CS:GO guess you can #39;t shoot through fences
+1 for me.
By: Apothum
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CS:GO guess you can't shoot through fences - Video
CS:GO guess you can #39;t shoot through fences
+1 for me.
By: Apothum
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CS:GO guess you can't shoot through fences - Video
Fences - Songs About Angels [Official Lyric Video]
Connect with Fences Site: http://fencesmusic.com Like: http://fb.com/FencesVsWolf Follow: http://twitter.com/FFEENNCCEESS Follow: http://instagram.com/fencesmusic Directed by Steak Mtn....
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Fences - Songs About Angels [Official Lyric Video] - Video
In the run up to an informal meeting among EU development ministers, Germany's Gerd Mller is calling for stronger action to tackle the worldwide refugee crisis, saying that simply "raising fences" is too little. EurActiv Germany reports.
German Development Minister Gerd Mller has said he wants to fight the "worst refugee crisis in 50 years" with more money and new personnel.
"The refugee issue will continue to challenge us more strongly than ever", Mller told the newspaper Schwbische Zeitung. Apart from a quick reaction to the current crisis, "structural changes" are also necessary in the long run, the minister said.
During an informal meeting of the EU's development ministers in Florence on Tuesday (15 July), Mller hopes to discuss an immediate action programme of around 1 billion.
"The European Commission should develop a proposal for financing an EU emergency billion for refugees", Mller said.
The emergency programme is intended to be financed by restructuring in the EU budget.
Mller spoke in support of bundling the various financing options for refugee and development aid currently in place.
"We cannot walk through the world with a watering can," the development minister said. Bundling could free up more funds for preventing and tackling ongoing refugee crises.
But according to Mller, the emergency billion must also be attached to certain conditions.
"We cannot solve the problem by taking more people in here", Mller told the Bavarian broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk. While it is important to be generous in accepting refugees, Germany is already doing quite a lot regarding this issue, the development minister commented.
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German minister calls for 1 billion to tackle 'worst refugee crisis in 50 years'
ST. CHARLES COUNTY Citing pressing family concerns, state Rep. Doug Funderburk said Tuesday he has dropped his effort to unseat County Executive Steve Ehlmann in the upcoming Republican primary.
Funderburk said he hasnt campaigned, conducted major fundraising or sought political endorsements because of issues related to his 19-year-old sons severe illness.
He also said hes had to deal with the death of his mother in May and the death of a lifelong friend earlier.
There are just some unplanned events in my life that have put me in a position ... that it may be better for myself and my family to take a pass on running now, he said.
Funderburks name will remain on the Aug. 5 primary ballot because its too late under state law to withdraw.
Funderburk, who was barred by term limits from seeking re-election to his House seat, had been poised to offer the first significant challenge to Ehlmann as executive.
Funderburk, a union electrician for Boeing Co. who lives near St. Peters, served 10 years on the St. Charles County Council before his eight years in the House.
Ehlmanns previous opponents were political newcomers with no organized support.
The winner of the Republican primary will face Democrat Rod Zerr in the November general election. Ehlmann, a former state legislator and judge from St. Charles, is running for a third four-year term as executive.
Zerr, a former director of emergency management for the county, is unopposed for his partys nomination.
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Funderburk drops campaign to unseat Ehlmann as St. Charles County executive
Of all the elements of todays culture versus what I observed a generation ago, I believe the most disparate is in the area of common sense. While this element used to be fairly common, today it seems to be quite rare.
It is only by experience that we gradually acquire this ingredient. For me, this acquisition process was greatly accelerated during the several years I spent on our farm. The early lessons learned in that experience have served me well in all the experience Ive been involved with since.
It now occurs to me the reason for the rarity of common sense today is tied to the decline of the yeoman farmer in our culture.
Where most people fell into this category in our early republic, the mechanization of agriculture has caused the near disappearance of this once common class of worker and with it, the opportunity to learn a broad range of knowledge: not the academic knowledge learned in urban schools today, but hands on, applied and practical knowledge that once was learned in rural areas across the country. Apprenticeship programs used to pass knowledge from one generation to the next.
Adam Smiths division of labor concept has also contributed, I believe, to the decline of general knowledge for the worker. By dividing work into narrow categories, the worker becomes expert at his particular job, but ignorant of the overall process.
By breaking labor down into precise classes, unions have also essentially destroyed the jack of all trades idea. More than anyone Ive ever known, my father was the quintessential jack of all trades.
At various times in his life he was a farmer, truck operator, carpenter, inventor, electrician, dam construction foreman, cabinet maker, toy maker, mason, shipyard foreman, building superintendent, mechanic, rancher, blacksmith, architect, logger, post and pole peeling machine fabricator, machinist, general fabricator, hydraulic engineer, investor and businessman.
The rest of the world presented a much easier sell for socialism. They lacked the fierce independence and self reliant qualities that enabled our fathers to build the greatest nation in all of history. But even my father (the most independent and self reliant person Ive known or read of) was persuaded to accept Social Security.
Once this first step was taken, the rest of socialism was given legitimacy. Today the concept of collectivism is ubiquitous throughout our culture. Unions, tenure, affirmative action, food stamps, Obamacare, subsidy, class action lawsuits: all are forms of collectivism.
The rights and responsibilities of the individual are in great decline in our nation and the results of this are predictable and ominous.
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Common sense: once fairly common, today quite rare
Dustin Neil Gilbert, 24, was southbound on Eighth Avenue at about 1:20 a.m., when he said he took his eyes off the road for a minute, said Sgt. Matt Wildfong of the Ottawa County Sheriffs Department.
He claimed he didnt have enough time to avoid a collision when he looked back.
Gilberts car struck a paving machine that was being loaded onto a trailer at the side of the road. The impact caused a Bobcat on the trailer to fall off and land on its back in the middle of the road. The driver of the paving machine was not injured.
An ambulance transported Gilbert to Spectrum Hospital in Grand Rapids.
Wildfong said the asphalt company had just completed working on a driveway and the crew was loading up their equipment.
The crash is still under investigation.
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Man hurt in crash with paving machine
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July 15th, 2014 10:50 pm by Wes Bunch
GATE CITY A Tennessee man accused of carrying out multiple paving scams in Southwest Virginia pleaded guilty in Scott County court last week to a second felony charge of operating without a contractor's license.
Frank Edward Small, 52, of Johnson City, was indicted by a Scott County grand jury June 23 on a single count of violating Virginia business regulations for the third time in 36 months.
It was the second time since May Small had been indicted on the same charge by a Scott County grand jury.
Small was arraigned in Scott County Circuit Court on July 9 and, in a rare move, pleaded guilty to the felony charge against him during the appearance.
Scott County authorities issued a capias warrant June 11 for Small's arrest stemming from his May indictment for a separate case of operating without a contractor's license. He pleaded guilty to that charge during a June 23 hearing in Scott County.
Small will be sentenced by 30th Circuit Court Judge John Kilgore on both counts on Sept. 4.
The most recent charge against Small stemmed from an incident that reportedly occurred in December 2013.
Scott County authorities said the incident matched other complaints involving Small. Law enforcement said the victim was elderly and never given an exact estimate for the work Small was performing. Once the work was completed, authorities said Small asked for an unreasonable amount of money as compensation for work that was poorly done.
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Johnson City man accused of multiple scams pleads guilty
Monster Truck Demolition Derby ~ GTA 5 Online
Website: http://www.ashcast.spruz.com Twitch: http://www.twitch.tv/ashcastgaming Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AshCastGaming.
By: AshCast Gaming
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Monster Truck Demolition Derby ~ GTA 5 Online - Video
RMG foundry demolition is ahead of schedule
By: WSBT-TV
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RMG foundry demolition is ahead of schedule - Video
2014 Mott, ND Demolition Derby-Feature Pt. 2
The final part of the feature at Mott, ND #39;s 2014 demolition derby. Recorded July 12, 2014.
By: pipesrmylife
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2014 Mott, ND Demolition Derby-Feature Pt. 2 - Video