someone on the complementary (read: opposite) side of the introvert-extrovert spectrum, we can also feel as if they belong in the insane asylum.


IF I.........did not know any better I would swear this rabbit taste like chicken



Hossenfeffers they are, the lot....live with it or die living with it.........some choice. hey, free country rite? well, at least, on paper...solient green is around the corner
















Why? Because we're constantly projecting our experience upon others, imagining that they take in the world in the same way that we do--which is why, curiously, we tend to hire people who are just like us. So if we're going to really relate with the other -verts, we need to understand their axis.

Versions, intro- and extro-

As Belle Beth Cooper noted on Buffer (in a post we also published), introversion and extroversion don't fit our assumptions:

  • Extroversion is how outgoing you are.
  • Introversion is how shy you are.
Instead, she notes, your introversion-extroversion depends on where you get your energy:
  • Introverts (or those of us with introverted tendencies) tend to recharge by spending time alone. They lose energy from being around people for long periods of time, particularly large crowds.
  • Extroverts, on the other hand, gain energy from other people. Extroverts actually find their energy is sapped when they spend too much time alone. They recharge by being social.
Yet people aren't binary (isn't that confusing?!). Instead, we run along gradients. In the same way the Kinsey scale suggests that most people's sexuality lies along a spectrum, most of us are ambiverts.

















Where you get your sensitivity--and productivity

As Susan Cain notes in Quiet, if you squeeze a lemon on the tongue of an introvert, he or she will salivate more than an extrovert would.
Since introverts are more sensitive to stimuli, they don't need to gather stimulation with the same fervor as extroverts. Too much stimuli--especially of the social variety--will leave them feeling drained of energy and ultimately unproductive.
As we've noted again and again, managing your productivity is really a matter of managing your energy levels, so figuring out your introversion-extroversion orientation lends specifics to the oft ambiguous art of the recharge.

Introversion, extroversion, and collaboration

As Kellogg professor Leigh Thompson argues in Creative Conspiracy, collaboration--that is, the idea-blooming, strategy-begetting kind--springs from a rhythm of individual and solo work.
So to have a more literate conversation about introversion and extroversion and how they relate to collaboration and productivity, we need to know how best to work with either. Similarly, we need to recognize that everybody has tendencies of introversion and extroversion, so we can take care of both in ourselves, too.
If we're on the introverted side, we can:
  • Give space: We should carve out negative space between meetings to recharge our social batteries.
  • Create focus: Similarly, we should sculpt the opportunities to put our heads down and dive deep into complex problems--and bring the solutions back to the team.
  • Attune: As Dan Pink notes in To Sell Is Human, introverts are great at attuning to another person in a one-on-one situation, which shows that introverts can have super high social intelligence.
And when we're feeling extroverted, we can:
  • Embrace the busy: The more extroverted among us crave high levels of stimulation, so let them go after it--even if it means their schedules will be packed.
  • Compliment extroverts: Extroverts love being social; they love to be validated socially even more. So give 'em the praise (that would embarrass an introvert).
  • Explore: As Steve Jobs argued long ago, the more experiences you've had, the more ideas you have to draw from in life, catalyzing your creativity.






















by Jonathan Rashad
[Residents of al-Manial march from Salahuddien Mosque with the coffins of people killed in the clashes. 6 July 2013. Photo by Jonathan Rashad] [Residents of al-Manial march from Salahuddien Mosque with the coffins of people killed in the clashes. 6 July 2013. Photo by Jonathan Rashad]
Hundreds of people, including supporters of deposed president Mohamed Morsi and residents of Cairo's al-Manial district, clashed for hours on al-Gamaa bridge on the night of 5 July 2013, using rocks, sticks, and guns. The chaotic scene started around 10 p.m., as Morsi's supporters were returning from a march nearby Tahrir Square. The violence dragged on for hours, as victims were being carried away to the hospital every few minutes, and as the terrifying sound of gunfire echoed through the streets. Twelve of al-Manial’s residents died in the clashes.
Their anger and agony was still visible the next day, when I went back to cover the funerals of al-Manial residents. Friends and relatives of the victims said they were willing to retaliate.


The events leave us all wondering: What should be done to stop the bloodshed?








I would rather die by a bullet than to starve









a red flag is when the nsa trys to remove content indirectly.......but still allowing some of your filtered feeds to keep you on the site,  that way 'they' know where you are, at all times, and what gets fed into your brain at any particular moment........and this can be visual-audio-newsprint-billboards-radio, anything to pollute your mental environment, the main objective is to keep you personally distracted to the atrocity committed under the federal governments 'tax umbrella.i.e. slave population' oblivious to what the fuck we (let 'them') really finance.......... certain not to build a bridge here, some of us are getting it.......exponentially! While you dance with the stars rome burns.  spank you very much....kos


The red kochena




Comet ISON Observations by Two Amateur Observers



R. Frost tomb:   I had a lovers quarrel with the world






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