Sentences with phrase «incinerated when»

Things come from just about anywhere, get used, and then get taken to the landfill or are incinerated when we're finished with them.

Not exact matches

But the numbers drop pretty fast when certain niceties are specified — such as $ 100,000 - and - up price tags, the likelihood of severe motion sickness, dizziness, and acceleration - induced unconsciousness, as well as an unknown but certainly less than trivial chance of being incinerated in a rocket explosion or errant atmospheric reentry.
In Matthew 24, Jesus is not saying that when He comes again, He will be coming to obliterate and incinerate people.
But then the world awoke on September 11th, when 3000 innocent people were incinerated because 19 Muslim men believed that they were doing the divine work of Allah and that they would be rewarded in paradise.
In exchange, the state assures us that when we go to sleep, we will not be murdered in the night; when we go to work, we will not be incinerated; when we read our mail, we will not be lethally infected.
It's very hard to believe in an omnipotent, omnisent and (espesialy) omnibenevolent god when cretin pastors aren't incinerated by bolts of lightening.
It's very hard to believe in an omnipotent god (or any god at all) when cretin pastors aren't incinerated by bolts of lightening
Also, when his disciples want to call down fire from heaven to incinerate the city that did not accept Jesus (this fit perfectly with God's behavior in the OT, does it not?)
There have been difficult times when our differences created sparks that could have possibly turned into a raging fire that might have incinerated us.
Our history brought us to leave England due to religious persecution, into WW II as Hitler incinerated the Jew, against Russia when they would enslave Europe and the world to an atheistic communism.
The animals that weren't incinerated or gassed by fumes froze or starved to death soon after, when dust kicked up by the impact blotted out the sun for more than a year, killing plant life around the globe.
About two thirds of the discarded devices were still functioning, upping the danger that they would crack during transport or when crushed by garbage trucks, tossed into landfills or incinerated (more of an issue in developing countries), thereby releasing toxic chemicals into the environment.
When anyone comes for my advice on how to incinerate away the fat around their belly, I usually tell them to buy the following items for Amazon and get serious losing the love handles as well as toning their abs.
Most of them contain calcium carbonate which when introduced in the body, help incinerate fats.
I like how Galluzzo only expresses horror when they say the negative for Scarecrows was with them at the time and would have been incinerated in the accident.
But I believe that around the mid-1980s, when corporations began to become more powerful that some nation states, that the battle for critical democratic citizenship became just a smokescreen for the production of consumer citizenship and critical pedagogy as it was then conceived became more like a dying star about to go into a supernova stage and incinerate any hope we had for real educational transformation, locked as we were within a neoliberal state that was quickly consolidating itself (and that a few decades later would have transformed itself into a security state akin to fascism).
The original «Ring hosted the German Grand Prix from 1927 until 1976, when reigning world champion Niki Lauda was nearly incinerated there.
These bonkers numbers allow the massive Bentley Mulsanne Speed to climb all the way to 190 - mph, and the rear - wheel drive sedan somehow manages to avoid incinerating its tires when the gas pedal is floored and 60 - mph arrives in a scant 4.8 seconds.
The process must go on for a long time before all that digested light is reclaimed, but the Father of Greatness can look forward, even so, to the day when all the light that has been reclaimed can join the superior light above, and all the dross has been incinerated and let fall back into darkness.
What happens is, the dogs start at a «no kill» shelter, and when they are not adopted, they are sent or possibly transferred to a shelter that eventually (unless they are adopted) kills and incinerates their bodies.
But I had been focused on climate and humans since 1984, when I began reporting what would end up being a long cover story for Science Digest magazine assessing nuclear winter, kind of the inverse potential human impact on climate (global cooling from a pall of smoke rising from incinerated cities).
They're also made with chemicals that can pose a health danger when they're disposed of, incinerated, etc..
I believe Malcolm Light when he says we will find ourselves incinerated in a methane firestorm in about 5 to 8 years time.
Modern diesel powered vehicles are also equipped with diesel particulate filters (DPF) or diesel particulate diffusers (DPD), which remove particulate matter (soot) from exhaust gases and, like catalytic converters, reach temperatures of 500 - 900 °C during the «regeneration» phase, when the soot is effectively incinerated inside the DPF or DPD unit.
The Healing Walk on Saturday honored the memory of 47 residents of Lac - Mégantic in Canada who were killed this week last year when a train carrying explosive Bakken crude derailed and incinerated the town.
(I have owned an incinerating toilet and they are anything but eco-friendly, using a huge amount of electricity, creating noise and a pall of burned poop smell when the wind isn't blowing.
Approximately four pounds of gold can be retrieved from each ton of molten fly ash generated when sludge is incinerated.
Reuse is also a job creation leader, that is, when you manage 10,000 tons of materials, incinerating creates 1 job; landfilling creates 6 jobs; recycling it creates 36 jobs; and reuse of these same materials can create 28 - 296 jobs (source: US EPA, Institute for Local Self Reliance).
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