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Sunday, August 2, 2015

Electricity without paying for it (Google creates device)

You Will Never Pay For Electricity Again

August 1st, 2015 - Friday

ro With a pair of 10-power binoculars, a zoom-lens camera and sensible hiking shoes, Shelia Hargis arrived at a thickly wooded bird sanctuary just a few miles from the rapidly growing Austin suburbs shortly after 7 on a weekday morning.
Within minutes, a brilliantly colored golden-cheeked warbler soared through the foliage and alighted atop an oak, striking a photogenic pose in the early morning sunlight. Now I can breathe, exclaimed Ms. Hargis, 53, a crime analysis supervisor with the police in Austin who jokingly describes herself as a crazy obsessed birder.
Each year, thousands of other avid bird-watchers, including many from other countries, come to Central Texas with the  of catching a similar view. In the bird-watching world, the black, yellow and white warbler is a prized sighting. It nests in only about three dozen Central Texas counties  making the species a native Texan  before heading south to Mexico and

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GA key  in the warbler delisting effort is Susan Combs, a former state comptroller. Last year, she formed Texans for Positive Economic Policy, which has joined with two other groups to petition the Interior Department to remove the songbird from the endangered species list, contending that the warbler population is so robust that it does not need federal protection.
I truly believe that they did not have adequate science in the original decision, Ms. Combs said in a telephone 

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Other prominent figures who have voiced support for the delisting include George P. Bush, the Texas  commissioner and a son of the presidential  Jeb Bush, and Lt. Gen. Sean B. MacFarland, the commanding general of Fort Hood, which covers nearly 218,000 acres and is a prime habitat for the warbler.
In a statement, General MacFarland expressed support for U.S. government efforts to  the environment and wildlife species on our installation but said delisting the warbler would benefit Fort Hood both operationally and administratively.
Since 1993, the military installation has been required to impose training restrictions to minimize the impact on the warbler. Directives in force in 2008, according to Fort Hood documents, prevented the firing of  or use of chemical or  grenades within 328 feet of habitats during nesting periods. The restrictions also placed a two-hour limit on training in habitats while warblers were nestinghreesomesand a variety of other alternative partners Included in the exposed personal information are customers email addressesusernamespasswordsbirthdays and zip codesin addition to their ual preferences Grooveshark cofounder Josh Greenberg at







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