[Abel-tasman] Ultra Simple "Carb-Hormone" Trick Lowers Blood Sugar
Health Nutrition News
HealthNutritionNews at edcczaoa.us
Wed Sep 25 19:10:41 CEST 2013
Do THIS before eating carbs (every time)
http://www.edcczaoa.us/2364/154/336/1288/2701.10tt62883642AAF5.php
Unsub- http://www.edcczaoa.us/2364/154/336/1288/2701.10tt62883642AAF6.html
aper
signed by Satoshi Nakamoto -- likely a pseudonym -- and the coins
made their online debut in 2009. How the coins are created, how
the transactions are authenticated and how the whole system manages to power
forward with no central bank, no financial regulator and a user base
of wily hackers all comes down to computing power and savoir faire.Or,
as Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist for the ConvergEx Group, describes
it: "genius on so many levels."The linchpin of the system is a
network of "miners" -- high-end computer users who supply the Bitcoin network
with the processing power needed to maintain a transparent, running tally
of all transactions. The tally is one of the most important ways
in which the system prevents fraud, and the miners are rewarded for
supporting the system with an occasional helping of brand-new bitcoins.Those
bitcoins have become a dangerously hot commodity in the past few days.Rising
from roughly $13 at the beginning of the year, the price of
a single bitcoin blasted through the $100 barrier last week, according to
Mt. Gox, a site where users can swap bitcoins for more traditional
currencies.On Tuesday, the price of a single bitcoin had topped $200. On
Wednesday, it hit $266 before a flash crash dragged it back down
to just over $100. By Thursday, bitcoins were trading for around $150.The
rebel currency may seem unstable, but then so do some of its
more traditional counterparts. Some say Bitcoin got
The White House says President Obama would veto a Republican bill that
would effectively shut down the National Labor Relations Board until certain
conditions are met.Republicans have claimed the board is illegitimate since
an appeals court panel ruled in January that Obama violated the Constitution
when he bypassed the Senate to fill vacancies on the board.House Republicans
are expected to vote this week to prevent the board from conducting
business until the Senate confirms new members constituting a quorum or
the Supreme Court decides the board has the authority to act. The
bill isn't expected to gain traction in the Senate.The White House says
that the bill would hurt the middle class and jeopardize workers' rights.
The administration argues Obama's appointments were constitutional and valid.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20130925/f4ae12dc/attachment.htm
More information about the Abel-tasman
mailing list