Τετάρτη 30 Αυγούστου 2017

en tiedä mistä pidän mistä unelmoin olen unohtanut mitä sydän tahtoo

Κανω καφε στο 16χρονο και μου μιλησε στον πληθυντικο, ενιωσα σα να βαρεσα πεναλτι αλα πανενκα και ο τερματοφυλακας το πιασε ορθιος χαλαρα.meti zesti kai fai joo mepernei ipnos sta 57Taavi Tyhtilä‏ @TaaviTyhtila 18. syyskuuta Lisää Yhden lehden linjaus hävitti 48 tunnissa Suomesta sukupuolet, tuhosi Classical political economy[edit] Main article: Classical economics See also: Thomas Edward Cliffe Leslie, Walter Bagehot, and Thorold Rogers The classical economists were referred to as a group for the first time by Karl Marx.[47] One unifying part of their theories was the labour theory of value, contrasting to value deriving from a general equilibrium theory of supply and demand. These economists had seen the first economic and social transformation brought by the Industrial Revolution: rural depopulation, precariousness, poverty, apparition of a working class. They wondered about population growth, because demographic transition had begun in Great Britain at that time. They also asked many fundamental questions, about the source of value, the causes of economic growth and the role of money in the economy. They supported a free-market economy, arguing it was a natural system based upon freedom and property. However, these economists were divided and did not make up a unified current of thought. A notable current within classical economics was underconsumption theory, as advanced by the Birmingham School and Thomas Robert Malthus in the early 19th century. These argued for government action to mitigate unemployment and economic downturns, and were an intellectual predecessor of what later became Keynesian economics in the 1930s. Another notable school was Manchester capitalism, which advocated free trade, against the previous policy of mercantilism. Capitalism, Communism, and Karl Marx[edit] Main article: Marxian economics Karl Marx (1818–1883) published a fundamental critique of classical economics based on the labor theory of value. With Marx, Friedrich Engels (1820–1895) co-authored The Communist Manifesto and the second volume of Das Kapital. Key people: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) Just as the term "mercantilism" had been coined and popularized by critics like Adam Smith, so the term "capitalism" coined by Karl Marx (1818–1883) was used by its critics. Socialism emerged in response to the miserable living and working conditions of the working class in the new industrial era, and the classical economics from which it sprang. The economic and political theory published in The Communist Manifesto (1848) and Das Kapital (1867) combined with the dialectic theory of history inspired by Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) to provide a revolutionary critique of nineteenth-century capitalism.[citation needed] In 1845 German radical Friedrich Engels (1820–1895) published The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844,[48] describing workers in Manchester as "the most unconcealed pinnacle of social misery in our day." After Marx died, Engels completed the second volume of Das Kapital from his notes.demokratian ja pakotti rahtarit vegaaneiksi. Eipä paljoa vaadittu

Πέμπτη 24 Αυγούστου 2017

withhte discovery of purpose🐦🍒 #breakfast 🍒🐦 i relsized theloss ov freeDom, Walk isthe Poetry in Motion

2008 Mimi completed a run from John O’Groats to Land’s End in the UK, a distance of 840 miles. Along the way, she set a new Female World Record. In 2012, she set another Female World Record for running the length of Ireland, 345 miles. Mimi was the first person to hold both World Records simultaneously. In September 2014, she ran an average of 61km for 32 consecutive days across South AfricaLääkäri:No niin, näyttää siltä, että olette raskaana. Potilas:minähän olen viisikymppinen mies? Lääkäri:Minähän sanoin, että NÄYTTÄÄ siltä!Stunning & surprisingly modest Para55 house built in/ on the rolling hills of Herefordshire. Also happens to be a #passivhaus Mitä? Rasismia/seksismiä/jne on olemassa vaikka *vuosi on 2017*? Nämä eivät automaattisesti poistukaan uusien kalenterien ostotarpeen myötä? a tenant of Black Duncan meant abiding by lots of rules. Some of them, listed in the Black Book of Taymouth, are still quite familiar – the moors were to be burnt in March, and no young trees were to be destroyed – but the stipulation that no one could drink at a brewhouse “unless they have travelled eight miles thereto” is a little puzzling. I’m guessing that taking a long circular route to the pub was frowned on as cheating. Rents were paid in kind, in the form of corn, cattle and poultry. Loch Dochart Castle (1)During the Civil War in the mid-17th century, loyalties were bitterly divided among the Scots clans as families ranged themselves on the side of Charles I or the Covenanters. Around 1646, Loch Dochart Castle was destroyed by fire at the hands of the McNabs. Their chief, ‘Smooth John’ McNab, had sided with Charles I – he died at the Battle of Worcester in 1651 – while the Campbells joined forces with the Covenanters. The RCAHMS notes that “in the ruins of the castle were found 87 small copper coins from the reign of Charles II”, but by my reckoning these would have been minted after the castle was destroyed. Perhaps it was repaired and inhabited for a while, or maybe the coins represent a stash that was hidden in the ruins. What became of Duncan Campbell’s descendants? His great-grandson John Campbell, 11th Laird of Glenorchy, was implicated in the massacre of Glencoe, and was described as being “cunning as a fox, wise as a serpent, and supple as an eel… who knew neither honour nor religion but where they were mixed with interest.” He sounds like a colourful character, so I had to make sure he was really related. This list of inheritance does not include all the other children of each laird, legitimate or illegitimate (and there were many!)

Κυριακή 20 Αυγούστου 2017

Corporations are replacing churches as America's conscience.."Huipputyyppi" on tota hybristermistöä, todellisuudessahan harva on edes mukava.

We can get up to 18hrs darkness at the height of winter which is a long time to sit on a perch and not have a good scratch in the grass 🐔New on MoA: The U.S. Can Not Be Trusted - Case XXXIV: Trump Cheats On China Sanction Deal http://www.moonofalabama.org/2017/08/the-us-can-not-be-trusted-lesson-xxxiv-trump-cheats-on-china-sanction-deal.html … Sähkönsiirtoyhtiöt ylläpitävät paikallisia sähköverkkoja ja näin ollen niillä on paikallinen monopoli sähkön siirtoon. Ne voivat hinnoitella siirtohinnat oman mielensä mukaan . EU pakotti sähköyhtiöt eriyttämään myynti- ja siirtoliiketoiminnan, jonka takia olemme nyt tilanteessa, jossa tarvitaan kaksi erillistä toimijaa radikalisoituminen on tapahtunut melko nopeasti. Miehen käytös ja esimerkiksi hänen pukeutumisensa alkoivat muuttua elokuussa.Turun veitsi-iskuista epäilty Abderrahman Mechkah oli uhkaava ja hänestä varoitettiin Turun vastaanottokeskuksen johtoa 🐦🍒 #breakfast 🍒🐦useammin kuin kerran.Turun vastaanottokeskuksen apulaisjohtaja Heimo Nurmi kertoo, että vihje oli poikkeuksellinen.epäilemme tiettyjähttps://www.google.gr/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=4&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwilhcX-64vXAhVHChoKHatLAeEQFgg6MAM&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.fwi.co.uk%2Flivestock%2Fservice-helps-sheep-farmers-find-students-for-lambing-work.htm&usg=AOvVaw0Z8TFqQU1deQgZBk8QXezQDuncan Campbell ‘of the Cowl’, b.1550 son: Robert Campbell, 9th of Glenorchy, b.1575 son: John (Iain) Campbell, 10th of Glenorchy b.1606 son: John (Iain) Glas Campbell, 11th of Glenorchy, 1st Earl of Breadalbane b.1633 (who was reputed to own the best wig in Scotland). This was only going to be a short post about Loch Dochart Castle. Now I am reading about people’s wigs. But his old grandad was equally fussy about his headgear. Does that prove a genetic link? McNab graveyard at SuieWhere on earth was I? The McNabs… there is an ancient and fascinating little burial ground in Glen Dochart which has a story all of its own. If you’re travelling west, you will have already passed it by the time you get to Loch Dochart. Follow the road back to the east for a couple of miles, and you’ll see it in a field just opposite the Suie Lodge Hotel. Fast forward to the late 1800s, when the wife of a local landowner, a Mrs Place, used to take guests on boat trips to the island in Loch Dochart, braving nettles, brambles, midges and (she says) strong-smelling beds of wild garlic. She and her friends used to enjoy picnics here, and while Mrs Place was sipping her cordial she allowed her mind to wander over the ruins and imagine what they might look like if they were tidied up. It sounds deliciously like one of Jane Austen’s ‘exploring-parties’. Anyway, Mrs Place was a lady of action as well as words, and she soon had some of her picnic guests and the two boatmen engaged in hacking away the thick layers of undergrowth that concealed the remains of Loch Dochart Castle. Very soon, they had revealed “a dungeon eight feet deep… with an iron staple fixed in the wall”; the fragments of a jug, which they pieced together; and some quantities of charred bone. Although the fate of the castle leads you to jump to conclusions, there’s no indication of whether this bone was human. Outside the castle were currant and gooseberry bushes, now running wild, and “a real white-heart cherry tree” – faint echoes of an ancient garde