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vbsg Venezuelans in U.S. hopeful of change after Chavez s death
« le: Décembre 11, 2024, 03:22:16 pm »
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 Bigger isn t better in the United States. Bigger is best. We like our value mea stanley cup ls super-sized, our Gulps double big and our millions, well, mega. And what we drive - SUVs, trucks, vans - is certainly a reflection. People love their SUVs,  says Dr. David Cole, Chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich.  And they love them even more when gas is less than $2 a gallon. CEOs from the Big Three American automakers - Ford, General Motors and Chrysler - went before Congress this week asking for big money: $34 billion in emergency loans to save their ailing companies from imminent demise.But a major sticking point for many members of Congress was whether these companies will use the money to build smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles, not necessarily the immediate health of th stanley cup e industry.Cole says talk of manufacturing high-mileage vehicles detracts from the true issue at hand.          The real problem has nothing to do with clean vehicles. It has to do with credit markets,  he says.  It s like if there s an accident and you call an ambulance. You need life support to revive the patient right away,  says Cole about the current financial state of GM, Ford and Chrysler. This  bridge  loan, Cole believes, would  stanley termos provide the necessary, if temporary, life support. American automakers lag behind Japanese companies like Honda and Toyota in mass-producing green vehicles.  The Toyota Prius and Honda Civic Hybrid lead the hybrid market . But perhaps American carmakers ha Xeqt This Tower Of Power Gives You 40 USB Ports For Charging Everything
 Like aliens above, the notion that there   life below the Earth   crust is catnip to conspiracy theorists.     A recent Telegraph article recapped a statement made in 2002 by one Dalla stanley becher s Thompson on Art Bell   Coast to Coast AM radio show. After a devastating car accident, Thompson had a vision of a world that could be entered through a hole near the North Pole. There are cavern systems and caves that traverse the whole mantle, he told Bell. Because of the special atmosphere in the hole, Thompson explained, living creatures were protected from pollutants and harmful rays. There were herds of mammoth and ancient tribes down there, the members of which lived to be around 1,700 years old. Thompson, who made some other curious claims and later mysterio stanley becher usly dropped out of sight  coincidence  , may sound a bit nutty, but he   just one of many believers in the Hollow Earth, a concept that   tied into ancient folklore and religious beliefs  Christian hell, for instance . The idea of a subterranean world inspired classic stories by Jules Verne, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and others. And it   extended to real-world experimentation, too. Just one example: a few years after Verne   Journey to the Center of the Earth was published in 1864, Cyrus Teed founded the Koreshan Unity, a commune devoted to his Cellular Cosmogony th stanley cup eory that turned Hollow Earth inside out, suggesting our planet and sky were actually contained within a