On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 2:24 PM, Cameron Childress wrote:
> Have you seen the Christopher Walken video?
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZLidy7pIQ
>
>
Oh yeahi love that video..dig the song too. So there you goi do
know some Fatboy Slim.
Learn something new every day.
--
Does an
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 3:12 PM, G Money wrote:
> Cept when they played that one song, I could say "Oh, this is that song
> accompanied that stupid 'did you know' video." :)
Have you seen the Christopher Walken video?
http://www.yout
say "Oh, this is that song
accompanied that stupid 'did you know' video." :)
--
Does anyone know where the love of God goes
When the words turn the minutes to hours?
~|
Want to reach the ColdFusion commun
>
> And the music sucked :)
Pish tosh. Fat Boy Slim is the shiz man.
~|
Want to reach the ColdFusion community with something they want? Let them know
on the House of Fusion mailing lists
Archive:
http://www.houseoffusion.co
> China will soon become the Number One English Speaking country in the world
China, while it may soon contain the largest number of English
*speakers* is *not* *not* *not* an "English speaking country". Not
unless they've changed their official policies recently.
High # English speaking popula
Meh...pretty generic...what constitutes an "internet device"? How do you
measure the "computational power of the human brain"? 1 in 2 people have
been at their jobs for less than 5 years? That means that 50% of workers
have been at their job for MORE than 5 yearsthat's a more interesting
stat
>
> I think we are soon to reach a point where it will be impossible for a
> collage degree to be valid for a life time.
You can get a degree in collage? Cut, add paste and stick. Didn't really
think that was degree worthy.
~|
With the ever increasing rate of new information and the increasing life
span of humans.
I think we are soon to reach a point where it will be impossible for a
collage degree to be valid for a life time.
Not to get bogged down in the related debate about learning information
and learning to l
> What are the ramifactions for that though? That the top
> performers of one country, India, can fill entire other
> countries?
That's the point though... what is the actual 75th percentile IQ in India?
Just because they're the top 25% in India doesn't mean much unless you
compare the *quality*
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 2:17 PM, Vivec wrote:
> What are the ramifactions for that though? That the top performers of
> one country, India, can fill entire other countries?
> Why aren't they running the world,are they producing amazing advances
> in medicine and technology that we haven't heard ab
There was a lot more to the video than just that one statistic LOL!
It holds true for most countries in the world as well, India's
population is much larger than that of the UK , so the stat holds true
there.
What are the ramifactions for that though? That the top performers of
one country, India
> On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 1:57 PM, Vivec wrote:
> > The 25% of India's Population with the highest IQs, is greater than
> > the entire population of the United States
>
> Or for that matter saying that the dumbest 25% of India's population
> is larger than the entire population of the United stat
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 1:57 PM, Vivec wrote:
> The 25% of India's Population with the highest IQs, is greater than
> the entire population of the United States
Isn't this the same thing as saying 25% of India's population is
larger than the entire population of the United States?
Or for that ma
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL9Wu2kWwSY
Some interesting facts -
China will soon become the Number One English Speaking country in the world
The 25% of India's Population with the highest IQs, is greater than
the entire population of the United States
The Top Ten In Demand jobs in 2010, did
Yeah i meant to post when I got home and found the name...they clean
just about anything...kinda scary really...
Adam H
On 5/11/05, Tony Weeg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> well peeps.
>
> it was quite simple.
>
> use one of these puppies...
>
> http://www.homemadesimple.com/mrclean/
>
> and
that
compose the bathtub. I scrubbed, bleached, and used CLR on that stuff to no
avail. The magic eraser got rid of it, no problem.
- Matt Small
-Original Message-
From: Tony Weeg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, May 11, 2005 9:47 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Did you know #666 (H
well peeps.
it was quite simple.
use one of these puppies...
http://www.homemadesimple.com/mrclean/
and BLAM... its reduced to nothing more than a faint
discoloring... do not have to paint it, but it will bother me
so i will paint it...
anyway... there you go!
--
tony
Tony Weeg
macromedia
Sam wrote:
> --- Gruss Gott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 1.) Doctor incompetance exists, and
> > 2.) Doctors should be responsible for their screw
> > ups.
>
> And they are even if you cap the award.
No they're not becase all doctors pay for the award, not just the one
who screwed up. This wou
not quite what? Are you saying you have been there too?
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 18:16:43 -0500, Andy Ousterhout
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not quite. But good try.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: dana tierney
>
> hrm. Tort reform is a term used by those who have never been denied
> medica
Depends how she cooks...
-Original Message-
From: dana tierney
It isn't a matter of what the woman is "worth." Presumably her husband
wasn't going to sell her at auction any time soon.
~|
Purchase from House of Fus
Not quite. But good try.
-Original Message-
From: dana tierney
hrm. Tort reform is a term used by those who have never been denied
medical treatment because the other driver's insurance company messed
them around for three years like a good neighbor, my left erm...
armpit. They made
Actually, I agree with you that this should happen. But any victims
should be compensated and sorry, I am against caps on awards.
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 15:58:18 -0700 (PDT), Sam Morris
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Suspend there licence for 6 months. That'll shock them
> more than raising my insuran
Suspend there licence for 6 months. That'll shock them
more than raising my insurance will.
-sm
--- dana tierney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It isn't a matter of what the woman is "worth."
> Presumably her husband
> wasn't going to sell her at auction any time soon.
> If she had small
> childr
--- Gruss Gott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 1.) Doctor incompetance exists, and
> 2.) Doctors should be responsible for their screw
> ups.
And they are even if you cap the award.
> The Bush policy says that:
>
> 1.) There should be no personal responsibility on
> the Doctor's part, and
No it d
Hope he does that well when he gets in office
-Original Message-
From: Tangorre, Michael [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2004 11:10 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: Did you know?
> By the way...the lawyer that represented the man in the flu
> shot law suit wa
In a market economy this is how we ensure quality and demand
responsibility: we make it very expensive to make mistakes.
Especially where life is involved.
Doctors, however, are exempt from the market economy so when society,
via law, tries to send them a message they can shield themselves by
sen
It isn't a matter of what the woman is "worth." Presumably her husband
wasn't going to sell her at auction any time soon. If she had small
children, compensation of actual losses would include hiring child
care for ten or twelve years, plus a housekeeper, plus her salary if
any.
But most of these
> Sam wrote:
> Your personal experience does not a policy make.
The point is that:
1.) Doctor incompetance exists, and
2.) Doctors should be responsible for their screw ups.
The Bush policy says that:
1.) There should be no personal responsibility on the Doctor's part, and
2.) Legitimate suits
Well if the doctor twisted the tubes that'd be a
problem.
Still my life insurance is only one years salary.
Why would that accident make me or you suddenly worth
over $100 million?
-sm
--- dana tierney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't think you can say *what* it is worth. Isn't
> that h
I don't think you can say *what* it is worth. Isn't that his whole
point? These verdicts come about when a jury feels that someone has
been criminally negligeant. If you are ever hospitalized would you not
want to be able to count on the hospital to administer your medication
safely?
> If she did
Your personal experience does not a policy make.
If she did die it would have been by accident, and is
that worth 500 million to her husband?
-sm
--- Gruss Gott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Sam wrote:
> > Average malpractice awards have tripled to $3.5
> > million since 1994, driving medical
dare I say it, perhaps the solution to this lies in the *licensing* process?
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 14:17:59 -0700 (PDT), Sam Morris
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Average malpractice awards have tripled to $3.5
> million since 1994, driving medical liability
> insurance premiums up over 500 percent.
the "not meet FDA standards" argument applied to the drug supply is
eyewash. Pure protectionism.
Dana
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 11:44:56 -0700 (PDT), Sam Morris
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Actually it has to do with tort reform.
>
> To many lawsuits related to the very rare
> complications of vaccin
ubject: Re: Did you know?
> Sam wrote:
> Average malpractice awards have tripled to $3.5
> million since 1994, driving medical liability
> insurance premiums up over 500 percent.
As I understand it, malpractice insurance isn't tied to an individual
doctor. Rather, all doctor
hrm. Tort reform is a term used by those who have never been denied
medical treatment because the other driver's insurance company messed
them around for three years like a good neighbor, my left erm...
armpit. They made no *attempt* to pay me until I hired a lawyer.
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 13:38
A friend of mine is a vascular surgeon and 30% of her expenses are
malpractice insurance.
-Original Message-
From: Sam Morris
Average malpractice awards have tripled to $3.5
million since 1994, driving medical liability
insurance premiums up over 500 percent. In 2001, 12
juries awarded v
thank you Deanna :)
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 13:13:55 -0500, Deanna Schneider
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/flushot.asp
>
> On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 13:01:22 -0500, Andy Ousterhout
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Read all the way to the bottom.
> >
> > How the vacci
They are using figures that only include the direct costs, but not the
indirect costs. They are doing this to product their cronies who fund them.
-Original Message-
From: Gruss Gott
> Andy wrote:
> It is not surprising that
> Kerry and he don't see the need for any tort reform as part
> Sam wrote:
> Average malpractice awards have tripled to $3.5
> million since 1994, driving medical liability
> insurance premiums up over 500 percent.
As I understand it, malpractice insurance isn't tied to an individual
doctor. Rather, all doctors pay for the awards. This means that each
doct
Average malpractice awards have tripled to $3.5
million since 1994, driving medical liability
insurance premiums up over 500 percent. In 2001, 12
juries awarded verdicts over $20 million, including a
$269 million judgment in Texas. The cost of America's
tort system is predicted to go from $200 bill
And the chances are you'll have a safer vaccine. The Ministry of
Health has in many cases stronger standards than the US FDA.
larry
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 11:44:56 -0700 (PDT), Sam Morris
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Actually it has to do with tort reform.
>
> To many lawsuits related to the very
> William wrote:
> is there no end to their uppity-ness?!?
I hate to keep pointing this out, but Strange Brew proved the lengths
Canadians will go to to control the world.
~|
Purchase from House of Fusion, a Macromedia Authorized
> Andy wrote:
> It is not surprising that
> Kerry and he don't see the need for any tort reform as part of an overall
> Healthcare program.
That's not true - they've endorsed tort reform but aren't prioritizing
it since the costs is about %1 of the problem. They're being 80-20
or, in this case, 9
hehe!
I'd be all for that, but it just so happens that hockey is the only
pro sport I actually enjoy watching...
Isn't there some sort of highly radioactive glass parking lot option
we could use to prevent Canadians from pilfering our POE?
:-)
--
will
"If my life weren't funny, it would jus
y" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2004 2:05 PM
Subject: Re: Did you know?
> > You can skip the whole FDA process by going to Canada for a shot.
>
> , but then you might grow a gripping hand as a side effect...
>
> Flapping-head Canadian research bast
> You can skip the whole FDA process by going to Canada for a shot.
, but then you might grow a gripping hand as a side effect...
Flapping-head Canadian research bastards wanting to do their gripping
hand research on unsuspecting Americans who just want to get a
vaccination...
Next thing you
Actually it has to do with tort reform.
To many lawsuits related to the very rare
complications of vaccines. American companies don't
want to take the chance and the British supply didn't
meet FDA standards.
You can skip the whole FDA process by going to Canada
for a shot.
-sm
--- Gruss Gott <[
Why not? If the facts fit, you can't convict.
-Original Message-
From: G
Someone on this list hates when people mention Snopes.com to discredit
incorrect information.so i won't mention Snopes.com on this list.or
the fact that this piece is incorrect in its primary argument, as r
Interesting and not surprising.
However, the real point here is that Edwards is as attached to the
plaintiffs bar as Chaney is to Oil companies. It is not surprising that
Kerry and he don't see the need for any tort reform as part of an overall
Healthcare program.
-Original Message-
From
- Original Message -
From: "Andy Ousterhout" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "CF-Community" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2004 1:01 PM
Subject: Did you know?
> Read all the way to the bottom.
>
> How the vaccine works:
>
> Influenza vacci
> Michael wrote:
> And a rep from the CDC or some other place I forget said that this is not
> the case. The real reason was that the profit margin is just to low.
Exactly. Here's what I heard:
The vaccine must be started 9-12 months before its intended use and
then it cannot be used. That mean
http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/flushot.asp
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 13:01:22 -0500, Andy Ousterhout
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Read all the way to the bottom.
>
> How the vaccine works:
>
> Influenza vaccine is produced by growing the virus in eggs. The virus is
> killed and processed to
And a rep from the CDC or some other place I forget said that this is not
the case. The real reason was that the profit margin is just to low.
> The major pharmaceutical companies in the US provided almost
> 90% of the
> nations flu vaccine at one time. They did this despite a very
> low profit
Andy Ousterhout wrote:
> Read all the way to the bottom.
>
> How the vaccine works:
>
> Influenza vaccine is produced by growing the virus in eggs. The virus is
> killed and processed to create the vaccine, which is given by injection under
> the skin. The body then produces antibodies to the vir
> By the way...the lawyer that represented the man in the flu
> shot law suit was John Edwards.
AWESOME! He was doing his job. Can't fault a man for doing his job!
~|
Sams Teach Yourself Regular Expressions in 10 Minutes by Ben
Read all the way to the bottom.
How the vaccine works:
Influenza vaccine is produced by growing the virus in eggs. The virus is
killed and processed to create the vaccine, which is given by injection under
the skin. The body then produces antibodies to the virus over the next two to
four weeks. I
meow
-Original Message-
From: Kevin Gilchrist [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2001 8:04 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Did you know
* People in 16th-century Peking would take revenge on their enemies by
placing finely chopped tiger whiskers in their food. The whisker
* People in 16th-century Peking would take revenge on their enemies by
placing finely chopped tiger whiskers in their food. The whisker barbs
would get caught in the victim's digestive tract, causing nasty sores and
infections.
~~
Structure your Col
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