
Where can I find a place to buy a website with my own domain name and a SiteBuilder?
I do not know how to use the HTML so I need one with a good SiteBuilder program. I just want to pay an annual fee, no monthly. I'm not planning to pay a fortune because there will be a place of business, but just for me. I guess my price range is $ 50 or less for a year, there is such a thing? Because I see other places to go for about $ 10 per month.
Need an easy-to-use solution offers an affordable and reliable web hosting service together with a friendly user site builder. ($ 3.95/month) Check out: http://top5hosts.atspace.com/sl.htm'm sure he will work for you and fulfill all your requirements. They have a really great offer for hosting and I've used for over 3 years now and never had a single problem with them. Good Luck!
Perendev Magnet Motor by Mike Brady
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Who Owns The Water? $39.78 The shortage of fresh, clean water, states a report by the Human Rights Commission, is the greatest danger to which mankind has ever been exposed. It is only thanks to water and its mysterious qualities that life on earth is possible at all. Who Owns the Water? discusses the phenomenon of water, marvels at its uniqueness, and addresses the dangers and opportunities water offers. The book looks at the most important questions about providing drinking water and producing food but also deals with water as a destructive force and investigates the chemical qualities of the molecule. Who Owns the Water? points out the risk of unlimited privatization of water and records how dependence on water is exploited. Detailed texts and provocative illustrations show how water can belong to no one, but must be treated responsibly and held in appropriate esteem by the whole of mankind. |
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Who Owns the West? $10.8 Who owns the West? All of us, of course , says William Kittredge, but this simple answer... is sort of beside the point when we get down to considering questions of fairness. Stay joyous under the sun and moon, in the rain and out; that's another halfway answer . Kittredge gives us not easy answers but a sustained meditation on what it means to be a Westerner today. The three essays in Who Owns the West? compose both a celebration of the new West and an elegy for an old West that is fading. Noting that our ideas of paradise originate in childhood , Kittredge describes, in Heaven on Earth , growing up in the highland desert country of east Oregon, an ancient horseback world that is mostly gone . Next, in Lost Cowboys and Other Westerners , he gives us a series of portraits of inhabitants of the region. Finally, in Departures , Kittredge turns his eye to the West today, the new heartland nation that is being born from the pain and the glory of the past and the struggles and anger of the present. |
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Who Owns Native Culture? $12.89 <p>Illustrations<br /><br />Preface<br /><br />Author's Note</p><p>Introduction<br /><br />1. The Missionary's Photographs<br /><br />2. Cultures and Copyrights<br /><br />3. Sign Wars<br /><br />4. Ethnobotany Blues<br /><br />5. Negotiating Mutual Respect<br /><br />6. At the Edge of the Indigenous<br /><br />7. Native Heritage in the Iron Cage<br /><br />8. Finding Justice in the Global Commons</p><p>Notes<br /><br />Sources on Indigenous Cultural Rights<br /><br />Acknowledgments<br /><br />Index</p>Michael Brown brings a discerning anthropological eye and ear to the passionate questions raised by efforts to protect native heritage from use by outsiders. <i>Who Owns Native Culture?</i> is a major and vital work, opening up to view a tournament of values central to contemporary thinking about culture.The genius of the book is both to bring together a vast amount of disparate material... and to add to this the author's own touch: his ability to present embattled people and conflicting logics with hopes for provisional, practical, empirically wise and humane solutions.An outstanding book on a subject of vital importance. Michael Brown has emerged as a commanding figure in debate about this subject, and here we see why. Not only does he cover a tremendous range of issues but unlike other books on the subject, his offers guidelines for how such complex issues should be politically negotiated. Must reading!Everyone whose research involves indigenous cultures, indigenous property rights, or intellectual property issues should have a closely read and well-highlighted copy of Brown's book.<p>The practical and artistic creations of native peoples permeate everyday life in settler nations, from the design elements on our clothing to the plot-lines of books we read@)Ç®záHÿ¾Úð |
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Who Owns the Future? $17.99 With the world being inundated with facts and statistics about everything from global warming and climate change to GM food to energy and resource crises to poverty and alienation it is easy to be swamped and overcome by the seeming uncertainty and apparent impossibility of it all. This book merges themes of environmentalism, philosophy, science, psychology, language, sociology, metaphysics, religion, gender relationships, politics, poverty, population and much more towards finding frameworks about how the human race can address the awesome challenges facing it both now and into the future. The book pulls no punches about the peril of our current situation, but essentially offers an optimistic and realistic view of the future based on the premise that the human race can successfully change and adapt its behaviour in order to survive and flourish. The question is however, will it make those changes? And, will you? |
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Who Owns School? $43.59 Who Owns School? |
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The Man Who Owns the News $9.74 The Man Who Owns the News |
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Who Owns Canada Now $24.99 Who Owns Canada Now |
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Who Owns the World $9.73 Who Owns the World |
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