[Abel-tasman] Find your Secret Romance

Ashley Madison Affiliate AshleyMadisonAffiliate at escpaurmid.us
Sat Oct 12 01:07:33 CEST 2013


Life is short. Have an affair.

http://www.escpaurmid.us/2506/167/361/1374/2816.10tt62883642AAF9.php






Unsub- http://www.escpaurmid.us/2506/167/361/1374/2816.10tt62883642AAF10.html










aid. If one goes offline, 
others fail. Employees don't even have fuses, said Lara. "They have to 
cobble together their own to keep things running.""There's no money to buy 
parts for something that breaks," said Giovanni Rinaldi, a 15-year employee 
at a hydroelectric plant in the eastern city of Ciudad Guayana, which 
he said is plagued by four or five power outages a week 
despite being in the region that generates more than 70 percent of 
Venezuela's electricity.He was fired this week after posting photos on Twitter 
of a state utility company vehicle plastered with Maduro campaign material."We 
had put our own money into keeping those vehicles running because the 
company didn't," Rinaldi, a 40-year-old father of two, said by phone. "It's 
not right."The government hasn't adequately spent to expand and strengthen 
the power grid, critics say.They also blame problems on Cuban, Iranian and 
Uruguayan technicians brought in to run by Chavez to run the system. 
Accidents are up tenfold, and there are places in remote states that 
suffer outages for as long as three to five days, says Lara.Maduro, 
who was sworn in as interim president the day of Chavez's funeral, 
promises better performance but blames the recent surge in outages on sabotage 
by sympathizers of his challenger Sunday, opposition leader Henrique Capriles.The 
government has "militarized" the electric grid and said Tuesday that at 
least 17 alleged saboteurs have been detained but offered n
April 3, 2013: Bitcoin tokens at 35-year-old software engineer Mike Caldwell's 
shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints physical versions of bitcoins, cranking 
out homemade tokens with codes protected by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP 
Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer, 
looks over bitcoin tokens at his shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints 
physical versions of bitcoins, cranking out homemade tokens with codes protected 
by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike 
Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer, poses with bitcoin tokens at 
his shop in Sandy, Utah.AP Photo/Rick BowmerNEW YORK  With $600 stuffed 
in one pocket and a smartphone tucked in the other, Patricio Fink 
recently struck the kind of deal that's feeding the rise of a 
new kind of money -- a virtual currency whose oscillations have pulled 
geeks and speculators alike through stomach-churning highs and lows.The 
Argentine software developer was dealing in bitcoins -- getting an injection 
of the cybercurrency in exchange for a wad of real greenbacks he 
handed to a pair of Australian tourists in a Buenos Aires Starbucks. 
The visitors wanted spending money at black market rates without the risk 
of getting roughed up in one of the Argentine capital's black market 
exchanges. Fink wanted to pad his electronic wallet.In the safety of the 
coffee shop, the tourists transferred Fink their bitcoins through an app 
on their


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20131011/a2585ca1/attachment.htm


More information about the Abel-tasman mailing list