Not exact matches
As mentioned
earlier, Cameron, Clegg and
other key figures in the Coalition such as Michael Gove, like to think of themselves (and portray themselves) as radical and «progressive», dragging the
country forwards
into the global, liberal future — much like their role model, Tony Blair, did before them.
There's a kind of a drug - addled in the Big Bend
country sort of twang to the whole thing and it feels like it could all go off the rails at any moment and burst
into a hell hath no fury conflagration thanks to some lonely propane tank beside the tracks in some Chihuahuan Hooterville; and boy, that drummer works his ass off bringing the bass sound and everything else he's supposed to do; and boy, they remind me of Ed Hall and a bunch of
other whacky late 80s /
early 90s Austin bands whose names escape me; and man, this band is awesome in that sort of weird «lets go drop mushrooms in Marfa and look for the Marfa Lights» kinda way; and whoa, why don't I just shut up and let you listen for yourself?
On the occasion of the 2015 Summit of the Americas, held in Panama City, Panama, and in support of the Summit's theme of «Prosperity with Equity,» we announce our intention to notify the WTO of each of our acceptances of the TFA as
early as possible, ideally, before the 10th WTO Ministerial Conference in December 2015, within the framework of our domestic procedures, and urge
other countries, particularly in the Hemisphere, to do the same as soon as possible to enable the TFA to enter
into force.
But these ingestions occur randomly and with less precision than comiXology's — some weeks certain titles could release with any one of these platforms in certain parts of the
country as
early as 12:01 am Eastern, but on
other weeks (as we have learned already) we will be further back in their lengthy queues and our titles will release several hours later
into Wednesday.
Since stepping
into my new role
earlier this month, I have been traveling around the
country meeting with PIJAC members and
others in the pet business community, including visits to pet shops and commercial breeders.
So the bottom line from these two points is that there is a lot China is doing domestically, but how these get translated
into international commitments still to a significant extent will rest on whether China perceives
other countries as living up to not just to
earlier rounds of commitments (such as the commitments for developed
countries to act first in the original Framework Convention) but to the commitments in the Copenhagen Accord itself.