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• #27077
wac
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• #27079
It could come in quite low thus avoiding the radar?
Nothing should be anywhere near an airfield without them knowing about it.
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• #27081
"It found that while only 27 per cent of older drivers noticed a cyclist in black clothing with no lights riding in the dark, 100 per cent of younger drivers spotted a rider in a bright vest with ankle and knee reflectives, whether or not they had a light."
Presumably the conclusion from this is that old people shouldn't be allowed to drive at night?
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• #27082
define old
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• #27083
Fucking hell, NSA had cracked Google's internal network
It looks more like this was a man-in-the-middle attack, exploiting an external link between servers.
Elsewhere, Google has been giving up internal data to the NSA of it's own free will.
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• #27084
"It found that while only 27 per cent of older drivers noticed a cyclist in black clothing with no lights riding in the dark, 100 per cent of younger drivers spotted a rider in a bright vest with ankle and knee reflectives, whether or not they had a light."
How is this even a comparison? WTF!
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• #27085
just... horrible. worse than kony.
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• #27086
“We’ve started going to Waitrose in Finchley Road because of this – it would be great if there was a place like that in central Hampstead.”
OH THE HUMANITY
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• #27087
Rob Ford: police unearth Toronto mayor's alleged crack smoking video
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/31/rob-ford-toronto-crack-video-found-police
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• #27088
Going to play devil's advocate here, but might there be a valid point about Tescos selling, and encouraging the consumption of, nasty unhealthy food, perpetuating the bad diets of it's often uneducated customers? I mean uneducated specifically in terms of cooking, and a healthy diet. The silly cow complaining about her porridge or whatever and sparking a class whore might be overshadowing a genuine issue.
On the other hand, I avoid organic food because I think it's a scam.
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• #27089
sparking a class whore
...now that could get expensive.
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• #27090
it's often uneducated customers?
unforgivable apostrophe crime
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• #27091
Where's the crime?
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• #27092
Wow another tooth and claw debate, great stuff guy's
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• #27093
Guardian online >>>>>>>>>>!>>
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• #27094
FAA/TSA smartphone/tablet/e-reader/device BULLSH*T! - YouTube
You won't need to turn your gadgets off anymore when flying. -
• #27095
Going to play devil's advocate here, but might there be a valid point about Tescos selling, and encouraging the consumption of, nasty unhealthy food, perpetuating the bad diets of it's often uneducated customers? I mean uneducated specifically in terms of cooking, and a healthy diet. The silly cow complaining about her porridge or whatever and sparking a class whore might be overshadowing a genuine issue.
On the other hand, I avoid organic food because I think it's a scam.
Not bothered about organic but I did kick off in the Highgate store over the lack of English butter.
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• #27096
EBL member?
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• #27097
I blame the French for many things but flooding our shelves with NZ butter is probably their second biggest crime.
After being French.
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• #27098
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• #27099
Where's the crime?
While an apostrophe often signals ownership, for "it's", it only ever means a contraction of "it is" or "it has". "It" can not own something so the apostrophe is not correct. The sentence reads as [I]it is often uneducated customers.[/I]
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• #27100
The Hermes $11,000 bicycle.
http://www.bloomberg.com/video/what-makes-the-new-hermes-bike-worth-11-200-hHH4BRv~SwGZhj3o8MS~MA.html
Labour MP who called cyclists 'law-breakers' busted for running a red
http://www.bikebiz.com/news/read/labour-mp-who-called-cyclists-law-breakers-busted-for-running-a-red/015603