ID: ad3254 July 20, 2020, 6:37 a.m. No.10021078   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10020995

Exelon picked up where enron left off

 

>Bankrupt energy trader Enron Corp. said Thursday it elected two new board members, including former Exelon Corp. co-CEO Corbin A. McNeill Jr., to replace two members who resigned.

 

>McNeill, 62, is a former chairman and co-chief executive at Chicago's Exelon. He also served in those roles with Philadelphia's Peco Energy, before it merged with Unicom Corp. to create Exelon in fall 2000.

 

https://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/stories/2002/05/27/daily24.html

ID: ad3254 July 20, 2020, 7:14 a.m. No.10021311   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10021218

 

The thought then came that my impulse to commit suicide was a consequence of my being expressly overconcerned with "me' and "my pains,' and that doing so would mean that I would be making the supremely selfish mistake of possibly losing forever some evolutionary information link essential to the ultimately realization of the as-yet-to-be-known human function in Universe. I then realized that I could commit an exclusively ego suicidea personal-ego "throwaway'if to the voice of wants only of "me' but instead commit my physical organism and nervous system to enduring whatever pain might lie ahead while possibly thereby coming to mentally comprehend how a "me-less' individual might redress the humiliations, expenses, and financial losses I had selfishly and carelessly imposed on all the in-any-way-involved others, while keeping actively alive in toto only the possibly-of-essential-use-for-others inventory of my experience. I saw that there was a true possibility that I could do just that if I remained alive and committed my self to a never-again-for-self-use employment of my omni-experience-gained inventory of knowledge. My thinking began to clear.

 

https://archive.org/details/GuineaPigBFuller20100209132832Copy

ID: ad3254 July 20, 2020, 7:29 a.m. No.10021438   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Pave Low 4 supposed to have a 16 k altitude ceiling. Are they playing with the transponder?

 

ikorsky MH-53M Pave Low IV. U.S. Air Force special operations forces used the Sikorsky MH-53M to covertly enter enemy territory. Capable of operating at day or night or in bad weather, these helicopters conducted long-range, low-level missions to insert, extract, and resupply special operations forces.May 29, 2015

Ceiling: 16,000 ft.

 

https://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/Visit/Museum-Exhibits/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/196775/sikorsky-mh-53m-pave-low-iv/#:~:text=U.S.%20Air%20Force%20special%20operations,and%20resupply%20special%20operations%20forces.