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  1. The Cabal has arrived.

    Monday, 04-Apr-11 23:23:56 UTC from web
    1. @darkw00d Vitamins

      Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:38:06 UTC from web
    2. @darkw00d fun fact, they had to build an artificial lake larger than the whole city so we wouldnt die from lack of humidity

      Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:40:37 UTC from web
      1. @mushi Fun fact: The city I live in is powered entirely by hydro-electric plants and windmill farms. Green energy much?

        Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:42:16 UTC from web
        1. @huggablysoft well, 98% of brazil's energy comes from hydroeletricity

          Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:43:42 UTC from web
          1. @mushi That's always a good thing. China could seriously learn from countries on /this/ side of the world. Their pollution is ungodly bad.

            Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:47:14 UTC from web
            1. @huggablysoft yes, also we have the badassest ethanol production of the world

              Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:49:06 UTC from web
              1. @mushi No doubt there.

                Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:52:06 UTC from web
          2. @mushi China doesn't seem to have any sort of emissions regulations. Their air is so polluted that you can't even see the sun clearly and most people can't even breathe it with out getting sick. If you're used to breathing relatively fresh air, I wouldn't recommend going to China. You might come back with asthma.

            Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:50:42 UTC from web
            1. @huggablysoft yeah, someplaces in São paulo are know for being one of the few places in the world where peple can see the air they breath, but that is from cars and industries, not coal based energy or anything

              Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:52:37 UTC from web
              1. @mushi It's just that China allowed its emissions pollution to get out of hand instead of regulating it like other countries do when manufacturing automobiles and producing burned energy, such as coal. Also, here in the US and neighboring countries, we use ethanol based fuels that we most likely get from Brazil, among other countries and we tend to lean more toward cleaner burning energy such as hydro electricity, wind and natural gas.

                Sunday, 21-Jul-13 23:56:43 UTC from web
                1. @huggablysoft yea, also, here, if i remember it right, 25% of gasoline volume is actually ethanol. \That used to destroy engines when they started doing that decades ago, but not anymore

                  Monday, 22-Jul-13 00:01:18 UTC from web