http://www.cwhdallas.com/untested-texas/
Untested Texas
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| Texas Ranger CB Mobile Radio Mic Microphone 4 Four Pin untested | ![]() |
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US $9.99 | 24d 5h 3m |
| PLAIN VINTAGE TEXAS INSTRUMENTS LCD WATCH UNTESTED 4FIX | ![]() |
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US $49.99 | 14d 2h 22m |
| VINTAGE TEXAS INSTRUMENTS MEN WATCH MODEL 103 UNTESTED | ![]() |
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US $64.24 | 6d 9h 59m |
| UNTESTED Texas Instruments TravelMate 5100 VINTAGE Laptop Computer | ![]() |
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US $29.99 | 5d 20h 35m |
| Texas Instruments TSBKOHCI403 (Used, untested, no Power up) 1394 Designer Kit | ![]() |
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US $44.99 | 4d 13h 10m |
| Texas Instruments XDS510WS Emulator - Untested | ![]() |
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US $200.00 | 1d 12h 44m |
| LOT OF TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, SHARP, CASIO CALCULATORS UNTESTED AS IS | ![]() |
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US $25.99 | 1d 12h 21m |
| Untested Video Game System AC Power Adapters . Atari , Texas Instruments ,& more | ![]() |
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US $9.99 | 1d 11h 15m |
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Today, cosmetic surgery is an extremely common procedure carried out on both the young and the old. Most cosmetic surgery patients want to look good, nip and tuck a little bit here and there in an effort to hide evidence of the aging process. Statistics show that most cosmetic surgery patients are women, but there seems to be an influx of men who are unafraid of going under the knife in order to look good. Hence, cosmetic surgery is now common in both women and men. And in this modern era, cosmetic surgery patients want to get optimal results from cosmetic surgery without having to fork out the insane amount that cosmetic surgery used to cost some decades back. Therefore, more and more ways continue to be developed to satisfy the needs of consumers.
Once upon a time, facelifts and liposuction were the only options open to cosmetic surgery patients. Other untested and unproven cosmetic surgery methods were called ‘high-risk’ or ‘alternative’ cosmetic surgery methods. When the cosmetic surgery procedure comes with a term like ‘high-risk’, consumers tend to be more hesitant.
While previous methods of cosmetic surgery aims to CHANGE the way a person looks, modern cosmetic surgery methods aim to help the patient look better, healthier, younger without having too much of their facial features or body parts altered. Indeed, patients show that they want the cosmetic surgery to be done as quickly as possible, as noninvasive as possible and require as short a recovery time as possible.
Instead of pulling, nicking and tucking skin away, the latest that the cosmetic surgery world has to offer is the noninvasive form of cosmetic surgery; the facial fillers. Instead of pulling skin tighter in an effort to reduce wrinkles, the facial filler cosmetic surgery method is a form of hyaluronic acid injected to fill out parts of the face to reduce signs of aging. Facial fillers also help erase unsightly acne scares, chicken pox scars or simply provide the face with more meat. It has been shown that this type of non-invasive cosmetic surgery lasts longer than collagen itself. And furthermore, undergoing this cosmetic surgery procedure, there is no risk of developing an allergic reaction associated with other types of facial fillers available in the market today!
Botox is also an extremely popular cosmetic surgery method. Botox helps relax the miscles, fades wrinkles slowly and fill in deep laugh and frown lines. Botox is also a non-invasive method that helps etch away the signs of aging slowly and inexpensively.
Dakota Caudilla, journalist, and website builder Dakota Caudilla lives in Texas. He is the owner and co-editor of [http://www.your-plastic-surgery.comon] which you will find a longer, more detailed version of this article.
Dakota Caudilla, journalist, and website builder Dakota Caudilla lives in Texas. He is the owner and co-editor of [http://www.your-plastic-surgery.comon] which you will find a longer, more detailed version of this article.
Texas Relates To Import Safety Issues As China Executes Its Top Food and Drug Administrator
China's official Xinhua news agency announced yesterday the execution of Zheng Xiaoyu, the former head of its State Food and Drug Administration, in an attempt to show the country's seriousness about cleaning up obvious problems with exporting contaminated food and drugs.
Xiaoyu was convicted of accepting bribes totaling the equivalent of one million USD to approve untested drugs. The Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court carried out the sentence after denying appeals from Xiaoyu, who argued the punishment was too harsh for the crime, and that he had confessed to his wrongdoings. Evidently, it wasn't enough. Xiaoyu was the first ministerial-level official executed in China in seven years, and only the fourth within the past thirty.
The execution is expected to be met with mixed reviews by the American public, which has been outraged by China's continuous problems with contaminated food and drugs. Numerous industries -- from major retail chains, to the health insurance and health care industries -- have been trying to contain serious health and safety risks from the products. Hundreds of human and animal lives have been affected in the U.S. alone.
But putting an individual to death for accepting bribes also is riling up human rights' activists, many of whom argue that, no matter one's stance on the effectiveness of the death penalty, it should not be considered for nonviolent crimes. China's reputation for violating human rights, after all, is no better than its reputation for exporting dangerously contaminated goods.
The nationwide contamination earlier this year of some of the U.S.'s top pet food brands by wheat protein imported from China was only the latest in a series of scandals involving compromised products from the country, including tires, children's toys, vitamins used for baby formula, and toothpaste. Even phony anti-malarial drugs have been exported and used, killing or further sickening desperately ill patients.
Texas understands this issue well. With so many products legally and illegally imported from the border, and with only 1% of all of the nation's imports being inspected by the Food and Drug Administration, it's likely that nearly any establishment in the state selling almost any goods -- from Dallas, to Houston, to Austin, to the tiny border towns -- is making available a product American regulatory industries would never allow to be produced in the U.S. Even fruit is subject to different regulations in Mexico, and is often sprayed with chemicals now banned in this country. The problems with Chinese imports, then, which circulate throughout every state, only adds to the problem, and Texans have been shown to be less than tolerant about products on the market that could put public health at risk.
China knows America's outrage, and is making overt efforts to reassure the Western public of its commitment to safety, including the conviction and execution of Xiaoyu. Without its exports, the Chinese economy would collapse. Wal-Mart alone is China's eighth largest trading partner, and over 90% of the vitamin C sold in the U.S. is produced there. In fact, Americans would be surprised to know that much of their aspirin, pain relievers, and antibiotics, including penicillin, are produced in China. Labels stating a vitamin or drug's country of origin are not required in the U.S., however, and few products actually reveal it. Fewer Americans probably even think about it when picking up a prescription from the pharmacy.
This is certainly not to say that all products from China are dangerous, or even of poor quality. It's the fact we simply don't know that makes us cringe. We don't know which exports are safe or, at times, even when we're buying imported products, let alone imported drugs from a facility in China that may or may not be clean, and that may or may not be producing untested products. Xiaoyu's willingness to accept bribes to approve untested drugs forces most of us to count our blessings that we weren't one of the many malaria patients trusting phony medication, or one of the many beloved pets ingesting contaminated wheat protein. Perhaps this will be a turning point for China's regulatory industry. Perhaps. But until then: buyer beware.
Making sure the products you buy are safe is one very important part of taking care of your health. How you take care of yourself will certainly affect you as you age, and eventually your wallet, as well.
About the Author
Pat Carpenter writes for Precedent Insurance Company. Precedent puts a new spin on health insurance. Learn more at Precedent.com
Can Republicans really be satisfied with the grumpy old guy and the cheerleader?
Obama's TV audience nearly doubled the amount of people who watched John Kerry forcing McCain to pick an obscure, untested and unknown woman when we all know McCain wanted Lieberman and was willing to settle for Pawlenty.
“No one knows anything about her,” complained one GOP strategist, who spoke on the condition that he not be identified. “I don’t know anyone who has even met her.”
McCain succeeded in keeping his pick a secret until this morning, but the secrecy came at a cost: Surrogates who might have been counted on to sing Palin’s praises were caught flat-footed and unprepared instead.
“I don’t know much about her,” Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison told CNN this morning. “I don't know Sarah Palin."
Who are the Neocons on Y/A trying to fool?
Perhaps by picking a complete unknown McCain is suggesting that he doesn't really need a VP, that it's a do-nothing job that only needs window dressing? Or maybe there's more to it. I'm curious and will stay tuned in. I really don't know who I'll vote for. I used to be more for McCain: now I'm more for Obama, who knows.
Afghanistan battle shows war rarely fought to plan
The intelligence said a Taliban commander planned to dispatch a suicide bomber against an American patrol base. But where? Would more than one attacker strike? What day and time? On foot, or in a vehicle that would pack more explosives?
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