Higgenbotham wrote:3D Printing Promises to Revolutionize Defense, Aerospace Industries
March 2014
Additive manufacturing has also made a big splash in the area of tooling, Dietrich said. Using 3D printing, engineers in assembly factories can print out customized tools that help with the manufacturing of complex items, he said.
http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/ ... tries.aspx
1/3 of there customer base will die before age 40 some allude to, anyways...
http://aqicn.org/city/beijing/
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/indi ... indid=2073
The Soviets were about to hand over a prototype bomb when Mao’s saber rattling over Taiwan spooked them. As Mao prepared to invade Quemoy (Jinmen) and Matsu (Mazu) in September 1958, Khrushchev advised caution. Mao was deeply offended, in part because he no longer respected Soviet military advice.[36] So it was that when Khrushchev pointedly reminded him that America possessed nuclear weapons, Mao airily dismissed the possibility of mass casualties. “So what if we lose 300 million people,” the Great Helmsman told a stunned Khrushchev. “Our women will make it up in a generation.”
Not surprisingly, in June 1959, Khrushchev unilaterally abrogated the agreement that was to have provided China with an atomic weapon.[37] Mao was furious. In September of that year he angrily denounced Soviet meddling in Chinese affairs, telling members of the Military Affairs Commission, “It is absolutely impermissible to go behind the back of our fatherland to collude with a foreign country.”[38] The Soviets were “revisionists,” China was soon telling the world, and a greater threat than American “imperialism.” In going his own way, Mao was now less a part of an international revolutionary movement than the reawakening Hegemon slowly exerting control over ever wider territory.
Like I remember here when the river was dead in the late sixtys.
Later over 800,000 gallons of sludge - diluted abrasive oil was leaked into it from telemetry phone tag
retards which we warned was a disaster waiting for a head line as "cost savings".
Gee I guess write senator x two decades removed from whatever reality.
http://www.freep.com/article/20131211/N ... bridge-oil
We already seen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubbly_Creek bubbly creek and last time I checked the north and south canals to connect the main rivers
was still moving forward over there updated here ---
http://www.forbes.com/sites/ywang/2014/ ... n-project/
Epic disasters still wanting to increase the amount of crude oil running through Line 5 by 1.2 million gallons of oil a day.
http://www.joycefdn.org/sunken-hazard-a ... -mackinac/
Is it safe?, just buy a expert to says it is.
They want to use ships from st ignace to chicago also.
The issue is the age of the pipe and get it the hell out of the drinking water.
Thousands of miles away in a swamp they proclaim it is safe just as 100 trillion unfunded liability is also.
Educated ......
water wheat weather and I think Nixon is still a post war MIC idiot... When you are not left, or right you are seeing what is as no man status
as we the people.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-1 ... using-2006
There is no painless monetary fix that will shift the allocation of capital toward productive investment and away from distortive speculation.
[36] Indeed, just two months before he had told a meeting of the Military Affairs Commission that Chinese military theory and experience (which is to say, Mao’s own) were superior to those of the Soviets.
[37] Talbot, 269.
[38] Mao, “Speech at the Enlarged Session of the Military Affairs Committee and the External Affairs Conference,” 11 September 1959, Schram, Chairman Mao Talks, 151.
[39] At the Tenth Plenum of the Central Committee in 1962, Mao recalled his escalating troubles with Soviet leaders: “In 1958 Khrushchev wanted to set up a Soviet-Chinese combined fleet in order to seal us off [from attacking the offshore islands held by Taiwan]. At the time of the border dispute with India, he supported Nehru. At the dinner on our National Day he attacked us. . . . Today . . . we are called ‘adventurists, nationalists, dogmatists.’ ” Mao’s speech became public knowledge in the West only after it was published in 1969. Laszlo Ladany, The Communist Party of China and Marxism: A Self-Portrait, 1921–1985 (Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1988), 267–68. Added to these insults was a real injury: Khrushchev’s suspension of all technical assistance to China. Perhaps because Mao did not want to appear the supplicant, he did not mention that in 1960 Soviet engineers and technicians in China had rolled up their blueprints and returned home, cutting China off from its only source of modern technology.