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Strategies & Market Trends : The Epic American Credit and Bond Bubble Laboratory

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To: Ramsey Su who wrote (57953)4/11/2006 8:47:20 PM
From: russwinter  Read Replies (3) of 110194
 
you should go back a few years from now and take another reading.>

Too hazardous to my health and no doubt it just gets worse and worse (if even possible?), so perhaps I'll just monitor on occasion their air quality readings from the comfort of home sweet Portland. Meanwhile I truly feel for the people who live there, there should be no excuse. Wonder how many are sick now?

This one may afflict the US in a few days as well:
lakepowell.net

Records show that during the 17th century there were from 0.3 to 1.0 sandstorms in Inner Mongolia per year, but by 1990 the annual rate of occurrence had risen to 3.0 to 5.0 times per year. At the same time, the rate of occurrence of sandstorms in Beijing has also increased, and the number of violent sandstorms that occurred this spring in Beijing was more than three times the average for the same period in the 1990s. Some have called the sandstorm that occurred on April 10, 2000 the most serious such storm in 10 years. Other than natural factors like aridity being the cause creating such conditions, the fact that China’s ecological environment has suffered damage is also a major source of this calamity.
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