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TheQuiltedLlama

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About TheQuiltedLlama

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    Foot Soldier

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  1. Transfer / Share a beta key?!

    Got a product key i can't use yo.
  2. What trainj mod are you using in this picture could you send me a link http://www.simtropolis.com/forum/files/file/22735-smp-suburban-str-station/

  3. SMP Yellow Pause thingy remover

    Thanks guys! It's great that people are still downloading my stuff after all these years.
  4. Rothenthurn STR station

    Aah, that's pretty smooth. nice one!
  5. The Palmolive Building

    Very nice! Certainly looks accurate, and the night lighting is pretty much spot on too.
  6. NDEX Tunnelpack AVENUE version

    Wow. These are amazing. You win at tunnels.
  7. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
  8. But OMGz you have epic skillz in keeping the dependencies so low. How do you manage it for such an amazing work?
  9. Tis suck\ bad timezzz. I wants it in green!!!111o1neoneeleven.
  10. Official Simtroplis Gulf Oil Spill Thread

    This is worth reading. The Niger delta: some perspective on the BP oil spill Posted by Samira Shackle - 14 June 2010 13:04 There is a shocking disparity in the media and political response to oil disasters in different parts of the world. Water splashes from burst oil pipelines, destroyed with dynamite by separatists. Niger delta, July 2009. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images The response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has, understandably for such a catastrophe, been huge -- from international condemnation of BP, to a narrowly-missed diplomatic row between Britain and the US. No-one denies that the oil spill is a disaster that is having a devastating effect on ecosystems in the affected areas, as well as on the fishing and tourism industries. But what about a little sense of proportion? Receiving somewhat less attention in the international press is the environmental outrage that has been inflicted on the Niger delta over the last 50 years. To give a recent example, on 1 May 2010, a ruptured ExxonMobil pipeline spilled more than a million gallons into the delta over seven days before the leak was stopped. There was not so much reporting about that. This is just the tip of the iceberg. While exact figures are hard to come by, because oil companies and the Nigerian government are secretive about oil spills, a 2006 report by WWF UK, the World Conservation Union, and Nigerian representatives found that up to 1.5m tons of oil had been spilled in the area over the preceding 50 years. This is 50 times the amount spilled in the Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska. A 2009 report by Amnesty calculated that at least 9m barrels of oil had been spilled. These figures suggest that every year, an equivalent amount to that lost in the Gulf of Mexico is spilled in the delta. The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation says that an average of 300 individual spills each year equals nearly 2,300 cubic meters. This does not take into account "minor" spills, and the World Bank suggests that the real quantity is as much as ten times higher. The delta is now one of the most polluted spots in the world. It is estimated that leaking crude oil -- which the oil companies blame on thieves and separatists, and campaigners blame on rusting equipment -- costs Nigeria $10m (£5.3m) daily. The Niger delta provides 40 per cent of all the crude oil imported by the US. Over two generations, life expectancy in the region's rural communities -- where many people cannot access clean water -- has fallen to just over 40 years. Obama is right to recognise the scale of the disaster in the gulf (which, he said today, echoes "9/11"), but it is rather sobering to take note of this disparity. Yet again, it seems to be one rule for the west, and one for the rest of the world. [/Q] http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/the-staggers/2010/06/oil-delta-world-spilled
  11. UK Election 2010

    Originally posted by: Merlin of Flyote Just a point to note. Britain has had more years of Conservative government than Labour, nothing new there then! The conservatives believe in small government, low taxes, paying off the country's debts. Labour believe in Centralised government, high taxes, borrowing more, and state spending. (Communism by another name).quote> I'm really hoping you're joking or something. Otherwise you're just an idiot.
  12. Rodina

    Aaah! As if this is still going. Love your work, it is simply amazing.
  13. DuQuesne Heavy Shipyards

    Epic!
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