WaPo has a “False or Misleading Statement” page that you can filter by subject and then ranks the severity of the quote. It’s up over 12k and it hasn’t been updated since Aug 5th 2019...
WaPo has a “False or Misleading Statement” page that you can filter by subject and then ranks the severity of the quote. It’s up over 12k and it hasn’t been updated since Aug 5th 2019...
Thank you.
CARB and the EPA have been working together for a while to unify their rule making set since EPA phase II rules were rolled out in 2004. Phase 3A brought them even closer and the next round was supposed to pretty much unify the rulesets.
Plus the research is done, tooling has been ordered, and tier 2 manufacturers are likely in the process of being ramped up to comply with the standing regulation.
Seriously. I'd buy my neighbors kids electric dirtbikes at this point.
My company hired several entry level software developers at the height of the last recession.
Well I’m off to get a ‘dropdb’ tag since it’s still available in my state.
Good. Maybe we can finally get some fucking limits on executive orders using this as a test case. This is sure to piss off enough companies with deep enough pockets that it won’t happen without a fight.
Haha. Feel free. These days I’m in the eastern PA mountains with a hand full of acreage still pretending I’m a redneck when I hunt white tail.
Man dog cut vests have come a long way since I looked last. Unfortunately my current discount adoption dog probably wouldn’t go for it. Not that there’s pigs this far north anyway.
Field dressed them, tossed it in the Polaris, then took them back to a family members house. I was able to hunt on their acreage and the 3000+ acre cattle farm their property abutted.
Yes, sort of.
If the equipment could be hidden under a uniform.... (according to Google) 6:40 pm EST tonight when the Reds play the Rockies.
The federal budget doesn’t operate like a family household budget. Here’s a break down, with an actual economist who was interviewed, about how the federal government operates with a deficit constantly without going broke.
“none of the conditions in the settlement will impose strict limitations on Facebook’s ability to collect and share data with third parties.”
So I was an MRO mechanic for a brief stint.
That’s true. I have to hand it to the FTC that the fine is actually higher than a GDPR violation, which would have been 4% of worldwide turn over or a bit over 2 billion dollars (50ish billion dollars in revenue last year) in the case of Facebook. So in that regard it’s good.
It’s up because the fine is now known and it’s punitive relative to the net operating profit of Facebook.
So serious question. Is the body galvanized to the same standard as some of it’s European, and now Japanese, competitors?
I’m a certified A&P so I spend a lot of time on JRITS. Makes me glad I don’t work on cars for a job.