There are a number of easier
things average citizens can do to help keep property taxes down.
Not exact matches
For me, one of the most interesting
things is that our elected political officials consistently received lowers scores than the
average citizen.
There are countless
things that we can do at all levels of government to reduce our costs with little harm to the
average citizen.
Keep in mind as well that, for the
average citizen, there is no such
thing as a secure telephone line.
And incidentally, a lot of
average citizens like me wonder if
things like buying cars with a bit better gas mileage and switching to CFL and LED light bulbs amount to much more than pissing in the wind.
There are many
things that «
average citizens» can do to reduce our demand for fossil fuels — most of which will also save us money and improve our health and quality of life.
One of the many
things that puzzle me as non scientific
citizen of
average scientific knowledge in trying to follow the debate concerning AGW is understanding how, given the many «low» levels of uncertainty admitted by most experts, can anyone claim to «know» such a complex question?
In a lame effort to fill out the TRNN video with other material which looked like fossil fuel industry orchestrating
things, a line from the American Petroleum Institute's 1998 leaked «Global Climate Science Communications Team» memo was highlighted, while the narrator read it: «Victory will be achieved when
average citizens understand uncertainties in climate science.»
«Victory Will Be Achieved for Greenpeace When,» among other
things, «
Average citizens «understand» (recognize) certainties in climate science,» public «recognition of certainty becomes part of the «conventional wisdom.»»
Experts tells us that uninsured numbers tend to swell during tough economic times, and that they go up faster than they eventually do back down when
things get better financially for the
average citizen.
«There's no one
thing that spurred this motion,» says Hillier's legislative assistant Nick Kadysh, «In Canada there's been a fairly long history of property rights abuses — not always intentional — but there's very little that the
average citizen can do to combat this.»