Okay so I don't understand what you're arguing or why. Seems like you're saying there's high levels of lead in lots of food, but we don't know because we don't test... so how do you know if we don't test?
I'm saying that levels of lead found in the cinnamon applesauce probably don't occur just by chance, cuz they were so high they were causing symptoms in children which triggered a recall. That suggests there was more lead present than what naturally occurs. So where'd it come from? The FDA is pretty sure it's the cinnamon that came from Ecuador, so here are some possibilities:
The cinnamon was grown in a lead mine or something and had extremely high lead levels. Kind of doubt that.
Introduced during processing by machinery containing lead in its metal components. Possible.
Deliberately added to the cinnamon to alter its color or increase its weight. Also possible.
Tangential question: at what point, in the manufacture of applesauce, would lead even come in the vicinity of the product. I just don't see how unless it was deliberately added.
I don't care how they feel about the source. I think we're all grown-ups here and are capable of seeing through any propaganda the source may have added to the facts. I'm here to discuss the factual content of the article, which is rather interesting. I haven't been following the drama of northwestern Africa's territorial disputes.
Don't guess, because you're just wrong. 1st sentence. "The received tanks were immediately deployed to the southern part of the country, specifically to the disputed Western Sahara region." Some other commentors added more relevant info, so nice of them.
"has received" is indeed misleading, if you're in high school. No one receives weapons for free, not even Ukraine or Israel. Obviously Morocco paid for them.
Can you read? I mean obviously you can but your selective comprehension is baffling. I already told you my car has been "replaced." Actually it's been replaced multiple times over and it's still going. Your petty assumptions about my situation are frankly wrong, and when I compared deducting the mileage rate vs itemized deductions, the mileage rate was so much better I wondered why anyone would consider itemizing. Drive cheap, efficient cars my friend, you can really game that mileage rate.
Also do you really think the IRS has local couriers driving tiny used cars in mind when they're creating their mileage deduction? No, they don't.
lol yeah sure. I don't know what kind of car you're exclusively using for delivery driving, but by your logic mine was covered very quickly. So no, it definitely didn't cost me $0.65 a mile to drive with that in mind.
-sigh- speaking from experience, it doesn't cost you $0.65 a mile to drive. Perhaps you could make that argument if you bought and insured a new gas guzzler specifically for delivery driving, only took it to the dealership for maintenance/repairs, and only filled up with premium. If you're doing that, then... you should probably work for someone who makes decisions for you.
How is a microchip edible? Big as a sand grain? How does it work? How long has this tech existed? How many microchips have I eaten? Do they stop working if I eat them?
duckduckgo has been working well imo