Still can't edit.
Last one, with bibliography.
Thanks for your help.
Still can't edit.
Last one, with bibliography.
Thanks for your help.
Example is better than precept.
Okay, now I get it, along with 'wait 38 seconds or continue with premium downloads and your visa card number'. Could you give me yours, mine's dead
It's now been 2 minutes and the $69.99 special is still friggin there !If I wasn't on a 12 hour shift, I'd have had a beer and smoke by now.
Thanks anyway RTK
I'd use the full up URLs for websites you're sourcing. Additionally, use a common bibliographical format. For instance, for movie quotes I don't think using the fictional character's name as a source is correct. Also, you have opinions footnoted (ie. #74) which is not correct.
Interesting thoughts, though I'm not sure what the "so what" factor is here.
Example is better than precept.
You've obviously never met an Ethnic Russian Postal worker in Estonia
Remember the films with Russian migrant workers in gray dresses, a few missing teeth and fuzzy mustaches (the female workers RTK) ?
Slapout can tell you where some of them are...in the South...Lower Alabama (LA)
I would have to disagree with that. The vast majority of IEDs has not been Ammonium Nitrate Fuel Oil (ANFO). Such a device requires far too much raw material and no place to hide a 50 gallon drum along a dirt road.The bottom line is this. A lot of the information on bombs online is rubbish. Terrorists tend to make two types of bombs; ANFO and AP. The instructions are easy to find, the materials easy to get, and the manufacturing very simple.
Where I am and have recently been, most have been modified projectiles without fuses, or simple command detonated IEDs with extracted HEs from projectiles.
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