Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Scoop: UQ Wire: Illegalities Suggests Bush Role In 9/11

Scoop: UQ Wire: Illegalities Suggests Bush Role In 9/11: "UQ Wire: Illegalities Suggests Bush Role In 9/11
Tuesday, 6 March 2007, 10:59 am
Opinion: www.UnansweredQuestions.org
Distribution via the Unanswered Questions Wire
http://www.unansweredquestions.org/ .

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Bush Record Of Illegalities Suggests Possible Role In 9/11 WTC, Pentagon Strikes

By Sherwood Ross

The trouble with thinking 9/11 was an inside job staged by George W. Bush & Co. is that it defies belief any U.S. president might be capable of such an iniquitous crime against his own people.

Yet, subsequent Bush actions, such as lying the nation into war against Iraq, makes one wonder if the man didn’t create the 9/11 massacres to justify his attacks on Afghanistan, Iraq, and Iran.

After all, his record reveals him to be a serial liar, warmonger, tyrant, torturer, and usurper of his peoples’ civil liberties. Just off the top, here are some illegal GWB actions that betray what he is really about.

# Bush lied the U.S. into what former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan called an “illegal” war on Iraq. This conflict has killed 650,000 civilians, wounded over a million more, drove nearly 2-million from their country, and turned life into a living hell for the rest. The death toll there is already equal to about 240 WTC massacres,"

BBC NEWS | Technology | Hard drive speed limit is reached

BBC NEWS | Technology | Hard drive speed limit is reached: "Hard drive speed limit is reached
Hard drive close-up, Eyewire
The upper limit for writing data has been found
US scientists have found the theoretical maximum speed that data can be written to a PC's hard drive.

They discovered the limit by shooting electrons travelling close to the speed of light at a chunk of the same material used in computer hard drives

This created magnetic field pulses too short to alter the material's properties and record a bit of data.

The discovery might force hard drive makers to use exotic materials or new methods to breach this speed limit.

Quick response

Typically data is written on the platters of hard drives using opposing magnetisations to represent the 0s and 1s of binary information.

Bits are flipped by applying a short-lived magnetic field to reverse the magnetisation at a particular location and turn a 0 into a 1 or vice versa.

In a paper in the journal Nature, Ioan Tudosa and colleagues at Stanford University report that they have found just how short-lived that magnetic pulse can be.

Using the linear accelerator at Stanford University in California, the researchers managed to generate magnetic field pulses in hard drive materials that lasted a mere 2.3 picoseconds.

One picosecond is a millionth of a millionth of a second.

The team"

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