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New They volunteered to sell
to save us the trouble of scuttling the deal in DC. We certainly wouldn't be that nice. We'd be jumping up and down threatening trade sanctions if someone did this to us.
If you push something hard enough, it will fall over. Fudd's First Law of Opposition

[link|mailto:bepatient@aol.com|BePatient]
New To who?
New Financial Times didn't have that
only that it was a US firm that they were selling to.
If you push something hard enough, it will fall over. Fudd's First Law of Opposition

[link|mailto:bepatient@aol.com|BePatient]
New Shell game until verified otherwise
Wouldn't it be interesting if it got sold to Halliburton or the Carlyle Group on the cheap?
     It's over for Dubai Ports World. - (a6l6e6x) - (11)
         More proof - (bepatient) - (10)
             Oh bull - (broomberg) - (4)
                 They volunteered to sell - (bepatient) - (3)
                     To who? -NT - (broomberg) - (2)
                         Financial Times didn't have that - (bepatient) - (1)
                             Shell game until verified otherwise - (broomberg)
             Well, the US ports part is only about 10% of their - (a6l6e6x) - (1)
                 Wrong part of the Administration... - (Another Scott)
             Indeed....look who asked them DPW to give up. - (Simon_Jester) - (2)
                 News Flash! Der Berk talking out of both sides of his mouth. - (jb4) - (1)
                     ^H is your friend. :-) -NT - (Another Scott)

You're typing on a device that stores trillions of pieces of data and makes billions of computations per second with the ability to grab data on almost anything from around the world in milliseconds, using electricity transmitted from hundreds of kilometers through wires on towers dozens of meters tall connected to megastructures that do things like burn coal as fast as entire trains can pull into the yard, or spin in the wind with blades the size of jumbo jets, or the like, which were delivered to their location by vehicles with computer-timed engines burning a fuel that was pumped up halfway around the world from up to half a dozen kilometers underground and locked into complex strata (through wells drilled by diamond-lined bores that can be remote-control steered as they go), shipped around the world in tankers with volumes the size of large city blocks and the height of apartment complexes, run through complex chemical processes in unimaginable quantities, distributed nationwide and sold to you at a corner store for $1.80 a gallon, which you then pay for with a little piece of microchipped plastic, if not a smartphone, which does all of the aforementioned computer stuff but in a box the size of your hand that tolerates getting beaten up in your pocket all day.

But technology never seems to advance...


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