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CBS News Investigative Unit s Kim Lengle wrote this story for CBSNews. This bill will, in my judgment, raise the likelihood of
stanley ca future massive taxpayer bailouts. hellip;if you want to gamble, go to Las Vegas. If you want to trade in derivatives, God bless you. That was North Dakota Senator Byron Dorgan s statement on the floor of the Senate - not this week or last, or even during the last six months as Wall Street collapsed - but back in 1999. Four years later in a letter to shareholders, billionaire investor Warren Buffett followed with his own warning, calling derivative
stanley canada s weapons of financial mass destruction controlled by madmen. While financial experts were concerned with the housing bubble and mortgage-backed securities, Dorgan and Buffett were focused on what many now believe may be the next big shoe to drop - the credit derivatives market, better known as credit default swaps. What worries financial insiders most is the $54.6 trillion of risky credit derivatives concentrated among the few banks left standing. Credit default swaps CDS are the cornerstone of the credit derivatives market accounting for more than 98 percent of all credit derivatives. They are difficult to understand, ignored by regulators and poorly reported on balance sheets.
stanley cup In simplest terms, CDS are insurance policies on things like bonds, loans and corporate debt. But there are two big differences: the seller of a CDS doesn t need to have the money to cover losses if the securi Sxrr The Only Place to Eat After the Apocalypse
Without synapses, your neurons wouldn ;t be able to communicate and your brain would be little more than a ball of meat. Exactly what synapses look like has been a my
stanley thermos mug stery until now, and it turns out that even though their job is simple, they ;re complicated as hell. You have trillions of synapses in your brain, and when you zoom in, each one is an insanely complex miracle of nature. A tiny biological switch with so much nuance it mind-boggling. Using a number of techniques like Western blot, mass spectrometry, electron microscopy, and super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, German researchers were able to get a close look inside, and recently published their findings in Science. What you see is a party of some 300,000 different proteins all hanging out in and on a single synapse. And there are trillions of those parties raging in your brain right now. The specifics of what they all are doing is, of course, super complicated, but even someone with half a brain can appreciate how insanely complex our bodies really are. So exercis
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stanley vattenflaska ur synapses by pondering that. You can hop over to National Geographic to see a whole insane video tour. [National Geographic via It OK to be Smart]
http://phenomena.nationalgeographic/2014/05/29/now-this-is-a-synapse/ Science