That page says it's from environmental contamination, not lead doping. I think you'd have to have a huge amount of lead for it to be measurable in product weight.
SheeEttin
The proposal includes stiffer penalties for people who repeatedly carry guns in places where they would still be banned like schools or courthouses or commit crimes while armed, whether they use the weapon or not. It also would provide millions of dollars for free gun training across the state needed to get a concealed weapons permit for any adult who wants it.
Those are good, but I don't get the difference between open and concealed carry. You should have to have safety training before carrying at all.
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
I'm not sure there's a good adhesive that will accomplish this. What's the shape of the earbud? Could a piece of heatshrink on the outside accomplish it?
Yeah no shit. How about some consequences for people producing and spreading misinformation and disinformation already?
Yes there is. It's the current Democratic party platform.
Companies whose bankruptcy requires hazmat or similar cleanup should be required to post bond to cover it.
They have the whole world to trade with.
Well, except one of the biggest of all the countries that's right on their doorstep but refuses to trade with them.
Anyway, I'm not sure how you expect them to repay any debts when their economy is at rock bottom. The US expecting repayment for nationalized property is very much expecting to squeeze blood from a stone, and a stone of the US's own making.
Class action status has to be granted by a court. You can't file a class action ab initio. You'd have to file as an individual, get other people to file, then get a court to grant class action to consolidate the cases.
tl;dr:
The research was initiated after scientists on the research team reported seeing occasional flashes of green light while working with an infrared laser. Unlike the laser pointers used in lecture halls or as toys, the powerful infrared laser the scientists worked with emits light waves thought to be invisible to the human eye.
But packing a lot of photons in a short pulse of the rapidly pulsing laser light makes it possible for two photons to be absorbed at one time by a single photopigment, and the combined energy of the two light particles is enough to activate the pigment and allow the eye to see what normally is invisible.
“The visible spectrum includes waves of light that are 400-720 nanometers long,” explained Kefalov, an associate professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences. “But if a pigment molecule in the retina is hit in rapid succession by a pair of photons that are 1,000 nanometers long, those light particles will deliver the same amount of energy as a single hit from a 500-nanometer photon, which is well within the visible spectrum. That’s how we are able to see it.”
Neat! But please don't shine lasers into your eyes even if it's supposed to be invisible.
Yeah, that's not a material change. As per the article, anyone using a Roku device apparently has already agreed to the regular arbitration part. This change is likely to be no more or less legally enforceable. If you want to get upset at something, get upset that you've been using something without reading the terms (and, of course, that they're putting these terms in, in the first place).