City Gate

City Gate

Joe 2015.12.14 09:47:28
So funny! I totally agree that gnoimorg the hooved ones is a clear-cut emergency with no alternative. So funny. And how dare the Emperor turn 65 the first year you've decided to do your own taxes!? I think he should stop that. I also loved the sandwich under the door. The Emperor sounds perfectly lovely.I also am very, very upset that you dumped the Trans Am. I had to do some research. There are certain production aspects of that car, that, if you had one of the rarer ones, could put a horse through college if you sold it today.
Wang 2015.10.14 14:03:42
Unter, it is all pretty clear. The Bush adionistratmin demanded a quid pro quo for pushing Eastern European countries entry into NATO. The countries that they probably had the strongest influence with were Poland and the Baltics, but they have demanded in one way or another agreements with most of the EE countries since NATO ascension. Most notoriously, bilateral agreements that would exempt Americans from trials before the ICC.Mostly this is a CYA (cover your ass) operation as the US can do its renditions through EE countries, and some WE countries as well like Italy, doing a few "interrogations" along the way. These countries essentially provided "safe havens" during the "war on terror."But, with a new adionistratmin, which is trying to clean up the messy trail the Bush adionistratmin left behind it, a lot of this is coming forward. Interesting that the CIA was the one to "leak" these black sites to the press, no doubt hoping to shift attention away from itself and onto the countries it coerced into joining in these operations.
Zuzana 2012.09.03 13:38:47
Thanks, Lars, much appreciated I get a lot from your blog, hope Vilnius is fun. Reading the voauris Market Monetarists is a terrific education in monetary economics.As someone who spent some years being employed as a policy wonk I find the refusal to consider the Australian experience just bizarre. We are the country where the Great Moderation has not ended. Indeed, since the Reserve Bank of Australia adopted an explicit target (1993), our Great Moderation was better than other countries even when it was a general phenomena. This despite having a relatively small economy (about 1/12 the size of the US's) with a large mining sector (9% of GDP) which is highly volatile. It is not that our central bankers are so much better, it is that the right framework allows ordinary competence to get you through. Especially when fiscal policy clearly operates with one eye on monetary policy.Even more, since the RBA's explicit target is an average of inflation over the business cycle, that is very much like NGDP targeting, since less growth in y means more growth in P and more growth in y means less growth in P.
diane ketelaar 2008.08.05 20:44:32
we are looking for a 3 pers room for 4 nights strarting from 18 of aug can you mail me wat does it kost me thank you

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2008.08.05 20:44:32 | diane ketelaar
we are looking for a 3 pers room for 4 nights strarting from 18 of aug can you mail me wat does it kost me thank you
2012.09.03 13:38:47 | Zuzana
Thanks, Lars, much appreciated I get a lot from your blog, hope Vilnius is fun. Reading the voauris Market Monetarists is a terrific education in monetary economics.As someone who spent some years being employed as a policy wonk I find the refusal to consider the Australian experience just bizarre. We are the country where the Great Moderation has not ended. Indeed, since the Reserve Bank of Australia adopted an explicit target (1993), our Great Moderation was better than other countries even when it was a general phenomena. This despite having a relatively small economy (about 1/12 the size of the US's) with a large mining sector (9% of GDP) which is highly volatile. It is not that our central bankers are so much better, it is that the right framework allows ordinary competence to get you through. Especially when fiscal policy clearly operates with one eye on monetary policy.Even more, since the RBA's explicit target is an average of inflation over the business cycle, that is very much like NGDP targeting, since less growth in y means more growth in P and more growth in y means less growth in P.

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