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B4 the Bell Fryday Sept 3, 2004


Guest yobob1

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Guest bullseatshitndie
Every little bit of weakness in Silver, well, doesn't get gobbled right up.

 

Silver DESTRUCTION at the moment.

 

Dec.'04 SILVER, COMEX

6.610

-0.200

matrix will get a clean sweep today except for bonds, cuz stocks will close up, even if only fractionally

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Anti-Bush Protesters Ordered Released Demonstrators Were Held Illegally, Judge Rules

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A...anguage=printer

 

Several dozen of those detained said that they had not taken part in protests. Police apparently swept up the CEO of a puppet theater as he and a friend walked out of the subway to celebrate his birthday; handcuffed two middle-aged women who had been shopping at the Gap, and arrested a young woman as she returned from her job at a New York publishing house.

 

[...]

 

In all, police arrested more than 1,700 people, or nearly three times as many as were arrested in Chicago at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, which had far more violence. Police have used large orange nets and riot and motorbike squads to sweep up dozens of alleged protesters.

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Let a Thousand Reactors Bloom?

 

Explosive growth has made the People's Republic of China the most power-hungry nation on earth. Get ready for the mass-produced, meltdown-proof future of nuclear energy.

 

While the West frets about how to keep its sushi cool, hot tubs warm, and Hummers humming without poisoning the planet, the cold-eyed bureaucrats running the People's Republic of China have launched a nuclear binge right out of That '70s Show. Late last year, China announced plans to build 30 new reactors - enough to generate twice the capacity of the gargantuan Three Gorges Dam - by 2020. And even that won't be enough. The Future of Nuclear Power, a 2003 study by a blue-ribbon commission headed by former CIA director John Deutch, concludes that by 2050 the PRC could require the equivalent of 200 full-scale nuke plants. A team of Chinese scientists advising the Beijing leadership puts the figure even higher: 300 gigawatts of nuclear output, not much less than the 350 gigawatts produced worldwide today.

 

http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.09/china_pr.html

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