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flytyer57

Fishing Buddy
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Everything posted by flytyer57

  1. I've seen a few smaller fish try to jump (swim) up the falls but I didn't have a decent camera with me at the time.
  2. Ever hear the expression; "It's in the mail." ???
  3. The lake is about 11 feet below the top of power pool. Sure they're already getting flack from the marinas and dock owners. They're supposed to turn on a unit two times today, morning and evening for an hour each.
  4. Olympus Stylus Tough 8010 Aperture-f/3.9 Shutter Speed-1/250sec. ISO-80 Expoure Bias-0 Focal Length-5mm (28mm using 35mm equivalant) Auto stitched by in camera software
  5. Cannon EOS Rebel T2i Aperture-F/36 Shutter Speed-1.6sec. ISO-100 Focal Length-48mm Exposure Bias-0 With cirular polarizer filter
  6. I took this pic at Dry Run Creek just below Norfork Dam earlier today.
  7. flytyer57

    Super Bowl

    GO STEELERS!!!!!!!
  8. I've heard them in the past. Every now and then they pop up on YouTube and just for chuckles, I'll listen.
  9. Oh trust me, I learned a looooooonnnnnnnnnng time ago to do just that. Really bothers me to hear their talking points here cuz I know the crap that those two spew.
  10. They are enough to steam up the Sahara on a HOT summer day.
  11. U.S. Imports 92% of Uranium for Nuclear Power U.S. Forecasts 42% Jump in LNG Imports in 2010, Says Supply May Go Higher
  12. How do you know there aren't tankers lined up with your Rushbeckian talking points? More than 160 tankers laden with Iraq oil Iraq starts exporting Kurdish oil There's a lot more of this out there, but I think it's time you starterd doing your own homework instead of listening to Beck and Limbaugh for all your info.
  13. Now just follow along. I know that's kind of hard for some of you...
  14. But animals do talk. Just because humans can't understand what they are saying...
  15. junkscience.com- Steven J. Milloy is a commentator for Fox News and runs the Web site junkscience.com, which is dedicated to debunking what Milloy labels "faulty scientific data and analysis." On Fox News Channel he is billed as a "Junk Science commentator." He is a self-described libertarian, in the American sense of the term. Among the topics Milloy has addressed are what he believes to be false claims regarding DDT, global warming, Alar, breast implants, secondhand smoke, ozone depletion, and mad cow disease. Milloy also runs CSRWatch.com, which monitors and criticizes the corporate social responsibility movement. From the 1990s until the end of 2005, he was an adjunct scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute, which hosted the JunkScience.com site. He is currently an adjunct scholar at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. Milloy is head of the Free Enterprise Action Fund, a mutual fund he runs with former tobacco executive Tom Borelli. He also operates the Advancement of Sound Science Center, a non-profit organization which is critical of environmental science, from his home in Potomac, Maryland. Milloy has authored four books. Milloy's close financial and organizational ties to tobacco and oil companies have been the subject of criticism from a number of sources, as Milloy has consistently criticized the science linking secondhand smoke to health risks and human activity to global warming.
  16. Turkmenistan Afghanistan Pakistan India- pipe line. Look it up.
  17. Syun-ichi Akasofu- Not much found on this guy except the University of Alaska. Tim Ball- Dr. Timothy Ball is Chairman and Chair of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the Natural Resources Stewardship Project (NRSP).[1] Two of the three directors of the NRSP - Timothy Egan and Julio Lagos - are executives with the PR and lobbying company, the High Park Group (HPG).[2] Both HPG and Egan and Lagos work for energy industry clients and companies on energy policy.[3] Ball is a Canadian climate change skeptic and was previously a "scientific advisor" to the oil industry-backed organization, Friends of Science.[4] Ball is a member of the Board of Research Advisors of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, a Canadian free-market think tank which is predominantly funded by foundations and corporations. Ian Clark- Clark and the NRSP- Clark sits on the "scientific advisory board" of a Canadian group called the "Natural Resource Stewardship Project," (NRSP) a lobby organization that refuses to disclose its funding sources. The NRSP is led by executive director Tom Harris and Dr. Tim Ball. An October 16, 2006 CanWest Global news article on who funds the NRSP, it states that "a confidentiality agreement doesn't allow him [Tom Harris] to say whether energy companies are funding his group." Recently, DeSmog has discovered that the NRSP is controlled by energy industry lobbyists. Patrick J Mickaels- Michaels' firm does not disclose who its clients are, but leaked documents have revealed that several were power utilities which operate coal power stations. On a 2007 academic CV, Michaels disclosed that prior to creating his firm he had received funding from the Edison Electric Institute and the Western Fuels Association. He has also been a frequent speaker with leading coal and energy companies as well as coal and other industry lobby groups. Nir Shaviv- Shaviv is a climate change skeptic and was a speaker at the International Conference on Climate Change (2009) hosted by the conservative think tank, the Heartland Institute. Fredereick Singer-Affiliations1989- Director and President, Science and Environmental Policy Project, a foundation-funded, independent research group, incorporated in 1992, to advance environment and health policies through sound science. SEPP is a non-profit, education organization. 1993- Member of the board of the International Center for a Scientific Ecology. 1994- Distinguished Research Professor, Institute for Humane Studies at George Mason University, Fairfax, VA. 2002 Advisory Board Member, American Council on Science and Health Editorial Advisory Board, The Cato Institute Adjunct Scholar, National Center for Policy Analysis Adjunct Fellow, Frontiers of Freedom 2006- Member of the Science Advisory Committee for the Natural Resources Stewardship Project. It should be noted that, according to the Environmental Defense Fund, October 26, 2006[6] The Cato Institute received $55,000 from ExxonMobil in 2002-2003. The National Center for Policy Analysis received $105,000 from ExxonMobil in 2002-2003. The Frontiers of Freedom organizations received $282,000 from ExxonMobil in 2002-2003. The American Council on Science and Health received $35,000 from ExxonMobil in 2002-2003 Oil Industry Contractor In a September 24, 1993, sworn affidavit, Dr. Singer stated that he had two meetings with Robert Balling in Pheonix for which his expenses were re-imbursed. Singer believed the the funding, which he received from Balling, originated from the Western Fuels Association.[19] Singer also admitted to working as a consultant on approximately half a dozen occasions for the Global Climate Coalition and that payments to him came either from the firm of John Shlaes, the coalition's director or the PR firm, E. Bruce Harrison, which worked for the coalition.[20] He also stated that he had undertaken consulting work on "perhaps a dozen or so" energy companies. This included work on behalf of oil companies, such as Exxon, Texaco, Arco, Shell, Sun, Unocal, the Electric Power Research Institute, Florida Power and the American Gas Association.[21]
  18. Afghanistan, search TAPI. Iraq, that's a no brainer. We attacked Iraq because Saddam tried to kill Bush's daddy? Please. And the proof was there long before the war that there were no WMD.
  19. Let us know how it reacts with water after it drys. My wife had a lot of that stuff left over after she died and if it works pretty good, I'll have a use for it.
  20. I did. And I also checked out those so called "scientists" that were listed in that video. Most of them were paid by corporations who have an interest to deny the truth.
  21. Brought to you by "junkscience.com"
  22. Allow me to repost with a highlight of something you missed. So where are we supposed to be getting all the uranium etc. to power these nuclear plants? Right now it looks as if Kazakhstan is the worlds leader in uranium mining. That again is in the same region in which we are currently fighting a war for oil and gas. Shall we continue our wars for energy or should we find alternative sources we can produce right here in the USA? The USA is over 1000 miles from coast to coast, but it is all still one in region. As is Kazakhstan, Iraq, and Afghanistan in one region.
  23. How many are still holding out?
  24. Hmmm... I wonder...
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