Attack which you may get some of these ransoms are getting two or 3 million. So its a high profit margin business. Basically people go out and recruit. But the to do is mix people are inexperienced and experience people. Say of someone whos called a jumper. The person is the first person who boards the ship. Thats the most extreme, the purses been there before and thats a person makes the most money. Thank all go out, one of two ways. Go out and what are called motherships which are small fishing boats but within the small fishing boats are little secrets. So they go out to sea and when they see a big ship coming, shoot out of the mothership and quickly run up on the bigger ship and the sea boat and start firing on them. When they get close enough where the ship has to slow down then they will board the ship and try to hijack it. They usually have machine guns and rpg. Basically most ships are not manned by people who are armed. A lot of Insurance Companies use to give Insurance Compan
This is the description of de l la idiotidiots. These were rebound, published later in the nineteenth century. But what they document is Napoleons Campaign in egypt and artists rendering of the landscape of egypt, pyramids, architecture, architectural elements, elements of the hieroglyphs, egyptian pottery, maps, diagrams of the layouts of pyramids, different historical sites around egypt. This is an era where there was no photography. This was a way to document and detailed the things napoleon and his army were capturing and a way to account for the riches of egypt that napoleon was hoping to bring back into france to the empire and also used as points of study for french architects and artists. This piece was another in a set from 1792 published during the french republic. About the history of louis the sixteenth. This is talking about the history of king louis and the start of the revolution. This kind of material gives us a perspective how the contemporaries, people who lived durin
Forty years ago, the idea of celebrating the birthday of Martin Luther King as a national holiday was signed into law. The road to winning that recognition included a 15-year hard-fought battle.
Editor’s Picks: A (non-exhaustive) list of our favorite TED Talks of 2020 18 December, 2020 - 03:30
As we usher out 2020 the (enter superlative of your choice) year let’s take a moment to look back before we close the door for good. What captured our imaginations, reflected our emotions and sparked our hope for a better tomorrow? From the wisdom of Dolly Parton to the life-saving potential of snail venom to the transformative work of antiracism, here’s a (non-exhaustive) list of the TED Talks that stayed with us as the world shifted beneath our feet.
Why do people distrust vaccines? Anthropologist Heidi Larson describes how medical rumors originate, spread and fuel resistance to vaccines worldwide.