In response The Mac to his Publication

Who is that with Andrew? Never forget a face but just.can’t.place.it.

oh, and i meant @ Not theMacAnon? Yes?

In response Lori Victoria to her Publication

Throughout his career, Evelyn de Rothschild has been actively involved in a number of other organisations in both the private and public sectors and has held the following business positions:

Chairman - The Economist (1972–1989)
Chairman - British Merchant Banking & Securities House Association (1985–1989)
Deputy Chairman - Milton Keynes Development Corporation (1971–1984)
Chairman - United Racecourses (1977–1994)
Director - De Beers Consolidated Mines (1977–1994)
Director - IBM United Kingdom Holdings Limited (1972–1995)
Evelyn de Rothschild also served as a Director of the newspaper group owned by Lord Beaverbrook. Years later, he served for a time as a Director of Lord Black's Daily Telegraph newspaper. An owner of thoroughbred racehorses, he is a former chairman of United Racecourses.

In response The Mac to his Publication

In 1967 Sir Evelyn created the Eranda Foundation to support social welfare, promote the arts and to encourage research into medicine and education.

Sir Evelyn serves as Queen Elizabeth II's financial adviser[citation needed]. He has been a Governor of the London School of Economics and Political Science as well as an active patron of the arts and supporter of a number of charities.

In response The Mac to his Publication

The Rothschilds were reported to have spent a night of their honeymoon at the Clinton White House. Indeed, Lady de Rothschild was so involved with Hillary’s presidential campaign that she had little time to devote to R Chocolate.

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

lend
/lɛnd/

1.
grant to (someone) the use of (something) on the understanding that it will be returned.

loan
give someone the loan of
let someone use
let someone have the use of
advance
sub
Opposite:
borrow
withhold

allow (a person or organization) the use of (a sum of money) under an agreement to pay it back later, typically with interest.

"no one would lend him the money"

gerund or present participle: lending

In response The Mac to his Publication

A LENDING

In response The Mac to his Publication

ding
/dɪŋ/
verb
verb: ding; 3rd person present: dings; past tense: dinged; past participle: dinged; gerund or present participle: dinging

make a ringing sound.

"cash registers were dinging softly"

exclamation: ding

used to imitate a metallic ringing sound resembling a bell.

In response The Mac to his Publication

sound
/saʊnd/

Origin

Middle English soun, from Anglo-Norman French soun (noun), suner (verb), from Latin sonus . The form with -d was established in the 16th century.

In response The Mac to his Publication

sonus

conditional of soni
Ido

Verb
sonus

conditional of sonar
Latin

Etymology
From sonō (“make a noise, sound”).

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

Keywords
Ultrasound Sonocrystallization Sonofragmentation Sonochemistry Cavitation Nucleation

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

An economic bubble is a situation in which asset prices are much higher than the underlying fundamentals can reasonably justify. Bubbles are sometimes caused by unlikely and overly optimistic projections about the future. It could also be described as prices which strongly exceed the asset's intrinsic value.

Bubbles are sometimes referred to as a speculative bubble, a financial bubble, or a speculative mania.

In the early stages of a bubble, many investors do not notice the bubble for what it is. People notice the prices are going up and often think it is justified. Therefore bubbles are often conclusively identified only in retrospect, after the bubble has already popped and prices have crashed.

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

late Middle English: from Latin depressio(n- ), from deprimere ‘press down’ (see depress).

In response The Mac to his Publication

compression
/kəmˈprɛʃ(ə)n/

noun: compression; plural noun: compressions
the action of compressing or being compressed.

the reduction in volume (causing an increase in pressure) of the fuel mixture in an internal combustion engine before ignition.

Origin

late Middle English: via Old French from Latin compressio(n- ), from comprimere ‘press together’ (see compress).

In response The Mac to his Publication

Compression- a region in a longitudinal (sound) wave where the particles are closest together. Rarefaction- a region in a longitudinal (sound) wave where the particles are furthest apart.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Because of the longitudinal motion of the air particles, there are regions in the air where the air particles are compressed together and other regions where the air particles are spread apart. These regions are known as compressions and rarefactions respectively.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Ultrasonic wave propagation (a) compression and rarefaction, (b) stable ultrasonic cavitation, (c) transient ultrasonic cavitation, (d) pressure variation during compression and rarefaction.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Piezomagnetism is a phenomenon observed in some antiferromagnetic and ferrimagnetic crystals. It is characterized by a linear coupling between the system's magnetic polarization and mechanical strain. In a piezomagnetic material, one may induce a spontaneous magnetic moment by applying physical stress, or a physical deformation by applying a magnetic field.

In response The Mac to his Publication

https://youtu.be/bacBKKgc4Uo

Commercial banks create money, in the form of bank deposits, by making new loans. When a bank makes a loan, for example to someone taking out a mortgage to buy a house, it does not typically do so by giving them thousands of pounds worth of banknotes. Instead, it credits their bank account with a bank deposit of the size of the mortgage. At that moment, new money is created. For this reason, some economists have referred to bank deposits as ‘fountain pen money’, created at the stroke of bankers’ pens when they approve loans.(1)

YouTube

Teile deine Videos mit Freunden, Verwandten oder der ganzen Welt

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

Stanley Johnson, 80, has “what the French would call a préjugé favorable towards China” and considers it “vital at this moment that we speak face to face”, especially in the run-up to COP26. “It is such a large country that if China doesn’t meet [net zero by] 2050, it’s hard to see how the world does.”

Max Johnson, 36, the youngest of Stanley’s six children, who was...

In response The Mac to his Publication

Liu Xiaoming is a Chinese diplomat who served as the Ambassador of China to the United Kingdom from 2010 to 2021, under Chinese leaders Hu Jintao and Xi Jinping. He retired as ambassador in January 2021 and will be replaced by Zheng Zeguang.

In response The Mac to his Publication

🤦🏼‍♂️

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

An echo is a sound that is repeated because the sound waves are reflected back. Sound waves can bounce off smooth, hard objects in the same way as a rubber ball bounces off the ground. ... That is why echoes can be heard in a canyon, cave, or mountain range.

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

With climate change, extreme heat events are on the rise.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Transcription is the process of copying a segment of DNA into RNA. The segments of DNA transcribed into RNA molecules that can encode proteins are said to produce messenger RNA. Other segments of DNA are copied into RNA molecules called non-coding RNAs.

In response The Mac to his Publication

An mRNA vaccine is a type of vaccine that uses a copy of a molecule called messenger RNA (mRNA) to produce an immune response. The vaccine delivers molecules of antigen-encoding mRNA into immune cells, which use the designed mRNA as a blueprint to build foreign protein that would normally be produced by a pathogen (such as a virus) or by a cancer cell. These protein molecules stimulate an adaptive immune response that teaches the body to identify and destroy the corresponding pathogen or cancer cells. The mRNA is delivered by a co-formulation of the RNA encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles that protect the RNA strands and help their absorption into the cells.

In response The Mac to his Publication

An immune response is a reaction which occurs within an organism for the purpose of defending against foreign invaders.

In response The Mac to his Publication
In response The Mac to his Publication

A criticism of eugenics policies is that, regardless of whether negative or positive policies are used, they are susceptible to abuse because the genetic selection criteria are determined by whichever group has political power at the time. Furthermore, many criticize negative eugenics in particular as a violation of basic human rights, seen since 1968's Proclamation of Tehran as including the right to reproduce. Another criticism is that eugenics policies eventually lead to a loss of genetic diversity, thereby resulting in inbreeding depression due to a loss of genetic variation. Yet another criticism of contemporary eugenics policies is that they propose to permanently and artificially disrupt millions of years of evolution, and that attempting to create genetic lines "clean" of "disorders" can have far-reaching ancillary downstream effects in the genetic ecology, including negative effects on immunity and on species resilience.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Researchers from the OHSU Casey Eye Institute in Portland, Oregon, have broken new ground in science, medicine, and surgery — the first gene editing procedure in a living person.

For the first time, scientists are altering DNA in a living human. With more research the study could lead to the development of procedures that can help to correct other genetic disorders.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Known as the BRILLIANCE clinical trial, the procedure is designed to repair mutations in a particular gene that causes Leber congenital amaurosis type 10, also known as retinal dystrophy. It is a genetic condition that results in vision deterioration and has previously been untreatable.

“The Casey Eye Institute performed the first gene editing surgical procedure in a human being in an attempt to prevent blindness from a known genetic mutation,” said Dr. Mark Fromer, ophthalmologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. “The abnormal DNA is removed from a cell with the generating mutation. This will potentially offer sight to people with a form of previously untreatable blindness.”

In response The Mac to his Publication

Deoxyribonucleic acid (/diːˈɒksɪˌraɪboʊnjuːˌkliːɪk, -ˌkleɪ-/ (About this soundlisten);[1] DNA) is a molecule composed of two polynucleotide chains that coil around each other to form a double helix carrying genetic instructions for the development, functioning, growth and reproduction of all known organisms and many viruses. DNA and ribonucleic acid (RNA) are nucleic acids. Alongside proteins, lipids and complex carbohydrates (polysaccharides), nucleic acids are one of the four major types of macromolecules that are essential for all known forms of life.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Only people mentioned by @TheMac in this post can reply

In response The Mac to his Publication

Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.

In response The Mac to his Publication

From Middle English perfit, from Old French parfit (modern: parfait), from Latin perfectus, perfect passive participle of perficere (“to finish”), from per- (“through, thorough”) + facere (“to do, to make”). Spelling modified 15c. to conform to Latin etymology. Doublet of parfait.

(1) Show this thread