Word: satelliteã
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...this claim must be noted. One satellite will not revive North Korea’s dysfunctional economic system. But even if it could, North Korea’s claims should still be met with great skepticism. There is nothing new about this “new” satellite??supposedly ushering in an exciting era for North Korea, it is instead strikingly reminiscent of 1998, when North Korea used the same claim as an excuse to test-fire a Taepodong-1 cruise missile over the territory of regional power Japan. Fresher in the public’s memory...
...he’d be able to create enough wealth to sustain more than a trillion people. Infinite wealth could be generated, he thought, by concentrating infinite power on the infinite resources of the earth. Unsurprisingly, his contraption—which was christened “The Satellite?? but was little more than a glorified plow—failed to bear the fruits Etzler dreamed of. The Satellite and the mentality that would inspire someone to conceive of such a project is, Stoll says, “an emblem of our own assumptions.” The view...
...Satellite.’ Lou Reed has a ‘Satellite.’ We thought about that. We tried to change the lyric but we came back to it because that was the lyric that the song just kind of wanted to have. Satellite??s a better title than, ‘You’re my satellite.’”Recycled title notwithstanding, Gardner and Rosenworcel agree on the overall quality of both the song and the album.“This record is the closest we got to what our music...
...prefers to work in state capitals—while those routinely collectivized under the label “gov jocks” at Harvard might overlook the powerhouse of the NEA in glances at national politics, it’s a good bet that you can find an NEA satellite??s office within three blocks of any state House. And on a community-by-community basis, the same school board system that allows the religious right to hijack school control in the South allows the NEA to do it elsewhere. Most localities in the United States hold separate...
...many have seen through Bush’s usual rhetorical wiles. Conservative columnist William Safire recently corrected Bush’s “free TV” notion, pointing out that “four-fifths of broadcast network TV is now delivered to homes by cable or satellite??not free—and NBC, ABC, CBS, and Fox are making money hand over fist,” not to mention the muddy logic of how an impersonal media conglomerate will improve the quality of local news...