...στο συνέδριο του ΠΑΣΟΚ . Στο συνέδριο του ΠΑΣΟΚ που αρχίζει αυτή την εβδομάδα, έχουν κληθεί αντιπροσωπείες και των άλλων κομμάτων. Τον Σ...
.
Στο συνέδριο του ΠΑΣΟΚ που αρχίζει αυτή την εβδομάδα, έχουν κληθεί αντιπροσωπείες και των άλλων κομμάτων. Τον Συνασπισμό θα εκπροσωπήσει αντιπροωπεία με επεκεφαλής τον Αλέξη Τσίπρα. Κι αυτό που ήδη ανησυχεί τα στελέχη της Χαριλάου Τρικούπη είναι ποιας υποδοχής θα τύχει από τους συνέδρους. Ή τουλάχιστον ένα τμήμα τους και μάλιστα της νεολαίας: "Κι αν αρχίσουν να τον χειροκροτούν και κερδίσει τις εντυπώσεις;" Ο,τι και να γίνει θα έχει μεγάλο πολιτικό ενδιαφέρον.
Αλεξης.. και ξερο ψωμι
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΗ τοπική ΚΑΙ ΝΟΜΑΡΧΙΑΚΗ αυτοδιοίκηση του Ν ΗΛΕΙΑΣ ΔΕΝ ΕΝΔΙΑΦΕΡΕΤΑΙ ΓΙΑ ΤΑ ΤΟΠΙΚΑ ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΙΑ ΝΕΩΝ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚανένα πρόβλημα.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤο ήθος η αγωνιστικότητα ,η δημοκρατικότητα μας και η καλή μας συμπεριφορά δεν μπορεί να αμφισβητηθεί.
Οι νοσηροί εγκέφαλοι εφεύρουν τέτοια θέματα .Μήπως θα ήθελαν αυτοί να τον ανακηρύξουμε δια βοής ..αρχηγό?
Ούτε κρύο ούτε ζέστη λοιπόν . Άσε που στο συνέδριο των δεν άφησαν ούτε κάλεσαν τον Γιώργο Παπανδρέου να πάει. Μην το ξεχνάμε αυτό. Άρα το πιθανότερο θα είναι να φάει ένα γερό κράξιμο γιατί την αντιδημοκρατική των συμπεριφορά.
Αλλά είπαμε το ήθος και η ευπρέπεια των ΠΑΣΟΚ-συνέδρων είναι εγνωσμένης αξίας οπότε είπαμε .Ούτε γάτα ούτε ζημιά .το πιθανότερο.
Με εκτίμηση
babis
ΝΟΜΙΖΩ ΕΤΣΙ ΟΠΩΣ ΑΡΜΟΖΕΙ ΣΕ ΠΡΟΕΔΡΟ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΟΥ ΚΟΜΜΑΤΟΣ ΚΑΙ ΜΑΛΙΣΤΑ ΣΥΓΓΕΝΙΚΟΥ. ΕΧΕΤΕ ΕΣΕΙΣ ΠΛΗΡΟΦΟΡΙΕΣ ΟΤΙ ΘΑ ΤΟΝ ΥΠΟΔΕΧΤΟΥΝ ΔΙΑΦΟΡΕΤΙΚΑ Ή ΜΗΠΩς ΦΟΒΗΘΕΙ ΤΟ ΠΑΣΟΚ ΟΤΙ ΘΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΚΛΕΨΕΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΟΥΣ ΨΗΦΟΦΟΡΟΥΣ ΤΟΥ;
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΑγαπητοί και εξαιρετικοί μου φίλοι
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΣημαντικά νέα και διαπιστώσεις
Xθες ψωνίστηκα με ένα τύπο Χάρις το όνομα του.
Σε μια φάση του αποφασίσαμε να του πάρω πίπα.
Φτάνοντας στο δωμάτιο κάθεται ο Χάρις στο κρεβάτι κατεβάζει το παντελόνι και αρχίζει.
- Ρούφα...Ρούφα...Ρούφα...Ρούφα!!
- Ρούφα...Ρούφα...Ρούφα...Ρούφα!!
- ΩΧ!!!Λεει ξαφνικά!
- Φύσα..Φύσα..Φύσα...Φύσα!!
Τι έγινε του λέω!
"Μου μπήκε το σεντόνι στον κώλο", λεει αυτός.
Πάντα με εκτίμηση
babis.
Μία είναι η υποδοχή που αρμόζει στο ΣΥΡΙΖΑ από τους απανταχού Έλληνες:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΒΡΕΓΜΕΝΗ ΣΑΝΙΔΑ!!!
Κανένα πρόβλημα.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήθα τον λιώσω στην πίπα.....
Με εκτίμηση
babis
Σύμφωνα με πληροφορίες απο νέους του Νομού Ηλείας ελάχιστοι είναι οι νέοι και οι νέες που έχουν μέχρι και σήμερα καταθέσει δηλώσεις συμμετοχής στο θεσμό.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΟι περισσότεροι ΔΗΜΟΙ δεν ενδιαφέρονται για το ζήτημα.
Αγαπητοί και εξαιρετικοί μου φίλοι,
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΣημαντικά νέα και διαπιστώσεις πάντα.
Ο Γιώργος Ανδρέα Παπανδρέου, ηγέτης της δημοκρατικής παράταξης και προστάτης εμάς των ομοφυλόφιλων, έχει λύση και στο θέμα της πρόσκλησης Τσίπρα.
Θα ηγηθώ της επιτροπής υποδοχής. Μου αγόρασε ένα νέο φόρεμα από την Kathy Heyndels, τακούνια 12ποντα από τον Καλογήρου και μία εσάρπα. Χτένισμα από το Δουδέση, μανικιούρ, πεντικιούρ και θα με βάψει ο Αχιλλέας Χαρίτος που βάφει και τη συντρόφισσα Στάη.
Το ήθος η αγωνιστικότητα ,η δημοκρατικότητα μας και η καλή μoυ συμπεριφορά δεν μπορεί να αμφισβητηθεί. Ο Αλέξης θα περάσει αξέχαστα.
Τέτοιες μεγαλοφυείς ιδέες του Γιώργου Ανδρέα Παπανδρέου θα μας οδηγήσουν και πάλι στην κυβέρνηση.
Πάντα με εκτίμηση,
babis
ΚΟΥΙΖ:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΠΟΣΟΙ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΥΣ 5000 ΣΥΝΕΔΡΟΥΣ ΤΟΥ ΠΑΣΟΚ ΘΑ ΨΗΦΙΣΟΥΝ ΤΣΙΠΡΑ?
Ρε με ένα πούστη που μπλέξαμε!
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤώρα έγινε αγρότης η πόρνη με τα χίλια παρατσούκλια...
Με το τέλος των πετρελαίων, Αγγλοσάξονες-Γερμανοί-Κινέζοι ετοιμάζονται να αλληλοσφαγούν κι όποιον πάρει ο χάρος, αν έρθει παγκόσμια ψύξη την επόμενη δεκαετία, και με τα τσι(π)ράκια τους εφαρμόζουν παντού το "διαίρει και κατάστρεφε". Γι΄ αυτό πολεμούν με λύσσα το ΣΥΜΦΙΛΙΩΤΙΚΟ ΕΝΙΑΙΟ ΨΗΦΟΔΕΛΤΙΟ. Μόνο που αν οι κανίβαλοι καταλάβαιναν ότι είναι μέσα στο λάκκο που σκάβουν για τους άλλους, δε θα υπήρχε κανιβαλισμός. Πάντως τελευταίοι θα μείνουν οι ψυχραιμότεροι!
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/10/eu.climatechange
http://www.nap.edu/html/climatechange-brief/abruptclimatechange-brief.pdf
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/ray-of-hope-can-the-sun-save-us-from-global-warming-762878.html
http://en.rian.ru/science/20080122/97519953.html
http://www.gao.spb.ru/english/astrometr/index1_eng.html
http://www.nzclimatescience.org/images/PDFs/archibald2007.pdf
http://www.ardin.gr/page/article.php?id=ARDIN_I_33-S_1-A_9
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NaXxwSUXMOw
ΕΔΩ ΤΙΣ ΑΓΩΓΕΣ ΣΑΣ ΜΕΧΡΙ ΝΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΦΥΓΟΥΝ ΤΑ ΣΦΡΑΓΙΣΜΑΤΑ:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΔΙΟΙΚΗΤΙΚΟ ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΙΟ
Α/Α
ΘΕΣΗ
ΟΝΟΜΑΤΕΠΩΝΥΜΟ
1
ΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΦΩΤΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΝΙΚΟΣ
2
ΓΕΝ.ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΜΠΟΥΖΟΥΛΑΣ ΕΥΑΓΓΕΛΟΣ
3
ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΣΤΑΜΕΛΟΣ ΗΛΙΑΣ
4
ΓΡΑΜ ΟΡΓΑΝΩΤΙΚΟΥ
ΡΙΖΟΣ ΡΙΖΟΣ
5
ΤΑΜΙΑΣ
ΣΤΑΣΙΝΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΔΙΟΝΥΣΗΣ
6
Β' ΑΝΤΡΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΥΠΕΥΘΥΝΟΣ ΤΥΠΟΥ
ΚΑΤΑΝΑΣ ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣ
7
Β ΑΝΠΛ. ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΠΡΟΣΚΥΝΗΤΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΑΡΗΣ
8
Γ' ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΚΑΤΣΑΡΟΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
9
Γ΄ΑΝΑΠΛ. ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΚΑΡΑΠΑΣ ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣ
10
ΑΝΑΠΛ. ΤΑΜΙΑΣ
ΠΗΛΙΧΟΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
11
ΕΦΟΡΟΣ
ΒΑΡΛΑΜΟΣ ΠΑΥΛΟΣ
12
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΔΗΜΑΣ ΓΙΑΝΝΗΣ
13
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΓΚΑΡΑΒΕΛΑΣ ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣ
14
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΚΑΛΑΙΤΖΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΙΟΡΔΑΝΗΣ
15
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΚΟΥΤΣΟΔΗΜΑΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
16
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΑΓΓΕΛΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΑΓΓΕΛΗΣ
17
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΑΠΟΣΤΟΛΙΔΗΣ ΠΑΝΤΕΛΗΣ
18
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΖΑΚΟΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
19
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΛΑΙΤΖΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΑΠΟΣΤΟΛΟΣ
20
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΜΠΑΝΟΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
21
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΡΑΛΕΥΘΕΡΗΣ ΠΑΝΤΕΛΗΣ
22
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΟΛΛΑΤΟΣ ΕΥΓΕΝΙΟΣ
23
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΟΥΡΕΤΑΣ ΓΙΑΝΝΗΣ
24
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΑΝΙΑΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
25
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΑΣΤΑΣ ΔΙΟΝΥΣΗΣ
26
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΟΥΚΟΥΒΑΛΑΣ ΑΝΕΣΤΗΣ
27
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΠΑΠΑΝΔΡΙΑΝΟΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
28
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΠΟΛΥΖΩΓΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΒΑΣΙΛΗΣ
29
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΤΡΑΧΑΝΑΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
30
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΡΕΛΙΑΣ ΣΤΑΜΑΤΗΣ
31
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΧΑΤΖΑΡΑΣ ΝΙΚΟΣ
ΕΞΕΛΕΚΤΙΚΗ ΕΠΙΤΡΟΠΗ
Α/Α
ΘΕΣΗ
ΟΝΟΜΑΤΕΠΩΝΥΜΟ
1
ΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΧΡΙΣΤΟΓΟΥΛΑΣ ΒΑΓΓΕΛΗΣ
2
ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΡΟΣ
ΦΡΑΓΚΟΓΙΑΝΝΗΣ ΒΑΓΓΕΛΗΣ
3
ΓΕΝ.ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΤΟΥΜΠΟΥΛΙΔΗΣ ΝΙΚΟΣ
4
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΟΥΝΤΡΙΧΑΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
5
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΡΟΥΜΑΣ ΑΡΙΣΤΕΙΔΗΣ
ΓΕΝ.Ο.Π./Δ.Ε.Η.-Κ.Η.Ε.
Member of ICEM & EMCEF, Μέλος Γ.Σ.Ε.Ε.
Αριθ. Μητρ. Πρωτοδικείου Αθηνών 57
Αριθ. Απόφ. 262/27.02.1971
ΣΤΟΥΡΝΑΡΗ 73-75 Αθήνα, Τ.Κ.104-32
ΤΗΛ. 210.5215.700 FAX:210.5235.996
ΕΔΩ Ο ΚΟΣΜΟΣ ΚΑΙΓΕΤΑΙ ΜΕ ΑΠΕΡΓΙΕΣ, ΑΣΦΑΛΙΣΤΙΚΟ, ΠΕΙΝΑ, ΑΝΕΡΓΙΑ ΚΑΙ ΟΛΑ ΤΑ ΕΘΝΙΚΑ ΘΕΜΑΤΑ ΑΝΟΙΧΤΑ ΚΙ ΕΣΕΙΣ ΑΣΧΟΛΕΙΣΤΕ ΤΙ ΘΑ ΓΙΝΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΟ ΓΑΛΑΚΤΟΜΠΟΥΡΕΚΟ ΤΟ ΤΣΙΠΡΑΚΙ. ΕΝΔΙΑΦΕΡΕΙ ΤΟΝ ΚΟΣΜΟ Ο ΤΣΙΠΡΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΤΑ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΑ ΤΟΥ ΠΑΣΟΚ; ΣΤΑ ΠΑΠΑΡΙΑ ΜΑΣ Ο,ΤΙ ΚΙ ΑΝ ΓΙΝΕΙ.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΕΔΩ ΤΙΣ ΑΓΩΓΕΣ ΣΑΣ:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΜΠΟΥΖΟΥΛΑΣ ΕΥΑΓΓΕΛΟΣ, ΓΕΝ.ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ ΓΕΝ.Ο.Π./Δ.Ε.Η.-Κ.Η.Ε.
Δημητρακοπούλου Ν 38
Αθήνα 11742
KΟΥΚΑΚΙ
2109224003
ΣΤΑΜΕΛΟΣ ΗΛΙΑΣ
ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ ΓΕΝ.Ο.Π./Δ.Ε.Η.-Κ.Η.Ε.
Μανωλιάσας 12-14
Καισαριανή 16121
ΙΛΙΣΙΑ
2107233972
Πωλούνται Εξυπνάδες και Προπαγάνδα με το κιλό.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήBloopers
Bloopers:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤα καλύτερα παπαγαλάκια της πόλης.
Με κουραμπιέδες ασχολούνται στο ΠΑΣΟΚ?
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΣαν ο ήλιος ξεμυτίσει
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήβγαίνουν οι bloopers για γαμήσι.
Πάνε γύρω-γυροφέρνουν
κι άπτον κώλο τους τον παίρνουν.
Τους γαμάνε όλη μέρα
με μια κάβλα πέρα ως πέρα.
Σαν τελειώσει το γαμήσι,
πλέον ο ήλιος έχει δύσει.
Τα μεσάνυχτα και πάλι,
βγαίνουν οι bloopers για σεργιάνι.
Πίνουν μπύρες δεν μεθάνε,
τα γαμήσια αρχινάνε.
Δεν κουράζονται ποτές,
λέει πως γαμιούνται εφτά φορές.
Η πλατεία τους θαυμάζει,
πλέον πια τους έχουν χάσει.
Που είναι λένε
οι πίπες της αυθεντίας,
οι πρώτες πίπες της πλατείας;
Στεναχωριούνται και πονούν,
μπύρες πίνουν και μεθούν.
Τους θυμούνται και φουντώνουν,
bloopers λένε και καυλώνουν.
Γιατί θυμούνται τα παλιά,
τα γαμήσια τα τρελά,
τότε που του τον έχωναν όλοι,
άπτον κώλο τον ξεκώλη.
bloopers πιάστον απ' το μούσι!!
ΥΓ#1: Αυτή είναι η ιστορία
των bloopers των παιδιών,
που 'χουν κώλο σαν πηγάδι,
και γλώσσα σαν παραγάδι.
ΥΓ#2: Μωρές κουφάλες, έπεται και συνέχεια……..
bloopers, bloopers εθνικός δρυμός
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΑμα αρχίσω και λέω ονόματα πολιτικών θα γελάσει κάθε πικραμένος.
Πάτε γυρεύοντας ΝουΔούλες τσούλες κρυφοαδερφές του ελέους...
για λέγε, για λέγε... για να δούμε πόσο μεγάλη την έχεις... τη λίστα
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΕρευνα για διακοπές ρεύματος
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΕντός των προσεχών ημερών αναμένεται το πόρισμα της έρευνας που διενεργεί η εισαγγελία, για τις διακοπές του ηλεκτρικού ρεύματος. Στο πλαίσιο της έρευνας έχουν ήδη καταθέσει στελέχη της διοίκησης της ΔΕΗ, αλλά και του συνδικαλιστικού οργάνου των εργαζομένων, της ΓΕΝΟΠ-ΔΕΗ.
Η έρευνα γίνεται ύστερα από παραγγελία του εισαγγελέα του Αρείου Πάγου, κ. Σανιδά, προκειμένου διερευνηθεί αν διατίθεται το αναγκαίο προσωπικό ασφαλείας κατά τη διάρκεια της απεργίας και αν γίνονται εσκεμμένες περικοπές φορτίων, όπως καταγγέλλουν οι συνδικαλιστές.
Χτες η κατάσταση είχε σχεδόν ομαλοποιηθεί πλήρως, καθώς υπήρχε επάρκεια φορτίων, ενώ το ίδιο αναμένεται να συμβεί και σήμερα. Το ερώτημα όμως είναι τι θα γίνει από αύριο, καθώς θα επαναλειτουργήσουν οι χιλιάδες επιχειρήσεις που παρέμειναν κλειστές το τριήμερο της Αποκριάς και της Καθαρής Δευτέρας.
Στο μεταξύ, συνεχίζεται μέχρι και την Τετάρτη η απεργία της ΓΕΝΟΠ-ΔΕΗ, το διοικητικό Συμβούλιο της οποίας θα αποφασίσει για την περαιτέρω πορεία των κινητοποιήσεων.
12.50 καλώς τον κοινωνικό ρατσιστή
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήμάλλον σε γάμισε κάποιος πούστης και τόχεις απωθημένο
Για τα καλόπαιδα του
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΣΥΡΙΖΑ = ΡΗΓΑΣ ΦΕΡΑΙΟΣ
Πάντα Kikers φόραγαν,
Κωλωνάκι έμεναν,
και BMW τους καβάλαγαν.
CHIP + RASS
κάποια σχέση θα έχει!
(αστέρι έχει
αλλά όχι για την
Ελλάδα μας ρε γαμώτο.
Το πολύ πολύ τώρα που έφυγε
ο Κούρκουλος να πάρει την θέση του)
Σας γράφουμε Εγγλέζικα...
γιατί αυτή είναι η επίσημη γλώσσα
στα ιδιωτικά σχολεία που πηγαίνετε.
Dear poor friends,
we appreciate your effort for surviving,
but not on our Own Major Interest and History.
Honest Proposition:
The name at stake as you put it is "MAKEDONIA"
We are very polite and civilized people so we
let you get the first syllable, "MA".
We keep the second "KE".
So you can be called "MADONIANS".
This is a great advantage for you because:
1. You can have a modern emblem in the sun of your flag.
The famous singer "MADONΝA"
2. You will please the USA because you are the same kind
of products like Madonna,
made in USA.
____
Tο παίζετε Μαγκάκια ...
Με τα ροζ τα Kikerakia…
Και αν φοράτε παντελόνια
Είστε μόνο για σαλόνια...
Οι Μάγκες απαντάνε.
"Πώς θα ...υποδεχτούν τον Τσίπρα;"
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΗ μαλακιας εγκώμιον.....
Λιγουρια του συνασπισμού βρηκατε για μια φορα αρχηγο που δεν ειναι για γελια ή για κλάματα και πρόσβαση σε ΜΜΕ και blogs οπως ποτε πριν στο παρελθον και εχετε ξεσκιστεί στη βαθια φιλοσοφία!!!
Εχετε ξεπερασει όλα τα ρεκορ των αειμνηστων ρηγάδων στη ομφαλοσκοπηση και τον πολιτικό αυνανισμό
ΤΙ ΦΟΡΑΕΙ Ο ΤΣΙΠΡΑς
ΠΟΙΑ ΓΑΜΑΕΙ Ο ΑΛΕΞΗΣ???
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΚΑΛΥΤΕΡΟΣ ΜΕ ΓΥΑΛΙΑ????
ΠΟΙΟΣ ΠΡΕΤΕΝΤΕΡΗΣ ΤΟΝ ΕΓΛΕΙΨΕ ΣΗΜΕΡΑ
ΠΟΤΕ ΘΕΛΕΙ SERVICE H BMW????
Απαντηστε σας παρακαλώ και σ αυτό:
απο που κλανει το μπαρμπουνι?????
.... Και απαντώ για να μην αποπροσανατολιστειτε:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΔεν Κλάνει γι αυτό ειναι κόκκινο
....εσεις τι χρώμα ειστε ειπαμε????
kalo mediako paketaki einai to Tsipraki...alla siga ton superheroe!protimousa Alavano!
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΟ ΤΣΙΠΡΑΣ ΚΑΙ Ο ΣΥΡΙΖΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΜΙΑ ΜΕΓΑΛΗ ΣΑΠΟΥΝΟΦΟΥΣΚΑ... ΔΕΝ ΠΡΟΤΕΙΝΟΥΝ ΛΥΣΕΙΣ - ΜΟΝΟ ΕΥΧΟΛΟΓΙΑ.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΜΕ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΓΙΑΟΥΡΤΙ
ΣΑΚΟΥΛΑΣ
Βρε παιδια,
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήτην bmw μηχανη του την εκανε δωρο ο Αλαβανος επειδη βγηκες προεδρος του Συνασπιμου??? (και btw, ξερετε τι καταναλωση και ρυπους εχει αυτη η μηχανη? χο-χο-χο-χο
σας λεω μονο οτι δεν ειναι και ιδαιτερα οικολογικη!!!!!, ασε που ειναι status symbol και το αγαπημενο μοντελλο των γιαπηδων του ..κολωνακιου και των βορειων προαστειων)
και μην μου πειτε οτι την αγορασε με τα 700ευρω/μηνα, μην τρελλαθουμε!
Αληθεια, γνωριζει κανεις τι επαγγελοταν/επαγγελεται ο Αλεξης?
-partyman
Ο Τσιπρας θα μπουκαρει με σουζα στο συνεδριο και ολοι οι πασοκο-συνεδροι εκστασιασμενοι θα πανυγυριζουν...
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήστην συνεχεια ομως θα εμφανιστει ο Γ.ΠΑΠ. και θα ξυπνησουν ολοι απο το ονειρο....
-partyman
Η ανάσταση του Aλεκου, η υποδοχή του Αλεξη μετά βαΐων και κλάδων, ο μυστικός δείπνος, η προδοσία, η σταύρωση και η Ανάσταση, ξαναζωντανεύουν στις ορθόδοξες αριστερες γωνιες όλου του κόσμου.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΑτμόσφαιρα κατανυκτική. Το φως των κεριών, τα λόγια του ευαγγελίου και οι πιστοί αντιμέτωποι με τα πάθη του Θεανθρώπου.
Οι πιστοί συμπάσχουν με τον Αλεξη και στο τέλος ζουν την Ανάσταση και την επικράτηση του Καλού απέναντι στο Κακό. Με έντονο το κομματικο αίσθημα οι πιστοί γιορτάζουν το Πάσχα και τιμούν το θρησκευτικό σύμβολο του Αριστερισμου.
Πρεςς καλη σαρακοστη.
μπεεεεεεεεεεεεεεεεεε
μουυαχαχαχαχ ΩΡΑΙΟΣ Ο μππεεεεεε,
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήμεγαλε...εγραψες!!!
Καλη Σαρακοστη σε ολους...
-partyman
ΕΔΩ ΤΙΣ ΑΓΩΓΕΣ ΣΑΣ???
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤελικά αυτός ο ηλίθιος κρυφο-φασίστας ο Πασαγιάννης έδωσε τις διευθύνσεις..
Να δώσει και τις διευθύνσεις των βιομηχάνων και μεγαλεμπόρων που έχουν γαμήσει τον κόσμο με την ακρίβεια. Να δώσει και τις διευθύνσεις των βουλευτών που έχουν ξεφτιλίσει ένα ολόκληρο λαό
Ντροπή και αίσχος
Στο συνέδριο θα μοιράσουν και κουραμπιέδες?
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚαφέ στη μάπα του Αλέξη.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΧωριάτης
VoIP!!!
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΑΠΟ ΤΟΤΕ ΠΟΥ Ο ΓΟΥΝΤΙ ΑΛΛΕΝ ΕΚΑΝΕ ΤΙΣ ΓΥΝΑΙΚΕΣ ΝΑ ΜΠΕΡΔΕΨΟΥΝ ΤΟ ΜΗΤΡΙΚΟ ΕΝΣΤΙΚΤΟ ΜΕ ΤΟΝ ΕΡΩΤΑ... ΦΛΟΜΩΣΑΜΕ ΣΤΟΥΣ ΦΛΩΡΟΥΣ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤΣΙ-γκεβαρα-ΠΡΑΣ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΗ
ΤΣΙ-τσιολινα-ΠΟΡΝΗ?
ΤΡΕΜΗ ΤΟ MEGA-ΛΟ ΚΑΤΕΣΤΗΜΕΝΟ..
ΕΡΧΕΤΑΙ Η ΤΣΟΥΠΡΑ ΤΩΝ ΝΤΑΒΑΔΩΝ.
@3.14
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήκι από τότε που έκανες την μαλακία εργόχειρο, όλο δήθεν ευρηματικές μαλακίες είσαι.
Μαλάκα!
ΤΙ ΕΓΙΝΕ ΑΔΕΛΦΙΑ??? ΤΟ ΡΗΞΑΜΕ ΣΤΑ ΟΥΖΑΚΙΑ?
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήWILD
Η Μύκονος στηρίζει Τσίπρα...
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΓΟΥΣΤΑΡΩ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΔΕΝ ΠΡΟΚΕΙΤΑΙ ΝΑ ΠΛΗΞΩ
ΜΕΤΑ ΤΟ ΣΗΡΙΑΛ ΜΕ ΤΟΥΣ ΚΑΡΑΓΚΙΟΖΗΔΕΣ ΔΗΜΟΣΙΟΓΡΑΦΟΥΣ
ΑΡΧΙΣΑΝ ΤΑ ΚΑΡΑΓΚΙΟΖΙΛΙΚΙΑ ΤΩΝ
"ΔΗΜΟΣΚΟΠΩΝ"
Η ΔΗΜΟΣΚΟΠΙΑΔΑ..
ΤΩΡΑ
ΚΑΡΑΓΚΙΟΖΗΔΕΣ ΑΝΑΛΥΤΕΣ ΚΑΙ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΟΙ,ΠΑΙΡΝΟΥΝ ΘΕΣΗ ΣΤΑ
ΔΟΛ-ΙΑ ΑΠΟΤΕΛΕΣΜΑΤΑ ΤΩΝ ΔΗΜΟΣΚΟΠΗΣΕΩΝ
ΣΥΝΕΧΙΣΤΕ ΚΑΡΑΓΚΙΟΖΗΔΕΣ ...
ΕΧΕΤΕ ΠΟΛΥ ΠΛΑΚΑ.
ΑΠΟ ΤΑ ΨΕΜΜΑΤΑ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤΗΣ ΖΑΧΟΠΟΥΛΙΑΔΑΣ ΠΕΡΑΣΑΜΕ ΣΤΗΝ
ΘΕΜΟ-ΜΑΚΗΑΔΑ.
ΤΟ ΑΝΩΤΑΤΟ ΣΤΑΔΙΟ ΤΗΣ ΓΕΛΟΙΟΤΗΤΑΣ
ΘΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ Η ΔΗΜΟΣΚΟΠΙΑΔΑ.
ΘΑ ΚΡΑΤΗΣΗ ΜΗΝΕΣ
ΗΛΙΘΙΟΙ ΑΝΑΛΥΤΕΣ-ΔΗΜΟΣΙΟΓΡΑΦΟΙ
ΘΑ ΜΑΣ ΦΛΟΜΩΣΟΥΝ ΣΤΙΣ ΑΝΑΛΥΣΕΙΣ.
ΔΗΜΟΣΙΟΣΧΕΣΙΤΕΣ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΟΙ,ΚΑΝΕΙΣ
ΔΕΝ ΤΟΛΜΑΕΙ ΝΑ ΠΑΕΙ ΚΟΝΤΡΑ ΣΕ ΔΟΛ-ΙΕΣ ΔΗΜΟΣΚΟΠΗΣΕΙΣ,ΘΑ ΞΕΦΤΙΛΙΖΟΝΤΑΙ..
ΑΝΑΛΥΟΝΤΑΣ ΤΟ "ΝΕΟ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΟ ΣΚΗΝΙΚΟ"
ΑΘΑΝΑΤΟ ΚΑΡΑΓΚΙΟΖΙΣΤΑΝ...
Ο Αλέξης χαμογελάει (μόνο) και απολαμβάνει τα υψηλά του ποσοστά.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΧωρίς θέσεις για τα κύρια προβλήματα της Χώρας μάλλον θα ξεφουσκώσει γρήγορα το φαινόμενο αυτό.
Πάντως ακόμα και να καταρρεύσει, τα πράγματα είναι μάλλον δύσκολα για τον Γιωργάκη.
"ΦΑΙΝΟΜΕΝΟ ΤΣΙΠΡΑΣ" ΟΥΡΛΙΑΖΟΥΝ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤΑ ΠΑΠΑΓΑΛΑΚΙΑ..
ΤΟ ΠΡΑΓΜΑΤΙΚΟ ΦΑΙΝΟΜΕΝΟ ΕΙΝΑΙ Η
ΜΑΛΑΚΙΑ ΠΟΥ ΜΑΣ ΔΕΡΝΕΙ..
Ο ΑΛΑΒΑΝΟΣ ΚΑΙ ΟΙ ΥΠΟΛΟΙΠΟΙ ΞΟΦΛΗΜΕΝΟΙ ΓΕΡΟΙ ΤΟΥ ΣΥΡΙΖΑ,ΕΒΑΛΑΝ
ΜΠΡΟΣΤΑ ΕΝΑ ΩΡΑΙΟ ΑΓΟΡΙ,ΚΑΙ ΑΥΤΟ
ΤΟ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΟΥΝ ΑΝΑΝΕΩΣΗ..
ΑΝΑΛΥΣΗ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή122 εκατ. ευρώ θα ζημιωθεί η ΔΕΗ εξαιτίας Μυτιληναίου
Του Νικου Νικολαου
Ο ΣΥΡΙΖΑ και το ΠΑΣΟΚ, έστω και συρόμενο, απέκτησαν ήδη αρκετή εμπειρία από τις επιδρομές στα γραφεία της ΔΕΗ προκειμένου να παρεμποδίσουν τη διοίκησή της να προχωρήσει στη δημιουργία νέων μονάδων παραγωγής ρεύματος με λιθάνθρακα. Μια λύση, που όμως είναι αναπόφευκτη και επιβεβλημένη, αν θέλουμε η ΔΕΗ να παραμείνει ο μεγάλος εθνικός παραγωγός, μια και εν ονόματι της ψευδεπίγραφης απελευθέρωσης της αγοράς, το κράτος δεν της επιτρέπει να δημιουργήσει νέες μονάδες με πρώτη ύλη το φυσικό αέριο.
Οι επιδρομές, όμως, και το κομματικό αβαντάρισμα των συνδικαλιστών της ΓΕΝΟΠ γίνονται με το πρόσχημα ότι τα «προοδευτικά» κόμματα έχουν χρέος να προασπίσουν τον δημόσιο χαρακτήρα της ΔΕΗ, κάτι που δεν συμβιβάζεται βέβαια με τις πράξεις τους, αφού ισοδυναμούν με τη νομοτελειακή αποδυνάμωση της ΔΕΗ και τη μακροπρόθεσμη κυριαρχία των ιδιωτικών μονάδων. Το ότι άλλωστε αυτά τα δύο κόμματα ουδόλως ενδιαφέρονται για την ενδυνάμωση της ΔΕΗ, προκύπτει ευθέως και από την ένοχη σιωπή τους στο μέγα σκάνδαλο των ζημιών που υφίσταται η κρατική επιχείρηση από τις επιθέσεις που δέχεται από το συγκρότημα Μυτιληναίου!
Οπως έγραψε η «Καθημερινή» στο φύλλο της στις 29 Φεβρουαρίου, η «Αλουμίνιον της Ελλάδος», η μεγαλύτερη βιομηχανία του συγκροτήματος Μυτιληναίου, επέτυχε με «δικονομικό παίγνιο» απόφαση του Πολυμελούς Πρωτοδικείου, με βάση την οποία παρατείνεται τουλάχιστον μέχρι τον Ιούνιο του 2009 η αποικιακή σύμβαση του 1960, που είχε ως γνωστόν υπογράψει ο Κωνσταντίνος Καραμανλής με τη γαλλική Πεσινέ, σε μια περίοδο όμως που η Ελλάδα είχε ανάγκη για ξένες επενδύσεις και βιομηχανίες που θα αξιοποιούσαν τον μεταλλευτικό της πλούτο.
Πέραν αυτού του χαρατσιού ο Μυτιληναίος, ως γνωστόν, διεκδικεί και τον αποχαρακτηρισμό της μονάδας αυτοπαραγωγού συμπαραγωγού ισχύος 335 ΜW, που σχεδίασε και υλοποίησε για την ηλεκτροδότηση της «Αλουμίνιον», σε μονάδα συμπαραγωγού, που του δίνει το δικαίωμα να πουλάει τις παραγόμενες κιλοβατώρες σε υψηλή τιμή στο σύστημα και ο ίδιος να αγοράζει σε χαμηλή τιμή από τη ΔΕΗ.
Εκανα ρεπορτάζ στις αρμόδιες υπηρεσίες της ΔΕΗ για να έχω στοιχεία όσον αφορά τις οικονομικές συνέπειες εις βάρος της από τη δικαστική αναβολή και πληροφορήθηκα τα εξής:
- Εάν η «Αλουμίνιον» εντασσόταν στο τιμολόγιο Α-150, που πληρώνουν όλες οι μεγάλες βιομηχανίες, τότε θα πλήρωνε σήμερα 54 ευρώ / MWH. Με το ειδικό τιμολόγιο τον Ιανουάριο 2008 πλήρωσε 38 ευρώ / MWH.
- Εάν οι τιμές αυτές διατηρηθούν ως έχουν μέχρι το τέλος Ιουνίου 2009, που θα εκδικαστεί η αναβληθείσα υπόθεση, τότε στο 16μηνο που μεσολαβεί η ΔΕΗ θα χάσει έσοδα 53 εκατ. ευρώ συγκριτικά με τις τιμές που πληρώνουν οι άλλες μεγάλες βιομηχανίες.
- Ας σημειωθεί ότι το μέσο κόστος της φθηνής λιγνιτικής παραγωγής βάσης χωρίς οποιοδήποτε κέρδος, η απόδοση είναι 52 ευρώ / MWH και της λοιπής θερμικής παραγωγής βάσης άνω του 70 ευρώ / MWH.
- Ετσι, και αν ακόμη δεχθούμε ότι παραχωρείται ειδικά στην «Αλουμίνιον» ένα μέρος της λιγνιτικής ηλεκτροπαραγωγής με τιμή στο μέσο κόστος χωρίς κέρδος ή απόδοση, πάλι η ΔΕΗ θα ζημιώσει 47 εκατ. ευρώ. Εάν δε η τιμολόγηση γίνει στο μέσο κόστος της θερμικής της παραγωγής βάσης χωρίς κέρδος ή απόδοση, τότε η αντίστοιχη ζημία της ΔΕΗ θα είναι περίπου 65 εκατ. ευρώ.
- Εάν δεχθούμε ότι η «Αλουμίνιον» θα πουλάει το ρεύμα στη ΔΕΗ στην τιμή 75 ευρώ / MWH και θα το αγοράζει πάλι πίσω προς 38 ευρώ / MWH, τότε η ΔΕΗ θα χάσει στους προσεχείς 16 μήνες περίπου 122 εκατ. ευρώ. Η «Αλουμίνιον» θα κερδίσει αντίστοιχα από την πώληση του ρεύματος στην αγορά περίπου 42 εκατ. ευρώ και από την αγορά με το ειδικό τιμολόγιο, έναντι του τιμολογίου Α-150 των μεγάλων βιομηχανιών, 53 εκατ. ευρώ, ήτοι συνολικά 95 εκατ. ευρώ.
- Στις παραπάνω ζημιές της ΔΕΗ θα πρέπει να συνυπολογισθούν το κόστος της αγοράς δικαιωμάτων διοξειδίου του άνθρακα που θα πληρώσει η ΔΕΗ, όπως επίσης και μια εύλογη απόδοση στα κεφάλαιά της.
Ιδού λοιπόν η πρόκληση για τον κ. Τσίπρα. Ας καβαλήσει τη μοτοσικλέτα του, ας ειδοποιήσει και τις κάμερες και ας πάει στα γραφεία του κ. Μυτιληναίου, για να μάθουμε και εμείς τι επιδιώκει η Αριστερά!
Ιδού λοιπόν η πρόκληση για τον κ. Τσίπρα. Ας καβαλήσει τη μοτοσικλέτα του, ας ειδοποιήσει και τις κάμερες και ας πάει στα γραφεία του κ. Μυτιληναίου, για να μάθουμε και εμείς τι επιδιώκει η Αριστερά!
O MEGA-λος ΕΚΒΙΑΣΤΗΣ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΟ ΜΕΓΚΑ-λος ΥΠΟΚΟΣΜΟΣ
ΟΛΗ Η ΑΛΗΘΕΙΑ..
«Η μεγαλύτερη επιχείρηση μίζας"
«Η μεγαλύτερη επιχείρηση μίζας, πιέσεων και εκβιασμών έχει στηθεί εδώ και χρόνια σε μεγάλη κυριακάτικη εφημερίδα. Σε άρθρα της, σε σχόλια, σε ρεπορτάζ, αναγνωρίζεις αμέσως το μήνυμα: « Δώστε μας προμήθεια , αλλιώς σας χαλάμε τη δουλειά». Φυλλομετρούσαμε χθες τις σελίδες , τα άρθρα και τους …υπαινιγμούς της μεγάλης εφημερίδας. Και καταγράψαμε άπειρους εκβιασμούς σε επιχειρηματίες «που δεν τα ακούμπησαν ακόμη», ύμνους σε μεγάλους προμηθευτές που υπέκυψαν και ενίσχυσαν τους ήδη φουσκωμένους τραπεζικούς λογαριασμούς των ηγητόρων της μεγάλης εφημερίδας και υπονοούμενα για άλλους επιχειρηματίες που δεν προσήλθαν να προσκυνήσουν εμπράκτως τον άπληστο δημοσιογραφικό παράγοντα! Έναν αδίστακτο άνθρωπο με σωρεία συμμετοχών σε επιχειρήσεις – εξεβίαζε την συμμετοχή του σε αυτές τις επιχειρήσεις – έναν άνθρωπο που επαίρεται ότι: «Ναι , ρε, έχω τραπεζικούς λογαριασμούς και στην Αγγλία και στην Αμερική και άμα θέλετε να σας δώσω και τους αριθμούς των λογαριασμών μου»!!!
Αυτά έγραφε το «Αντι» σε παλαιότερο τεύχος του.
η «μεγάλη κυριακάτικη εφημερίδα» δεν είναι το ΘΕΜΑ. Είναι το ΒΗΜΑ. Και ο «άπληστος δημοσιογραφικός παράγοντας», δεν είναι ούτε ο Θέμος, ούτε ο Μάκης. Είναι ο κ. Σταύρος Ψυχάρης.
ΑΥΤΗ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΟΧΗ Η ΜΕΓΑΛΥΤΕΡΗ
ΕΠΙΧΕΙΡΗΣΗ ΜΙΖΑΣ ΠΑΙΖΕΤΑΙ ΓΥΡΩ
ΑΠΟ ΤΗΝ ΔΕΗ.
ΟΙ ΑΝΤΑΓΩΝΙΣΤΕΣ ΤΗΣ ΔΕΗ
ΕΧΟΥΝ ΧΩΣΗ ΔΙΣ ΜΑΥΡΑ ΣΕ ΕΚΔΟΤΕΣ
ΚΑΙ ΔΗΜΟΣΙΟΓΡΑΦΟΥΣ ΓΙΑ ΝΑ
ΣΑΜΠΟΤΑΡΟΥΝ ΤΟ DEAL ME THN RWE.
ΝΑ ΔΙΑΒΑΖΕΤΕ ΠΡΟΣΕΧΤΙΚΑ
ΝΕΑ,ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΟΤΥΠΙΑ,ΒΗΜΑ,ΕΘΝΟΣ,ΘΑ ΚΑΤΑΛΑΒΕΤΕ..
ΕΧΕΙ ΜΕΓΑΛΗ ΠΛΑΚΑ..
ΜΕΡΙΚΟΙ ΤΟ ΠΑΙΖΟΥΝ "ΟΙΚΟΛΟΓΟΙ"
ΑΛΛΟΙ ΦΩΝΑΖΟΥΝ ΓΙΑ "ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΜΑ"
ΑΛΛΟΙ ΓΡΑΦΟΥΝ ΚΑΘΑΡΑ ΥΠΕΡ
ENDESA-MYTIΛΗΝΑΙΟΥ,ΚΑΙ ΑΛΛΩΝ.
ΑΛΛΟΙ ΥΠΕΡ ΤΩΝ ΕΡΓΑΖΟΜΕΝΩΝ.
ΜΕΣΑ ΣΤΟ ΚΟΛΠΟ ΚΑΙ Η ΓΕΝΟΠ-ΔΕΗ.
Αυτό το σχόλιο αφαιρέθηκε από τον συντάκτη.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή3 ώρες πέρασαν
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήαπάντηση καμιά,
τόσο μάγκες είστε στο ΣΥΡΙΖΑ
ή από ΕΛΒΕΤΙΑ ΓΥΡΙΖΑ...
Για τα καλόπαιδα του
ΣΥΡΙΖΑ = ΡΗΓΑΣ ΦΕΡΑΙΟΣ
Πάντα Kikers φόραγαν,
Κωλωνάκι έμεναν,
και BMW τους καβάλαγαν.
CHIP + RASS
κάποια σχέση θα έχει!
(αστέρι έχει
αλλά όχι για την
Ελλάδα μας ρε γαμώτο.
Το πολύ πολύ τώρα που έφυγε
ο Κούρκουλος να πάρει την θέση του)
Σας γράφουμε Εγγλέζικα...
γιατί αυτή είναι η επίσημη γλώσσα
στα ιδιωτικά σχολεία που πηγαίνετε.
Dear poor friends,
we appreciate your effort for surviving,
but not on our Own Major Interest and History.
Honest Proposition:
The name at stake as you put it is "MAKEDONIA"
We are very polite and civilized people so we
let you get the first syllable, "MA".
We keep the second "KE".
So you can be called "MADONIANS".
This is a great advantage for you because:
1. You can have a modern emblem in the sun of your flag.
The famous singer "MADONΝA"
2. You will please the USA because you are the same kind
of products like Madonna,
made in USA.
____
Tο παίζετε Μαγκάκια ...
Με τα ροζ τα Kikerakia…
Και αν φοράτε παντελόνια
Είστε μόνο για σαλόνια...
Οι Μάγκες απαντάνε.
P
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΠΡΟΣ ΑΝΑΛΥΤΗ ΔΕΗ
ΕΧΕΙΣ ΥΠΟΛΟΓΙΣΕΙ ΤΟ ΚΟΣΤΟΣ ΠΡΟΤΗΣ ΥΛΗΣ, ΤΟ ΟΠΟΙΟ ΕΙΝΑΙ Ο ΛΙΓΝΙΤΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΤΑ ΟΡΥΧΕΙΑ ΤΑ ΟΠΟΙΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΔΩΡΕΑΝ ΠΑΡΑΧΩΡΗΘΕΙ ΣΤΗΝ ΔΕΗ ΟΛΕΣ ΑΥΤΕΣ ΤΙΣ ΔΕΚΑΕΤΙΕΣ???? ΑΥΤΑ ΤΑ ΧΡΗΜΑΤΑ ... ΤΑ ΔΙΚΑ ΜΑΣ ΧΡΗΜΑΤΑ... ΤΑ ΕΧΕΙ ΥΠΟΛΟΓΗΣΕΙ ΚΑΝΕΝΑΣ ΚΕΡΑΤΑΣ? ΠΟΥ ΜΙΛΑ ΓΙΑ ΔΕΗ???
WILD
ΦΙΛΕ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΑΥΤΟ ΠΟΥ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΣΤΗΝ ΔΕΗ ΜΕ ΤΟΥΣ ΓΕΡΜΑΝΟΥΣ ΜΗΠΩΣ....ΜΗΠΩΣ ΣΟΥ ΘΥΜΙΖΕΙ ΤΙ ΕΚΑΝΑΝ ΣΤΟ ΑΡΑΠΟΓΛΟΥ ΤΗΣ ΕΘΝΙΚΗΣ ΟΤΑΝ ΑΓΟΡΑΣΕ ΤΗΝ ΤΟΥΡΚΙΚΗ ΤΡΑΠΕΖΑ??? ΠΕΣΑΝ ΝΑ ΤΟΝ ΦΑΝΕ... ΜΕΧΡΙ ΚΑΙ ΜΕΣΑ ΣΤΟ ΚΟΙΝΟΒΟΥΛΙΟ...ΓΙΑΤΙ ΗΞΕΡΑΝ ΤΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΠΕΡΙΜΕΝΕ ΑΝ ΓΙΝΟΤΑΝ Η ΣΥΜΦΩΝΙΑ
ΤΩΡΑ ΤΑ ΜΙΣΑ ΚΕΡΔΗ ΤΗΣ ΕΘΝΙΚΗΣ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΑΠΟ ΤΙΣ ΕΠΕΝΔΥΣΕΙΣ ΕΞΩΤΕΡΙΚΟΥ.......
ΑΛΛΑ Ο Δ/ΝΤΗΣ ΤΗΣ ΔΕΗ ,ΠΟΥ ΠΡΟΕΡΧΕΤΑΙ ΑΠΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΟYOTA ΑΝΤΙΔΡΑ ΩΣ ΠΟΝΤΙΟΣ..... ΚΑΙ ΧΑΝΕΙ ΚΑΘΕ ΔΙΚΑΙΟ ΠΟΥ ΕΧΕΙ ΣΤΟ ΣΤΡΑΤΗΓΙΚΟ ΣΧΕΔΙΑΣΜΟ ΤΟΥ....
ΟΣΟ ΓΙΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΙΔΙΟΩΤΕΣ ΣΤΗΝ ΕΝΕΡΓΕΙΑ...ΕΥΤΥΧΩΣ ΓΙΣ ΤΟ ΚΡΑΤΟΣ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΕΡΑΣΙΤΕΧΝΕΣ ΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΟΥ ΕΙΔΟΥΣ
ΦΙΛΙΚΑ
WILD
Το ΣΥΜΦΙΛΙΩΤΙΚΟ ΕΝΙΑΙΟ ΨΗΦΟΔΕΛΤΙΟ ΦΟΒΟΎΝΤΑΙ οι αριστεροδεξιοί επιθετικοί, γι΄αυτό πολεμάνε με λύσσα τις αμεσοδημοκρατικές προτάσεις του Γιώργου Παπανδρέου. ΠΕΡΑΣΤΙΚΑ ΤΟΥΣ !
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NaXxwSUXMOw
http://www.ardin.gr/page/article.php?id=ARDIN_I_33-S_1-A_9
ΤΑ ΜΙΖΑΡΙΣΜΕΝΑ ΑΡΘΡΑ ΤΩΝ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή"ΔΗΜΟΣΙΟΓΡΑΦΩΝ"...
ΝΕΑ
"Η ΔΕΗ ΕΠΙΜΕΝΕΙ ΒΡΩΜΙΚΑ"
γιωργος φιντικακης
χαρης καρανικας
ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΟΤΥΠΙΑ
ΔΕΗ "ΕΓΚΩΜΙΟ ΣΤΟΝ ΛΙΘΑΝΘΡΑΚΑ"
μιχαλης καιταντζιδης
ΡΕ ΑΛΗΤΕΣ
Ο ΛΙΘΑΝΘΡΑΚΑΣ
ΤΟΥ ΜΠΟΜΠΟΛΑ,ΜΥΤΙΛΗΝΑΙΟΥ,ΚΟΠΕΛΟΥΖΟΥ
ΚΤΛ
ΚΑΙ ΤΩΝ ENDESA,ENEL,ENDISON
EINAI OIKOΛΟΓΙΚΟΣ?
Ο ΛΙΘΑΝΘΡΑΚΑΣ ΤΩΝ ΝΤΑΒΑΤΖΗΔΩΝ ΔΕΝ
ΣΚΟΤΩΝΕΙ?
ΠΟΣΑ ΜΑΥΡΑ ΠΗΡΑΤΕ ΠΑΠΑΓΑΛΑΚΙΑ
ΓΙΑ ΝΑ ΓΡΑΦΕΤΕ ΜΑΛΑΚΙΕΣ?
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήart.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
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Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' " CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a "monstrous" two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.
art.space.shuttle.ap.jpg
Endeavour commander Dominic Gorie, left, and pilot Gregory Johnson will help assemble a space robot.
Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.
They're also delivering the first piece of Japan's massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.
At 16 days, the mission will be NASA's longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.
With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre -- short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter -- is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.
"Now I wouldn't go as far to say that we're worried it's going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it's operated and it doesn't have a lot of its own intelligence," Reisman told The Associated Press last week.
"But I'll tell you something ... He's enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It's a little monstrous, it is."
Don't Miss
* Shuttle safely home ahead of satellite shootdown
* Astronauts attach science experiments to new lab
Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.
"I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, 'Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this 'some assembly required' part of the space station," Foreman said.
Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can't wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up "almost like it's Frankenstein's monster coming alive."
In reality, there's nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope's savior.
Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA's helm -- it's scheduled for late summer -- and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.
Dextre -- which cost more than $200 million -- was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.
Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.
Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn't look human.
Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.
Canadian officials said they're convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.
"It's quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision," said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.
Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.
Even though it's suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.
That said, Linnehan acknowledges it's "a cool project" that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.
Dextre, by the way, isn't necessarily a "he."
"I tend to use 'he' because I think Dextre is a masculine name," Rey said. "But it's a robot. It's tele-operated. It doesn't have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say 'he.' "
ΓΕΝΟΠ-...............ΔΕΗ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΓΕΝΟΠ-τα παιρνω απο τους προμηθευτες-ανταγωνιστες της δεη-ΔΕΗ.
ΓΕΝΟΠ-ειμαστε το μακρυ χερι των νταβαδων-ΔΕΗ.
ΓΕΝΟΠ-χοντρες μιζες-ΔΕΗ
ΓΕΝΟΠ-απαξιωνουμε την δεη,με εντολες των ανταγωνιστων της-ΔΕΗ.
ΓΕΝΟΠ-διοριζουμε τα παιδια μας,στις
εταιρειες των προμηθευτων-ανταγωνιστων της δεη-ΔΕΗ
ΤΣΙΠΡΑ ΜΗ ΚΟΛΛΑΣ ΝΑ ΤΑ ΧΩΣΗΣ ΧΟΝΤΡΑ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΔΙΕΛΥΣΕ ΤΟΥΣ ΑΥΤΟ ΤΟ ΘΕΛΕΙ ΚΑΙ
Ο ΓΝΗΣΙΟΣ ΛΑΟΣ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΩΙΝ ΠΑΣΟΚ
ΕΞΩ ΟΙ ΚΛΗΡΟΝΌΜΟΙ ΤΗΣ ΕΧΟΥΣΙΑΣ
ΕΞΩ ΟΙ ΔΥΝΑΣΤΕΣ
ΕΞΩ ΤΑ ΠΟΥΛΗΜΕΝΑ ΤΟΜΑΡΙΑ
ΕΞΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟ ΜΑΝΤΡΙ ΡΕ ΜΑΛΑΚΕΣ
ΡΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕ ΕΞΩ
ΡΕ ΠΑΤΕ ΣΤΟ ΔΙΑΟΛΟ ΠΟΥ ΘΕΛΕΤΕ ΚΑΙ
ΨΗΦΟ
ΤΟΝ ΨΟΦΟ ΚΑΙ ΤΟΝ ΠΟΥΛΟ ΝΑ ΠΑΡΕΤΕ
ΠΟΥΛΗΜΕΝΑ ΤΟΜΑΡΙΑ
ΚΑΤΑΡΕΣ ΣΕ ΕΣΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΣΤΑ ΠΑΙΔΙΑ ΣΑΣ
ΠΟΥ ΘΕΛΟΥΝ ΝΑ ΚΛΗΡΟΝΟΜΙΣΟΥΝ
ΤΗΝ ΔΥΝΑΣΤΙΑ ΣΑΣ
ΚΟΠΡΟΣΚΥΛΑ ΤΟΥ ΚΑΠΙΤΑΛΟΣΟΣΙΑΛΙΣΜΟΥ
ΚΩΛΟΓΛΥΦΤΕΣ ΑΝΩΜΑΛΟΙ
ΕΔΩ ΤΙΣ ΑΓΩΓΕΣ ΣΑΣ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚΟΤΑΣ ΚΑΡΑ ΑΜΑΝ ΑΛΗΣ
ΡΑΦΗΝΑ ΚΑΝΑΠΕΣ ΕΜΠΡΟΣΘΕΝ ΝΤΙΒΙΝΤΙ.
Στα 4 θα τον υποδεχτούν
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΟ ΔΙΚΟΜΜΑΤΙΣΜΟΣ Ν.Δ-ΠΑΣΟΚ ΞΟΦΛΗΣΕ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΖΗΤΩ Ο ΝΕΟΣ ΔΙΚΟΜΜΑΤΙΣΜΟΣ
Ν.Δ-ΣΥΡΙΖΑ
ΔΕΞΙΑ-ΑΡΙΣΤΕΡΑ
Ο ΕΝΔΙΑΜΕΣΟΣ ΓΥΦΤΟΣ-ΠΑΣΟΚ ΕΙΝΑΙ
ΠΤΩΜΑ ΠΟΥ ΣΑΠΙΖΕΙ.
"Ξεφορτώσου ό,τι νομίζεις κακό,
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήόσο κοιμάσαι η ρουτίνα παύει να 'ναι ριζικό
κι οι φόβοι σου εκεί δείχνουν
μονιασμένοι με τη λαχτάρα σου, τη στοιχειωμένη."
Φίλτατε που γράφεις παρπάνω για τον Αράπογλου και τις επενδύσεις στην τουρκία και πόσο καλή ήταν να σου πω ένα πράγμα.... Ήταν από τις χειρότερες επενδύσεις που έχουν γίνει. Τρομερά υψηλού κινδύνου που αν δεν ήταν η ΕΤΕ κανένας μάνατζερ δεν θα είχε τα @@ να κάνει γιατί σε σοβαρές τράπεζες δεν είναι μπάχαλο...
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΠοια τράπεζα έχει γενικό διευθυντή προσωπικού 150 χρονών :)
Ποια τράπεζα έχει διευθυντή προσωπικού με απολυτήριο λυκείου (κυριολεκτώ)
Ποια τράπεζα κάνει γενικό διευθυντή άτομο με μηδαμινή εμπειρία, προβλήματα συμπεριφοράς και άγνοια των περισσοτέρων θεμάτων που διαχειρίζεται?
Ξέρω πολλά περισσότερα για την τόσο καλή διοίκηση του Αράπογλου και τους Διευθυντές του για όποιον επιμένει...
ρε 12.50,
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήτόσες ώρες σε γαμάει ο πούστης, τόσες ώρες με την ψωλή του στο στόμα δεν μπορεί να αρθρώσεις λέξη?
βάλτην λίγο και στο κώλο σου που τόσο σου αρέσει και πες μας...
ΤΙ ΝΑ ΥΠΟΔΕΧΘΟΥΝ ΟΙ ΚΑΚΟΜΟΙΡΗΔΕΣ ΟΙ ΠΑΣΟΚΟΙ!ΤΟ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΕΙΟ ΤΟΥΣ ΜΑΡΑΝΕ!ΓΙΑΤΙ ΔΕ ΠΑΝΕ ΝΑ ΨΑΞΟΥΝ ΤΟ ΠΟΙΟΝ ΑΠΟ ΤΑ ΡΗΜΑΔΟ- ΣΤΕΛΕΧΟΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΚΑΙ ΟΛΟ ΑΥΤΟ ΤΟ ΓΥΦΤΑΡΙΟ ΠΟΥ ΕΔΩ ΚΑΙ ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ ΜΑΖΕΨΑΝ ΓΙΑ ΝΑ ΠΡΟΩΘΗΣΟΥΝ ΣΚΑΤΟΣΥΝΔΙΚΑΛΙΣΤΕΣ ΤΟΥ ΚΩΛΟΥ ΠΟΥ ΔΗΘΕΝ ΑΓΩΝΙΖΏΝΤΟΥΣΑΝ ΓΙΑ ΤΑ ΔΙΚΑΙΏΜΑΤΑ ΤΩΝ ΕΡΓΑΖΟΜΕΝΩΝ!!!!ΣΤΗΝ ΕΤΑΙΡΙΑ ΑΤΤΙΚΟ ΜΕΤΡΟ ΠΡΕΠΕΙ ΝΑ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΠΩΣ ΣΥΝΔΙΚΑΛΙΣΤΕΣ ΤΗΣ ΠΑΣΚΕ ΣΥΝΕΡΓΑΖΟΝΤΑΙ ΤΩΡΑ ΜΕ ΤΟΥΣ ΔΕΞΙΟΥΣ ΔΙΕΥΘΥΝΤΕΣ ΥΠΟΓΕΙΩΣ ΓΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΝΑΒΑΘΜΙΣΤΟΥΝ(ΕΠΕΙΔΗ ΜΕ ΤΟ ΠΑΣΟΚ ΔΕ ΠΡΟΛΛΑΒΑΝ ΓΙΑ ΝΑ ΠΑΙΡΝΟΥΝ ΜΗΝΙΑΤΙΚΟ 5.ΟΟΟ ΕΥΡΩ).ΚΑΙ ΜΕΤΑ ΑΝΑΡΩΤΙΕΤΑΙ Ο KEΕP WALKING TI ΦTAIEI ΚΑΙ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΣΤΑ 23%.ΑΠΟ ΚΑΠΟΙΟΝ ΠΟΥ ΥΠΟΣΤΗΡΙΞΕ ΑΥΤΟ ΤΟ ΚΙΝΗΜΑ ΑΛΛΑ ΤΩΡΑ ΣΑΦΩΣ ΘΑ ΚΑΤΑΧΕΙΡΟΚΤΟΤΗΣΕΙ ΤΟΝ ΤΣΙΠΡΑ ΟΤΑΝ ΘΑ ΜΠΕΙ ΣΤΟ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΕΙΟ ΤΟΥ ΠΑΣΟΚ ΚΑΙ ΦΥΣΙΚΑ ΘΑ ΤΟΝ ΨΗΦΙΣΕΙ!ΑΙ ΣΤΟ ΔΙΑΟΛΟ ΠΙΑ ΜΕ ΤΑ ΛΑΜΟΓΙΑ.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΠρος BLOOPERS
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΜε συγχωρείτε που παίρνω το θάρρος να ρωτήσω την εξοχότητά σας αλλά να... έχω μια απορία που με βασανίζει εδώ και καιρό.
Στο Δημοκρατικό Καναδά που ζείτε (έτσι λέτε τουλάχιστον) θα μπορούσε ας πούμε το αντίστοιχο της ΓΕΝΟΠ ΔΕΗ συνδικάτο να κάνει αυτά που κάνει εδώ στην ψωρο-Ελλάδα μας;
Καταλήψεις εργοστασίων, διακοπές ρεύματος, και απο πάνω καπάκι προκλητικές εμφανίσεις δια των εκπροσώπων του στην τηλεόραση κλπ;
Και αν συνέβαινε να πεθάνουν κάποιοι άνθρωποι απο τις διακοπές ρεύματος και να πάθουν οικονομικές ζημιές πολλοί επαγγελματίες, ΠΩΣ ΘΑ ΑΝΤΙΔΡΟΥΣΑΝ ΟΙ ΑΡΜΟΔΙΕΣ ΑΡΧΕΣ ΣΤΟΝ ΚΑΝΑΔΑ; Γιατί εδώ ξέρουμε...
Απλώς ρωτάω.
ΚΑΙ ΑΚΟΜΗ ΠΕΡΙΜΕΝΩ ΑΠΑΝΤΗΣΗ.
ΚΑΙ ΑΚΟΜΗ ΠΕΡΙΜΕΝΩ ΑΠΑΝΤΗΣΗ.
ΚΑΙ ΑΚΟΜΗ ΠΕΡΙΜΕΝΩ ΑΠΑΝΤΗΣΗ.
ΚΑΙ ΑΚΟΜΗ ΠΕΡΙΜΕΝΩ ΑΠΑΝΤΗΣΗ.
ΚΑΙ ΑΚΟΜΗ ΠΕΡΙΜΕΝΩ ΑΠΑΝΤΗΣΗ
Ευρεία νίκη, όχι όμως και την αυτοδυναμία, εξασφάλισε ο Χοσέ Θαπατέρο
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚαθαρή νίκη για τους Σοσιαλιστές του Χοσέ Θαπατέρο
Μαδρίτη
Με αυξημένα ποσοστά σε σχέση με τις εκλογές του 2004, το κυβερνών Σοσιαλιστικό Κόμμα του πρωθυπουργού Χοσέ Θαπατέρο εξασφάλισε καθαρή νίκη στις ισπανικές βουλευτικές εκλογές, χωρίς όμως να πετυχαίνει και την απόλυτη πλειοψηφία στο Κοινοβούλιο.
Με καταμετρημένο το 99,95% των ψήφων, το Σοσιαλιστικό Κόμμα (PSOE) προηγείται με ποσοστό 43,64% και 169 έδρες, ενώ το αντίπαλο Λαϊκό Κόμμα (PP) ακολουθεί με ποσοστό 40,12% και 153 έδρες
==
ΕΛΛΑΔΑ 16/09/2007
ΝΔ 152 41.83 %
ΠΑΣΟΚ 102 38.10 %
ΚΚΕ 22 8.15 %
ΣΥΝ 14 5.04 %
ΛΑΟΣ 10 3.80 %
ΟΛΟΙ ΣΤΟ ΣΥΝΤΑΓΜΑ .
ΑΛΛΑΓΗ ΤΟΥ ΕΚΛΟΓΙΚΟΥ ΝΟΜΟΥ
Ο Αλέξης θα τους καθαρίσει. Πιστεύω ότι θα ζητουν ευκαιρία να μην παραβρεθεί ο Αλέξης στο συνέδριο του ΓΑΠ.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΟ Πολυζογόπουλος δεν ακούγεται πουθενά , φαίνεται ότι κατάλαβε ο ΓΑΠ ότι μόνο ζημιά κάνει αυτο το υποκείμενο και τίποτα άλλο.
10 Μάρτιος 2008 7:24 μμ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή==
ΚΑΝΑΔΑ?
ΑΠΟ ΠΟΤΕ Η ΧΑΡ ΤΡΙΚΟΥΠΗ ΚΑΙ Η ΠΑΡΟΔΟΣ ΚΑΛΛΙΔΡΟΜΙΟΥ ΤΩΝ ΕΞΑΡΧΕΙΩΝ ΓΙΝΑΝΕ ΚΑΝΑΔΑΣ??
Aγαπητοί-ες μου
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΌποιος δεν γνωρίζει το παρελθόν του να μαθαίνει από τα λάθη του και να τα διορθώνει, δεν μπορεί στο μέλλον να πορευθεί με επιτυχία. Για αυτό σας παραθέτω ορισμένα ιστορικά γεγονότα:
H ρουφιανιά, ο δοσιλογισμός, η παραπληροφόρηση, το ψέμα, το πλιάτσικο του τόπου ανέκαθεν ήταν τα προσόντα της δεξιάς. Με το παραπλανητικό σύνθημα, ψηφίστε μας και θα σας φέρουμε τα παιδιά σας πίσω, αφού καπηλεύτηκαν τη κούραση του λαού από τους συνεχείς πολέμους κέρδισαν τις εκλογές (Λαϊκό κόμμα λεγόταν τότε)συνεπικουρούμενοι από φιλοβασιλικούς ακροδεξιούς και ακροαριστερούς το 1920 και έκαναν πρωθυπουργό το Γούναρη( τον κρέμασε ο Πλαστήρας μαζί με τους άλλους 5 στο Γουδί). Έτσι κατόρθωσαν να κερδίσουν το μεγαλύτερο πολιτικό μετά το 1821, αυτόν που δημιούργησε την Ελλάδα των 2 Ηπείρων και των 5 θαλασσών. Βέβαια όχι μόνο δεν σταμάτησαν το πόλεμο αλλά οδήγησαν τη χώρα στη μεγαλύτερη καταστροφή και στον ακρωτηριασμό της.
Μετέπειτα είχαμε φασιστικές δικτατορίες ( Μεταξάς, Παπαδόπουλος) προδοσία και διαμελισμό της Κύπρου, χωρισμό των Ελλήνων σε εθνικόφρονες και μιάσματα όλα έργα των δεξιών ακροδεξιών και των βασιλοφρόνων.
Στις αρχές της προηγούμενης δεκαετίας με τον άλλο τον αρχιαποστάτη το τυμβωρύχο που είχε μαζέψει όλα τα αρχαία και που αναγκάστηκε να τα δωρίσει χα!!! χα!!! χα!!! για να περισωθούν τα προσχήματα και να μη πάει φυλακή. Που παίρνει τρεις συντάξεις αλλά ήθελε να φτιάξει το ασφαλιστικό. Δηλαδή να μη παίρνει κανένας σύνταξη παρά μόνο οι κουμπάροι. Που ήθελε να μικρύνει το Δημόσιο γιατί έλεγε ότι ήταν ζημιογόνο. Αλλά όλους τους δικούς του τους έχει τακτοποιήσει στο Δημόσιο. Που ήθελε να πουλήσει ολόκληρο τον ΟΤΕ 450 εκατ δολλάρια. Τον Ιούλιο 2007 το κράτος μόνο από το 5,3% του ΟΤΕ εισέπραξε 840 εκατ δολλάρια ή 600 εκατ ευρώ.
Αυτά τα μεγάλα επιτεύγματα μήπως σας θυμίζoυν άλλα σύγχρονα έργα της δεξιάς; αναξιοκρατία, διαφθορά, μίζες, κουμπάροι, ομόλογα, υποκλοπές, Πακιστανοί, αναψυκτήρια, κλπ;
Έλληνες ξυπνήστε ρημάζουν το τόπο οι δεξιοί και τα δεκανίκια τους. Μόνο η μεγάλη Δημοκρατική Παράταξη το ΠΑΣΟΚ μπορεί να βγάλει τη χώρα από τη κρίση και ο Γιώργος Παπανδρέου να καθαρίσει τη κόπρο του Αυγεία
ΒΡΕ ΧΑΖΟ-ΓΙΑΝΚΗ, ΤΑ ΑΓΓΛΙΚΑ ΣΤΟΝ ΑΡΧΗΓΟ ΣΟΥ ΠΟΥ ΤΑ ΞΕΡΕΙ ΚΑΛΥΤΕΡΑ. ΟΤΑΝ ΜΙΛΑΕΙ ΕΓΓΛΕΖΙΚΑ ΔΕΝ ΚΟΜΠΙΑΖΕΙ. ΣΤΑ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ ΚΛΑΦΤΟΝΑ. ΚΑΝ΄ΤΟΥ ΚΑΝΑ ΦΡΟΝΤΙΣΤΗΡΙΟ ΚΑΙ ΑΣΕ ΤΑ ΣΑΠΙΑ...
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΔΕ ΘΑ ΞΕΧΑΣΩ ΣΤΗΝ ΕΙΚΟΣΑΕΤΙΑ ΠΑΣΟΚ:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή1.ΤΟ ΣΚΑΤΟΨΥΧΟ, ΑΦΙΛΟ, ΑΠΑΤΡΙ ΙΔΡΥΤΗ ΤΗΣ
2.ΤΟΝ ΑΛΛΟΔΑΠΟ ΤΟΥΡΙΣΤΑ ΦΙΛΕΛΛΗΝΑ ΜΙΝΕΪΚΟ-ΤΣΑΝΤ ΣΤΟΚΟ ΓΙΟ ΤΟΥ
3.ΤΗΝ ΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΙΚΗ ΚΑΙ ΔΟΛΙΑ ΜΑΓΚΥ
4.ΤΗ ΜΙΜΗ (ΚΑΙ ΟΛΟΥΣ ΟΣΟΙ ΤΗΝ ΕΙΧΑΝ ΠΑΡΕΙ)
5.ΤΟΝ ΑΣΤΡΟΛΟΓΟ ΘΩΜΑΔΑΚΗ ΚΑΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΠΝΕΥΜΑΤΙΚΟΥΣ-ΚΑΦΕΤΖΟΥΔΕΣ-ΧΑΡΤΟΡΙΧΤΡΕΣ ΚΑΙ ΤΟΥΡΛΟΥΜΟΥΣΟΚΟΤΟΠΟΥΛΕΣ ΠΟΥ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΟΥΣΑΝ ΤΗ ΧΩΡΑ
6.ΤΟ ΣΚΑΝΔΑΛΟ ΚΟΣΚΩΤΑ ΚΑΙ ΤΟ ΑΠΟΤΟΚΟ ΤΟΥ, ΤΗ ΔΕΣΜΕΥΣΗ ΤΗΣ ΕΛΛΑΔΑΣ ΝΑ ΜΗΝ ΕΞΟΡΥΞΕΙ ΤΑ ΠΕΤΡΕΛΑΙΑ ΤΟΥ ΑΙΓΑΙΟΥ
7.ΤΗΝ ΚΑΤΑΣΤΡΟΦΗ ΤΟΥ ΚΟΙΝΩΝΙΚΟΥ ΙΣΤΟΥ ΤΗΣ ΧΩΡΑΣ ΠΟΥ ΕΚΑΝΕ ΚΡΑΤΟΥΣΑ ΑΝΤΙΛΗΨΗ ΤΟ ΦΑΣΙΣΜΟ ΚΑΙ ΤΗ ΡΕΜΟΥΛΑ
8.ΤΟ ΑΡΘΡΟ 4 ΠΟΥ ΚΑΤΑΡΓΗΣΕ ΤΟ ΙΕΡΟΤΕΡΟ ΔΙΚΑΙΩΜΑ ΤΟΥ ΕΡΓΑΖΟΜΕΝΟΥ, ΤΗΝ ΑΠΕΡΓΙΑ
9.ΤΑ ΔΩΡΑΚΙΑ 500 ΕΚ. ΔΡΑΧΜΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΜΑΥΡΑΚΗ
10.ΤΟΝ ΤΟΜΠΡΑ ΚΑΙ ΤΙΣ ΠΑΡΑΚΟΛΟΥΘΗΣΕΙΣ
11.ΤΟΝ ΖΑΡΑΚΙΑ ΞΑΔΕΡΦΟ ΤΗΣ ΜΙΜΗΣ ΠΟΥ ΕΧΑΣΕ ΣΤΟ ΜΠΑΡΜΠΟΥΤΙ ΕΝΑΝ ΠΙΝΑΚΑ ΤΟΥ ΤΣΑΡΟΥΧΗ ΠΟΥ ΑΝΗΚΕ ΣΤΟ ΥΠΟΥΡΓΕΙΟ
12.ΤΟΝ ΚΟΥΒΑΛΗΤΗ ΚΟΥΤΣΟΓΙΩΡΓΑ ΜΕ ΤΑ ΠΑΜΠΕΡΣ
13.ΤΟΝ ΚΟΥΤΣΟΓΙΩΡΓΑ ΕΚΛΟΓΟΜΑΓΕΙΡΑ
14.ΤΟΝ ΓΚΕΜΠΕΛΙΣΚΟ ΛΑΛΙΩΤΗ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΚΑΜΠΑΝΙΕΣ ΛΑΣΠΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΣΥΚΟΦΑΝΤΙΑΣ ΤΟΥ
15.ΤΟΝ ΜΙΖΑΔΟΡΟ ΛΑΛΙΩΤΗ ΚΑΙ ΤΗΝ ΠΟΛΛΑΠΛΑ ΥΠΕΡΤΙΜΟΛΟΓΗΜΕΝΗ ΚΑΤΑΣΚΕΥΗ ΤΟΥ ΑΕΡΟΔΡΟΜΙΟΥ ΓΙΑ ΝΑ ΚΑΝΕΙ ΤΗΝ ΠΡΟΙΚΑ ΤΟΥ
16.ΤΟΝ ΚΟΥΡΗ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΠΑΤΣΑΒΟΥΡΑ ΤΟΥ ΠΟΥ ΣΤΗΡΙΖΕ ΤΟ ΑΘΛΙΟ ΟΙΚΟΔΟΜΗΜΑ
17.ΤΟΝ ΚΟΥΛΟΥΡΗ ΠΟΥ ΠΑΝΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΑΝΟΙΧΤΟ ΤΑΦΟ ΤΟΥ ΠΑΙΔΙΟΥ ΤΟΥ ΕΚΑΝΕ ΚΩΛΟΜΕΓΛΥΦΑΤΑ ΣΤΟΝ ΣΚΑΤΟΨΥΧΟ
18.ΤΟ ΓΙΑΝΝΟΠΟΥΛΟ ΜΕ ΤΟ «ΚΩΛΟΣΠΙΤΟ»
19.ΤΟ GEORGE HALLAG, TO ΓΙΩΡΓΟ ΚΑΤΣΙΑΦΑΡΑ, ΤΟΝ ΑΝΤΩΝΗ ΛΙΒΑΝΗ ΚΑΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΔΑΝΕΙΣΤΕΣ ΤΟΥ ΣΚΑΤΟΨΥΧΟΥ
20.ΤΟΝ ΠΑΠΟΥΛΙΑ ΠΟΥ ΕΚΑΝΕ ΤΟ ΔΙΑΜΕΣΟΛΑΒΗΤΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΟ ΔΙΑΖΥΓΙΟ TOY ΣΚΑΤΟΨΥΧΟΥ (70 ΕΚ US$ ΕΔΙΝΕ Ο ΠΤΩΧΟΣ – 100 ΕΚ US$ ΖΗΤΗΣΕ ΚΑΙ ΠΗΡΕ Η ΜΑΓΚΥ ΚΑΙ ΤΟ ΥΠΟΥΡΓΕΙΟ ΠΑΙΔΕΙΑΣ ΓΙΑ ΤΟ ΒΛΗΜΑ ΤΗΣ)
21.ΤΟ ΣΑΡΤΖΕΤΑΚΗ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΚΛΟΓΗ ΜΕ ΤΑ ΜΠΛΕ ΚΑΙ ΑΣΠΡΑ ΨΗΦΟΔΕΛΤΙΑ, ΔΕΙΓΜΑ ΑΚΡΑΤΗΣ ΕΣΩΚΟΜΜΑΤΙΚΗΣ ΔΗΜΟΚΡΑΤΙΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΠΑΡΑΒΙΑΣΗΣ ΤΟΥ ΣΥΝΤΑΓΜΑΤΟΣ
22.ΤΟΝ ΠΕΙΝΑΛΕΟ-ΛΙΓΟΥΡΗ ΣΑΡΤΖΕΤΑΚΗ ΚΑΙ ΤΗΝ ΕΙΣΑΓΩΓΗ ΚΑΤΑΝΑΛΩΤΙΚΩΝ ΑΓΑΘΩΝ (ΜΙΑ ΓΕΜΑΤΗ ΝΤΑΚΟΤΑ) ΑΠΟ ΤΗΝ ΙΑΠΩΝΙΑ
23.ΤΟΝ ΑΚΗ ΠΟΥ ΑΓΟΡΑΣΕ ΛΟΓΩ ΜΙΖΑΣ ΥΠΟΒΡΥΧΙΑ ΠΟΥ ΜΠΑΤΑΡΟΥΝ
24.ΤΟΝ ΠΑΧΤΑ ΚΑΙ ΟΛΟΥΣ ΤΟΥΣ ΑΓΛΑΟΥΣ ΤΖΟΥΤΖΕΔΕΣ ΠΟΥ ΒΡΩΜΑΓΕ ΤΟ ΣΤΟΜΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΑΠΟ ΤΗΝ ΠΕΙΝΑ ΚΑΙ ΤΩΡΑ ΕΧΟΝΤΑΣ ΛΙΓΔΩΣΕΙ ΤΟ ΑΝΤΕΡΟ ΚΑΙ ΤΟ ΠΟΥΛΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΙΛΛΕΣ ΚΑΙ ΕΚ. ΕΥΡΩ
25.ΤΟΝ ΠΑΠΑΝΤΩΝΙΟΥ ΜΕ ΤΟ ΣΚΑΝΔΑΛΟ ΤΟΥ ΧΡΗΜΑΤΙΣΤΗΡΙΟΥ ΚΑΙ ΤΗΝ ΥΦΑΡΠΑΓΗ ΤΩΝ ΧΡΗΜΑΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΛΑΟΥ, ΤΩΝ ΕΡΓΑΖΟΜΕΝΩΝ ΚΑΙ ΤΩΝ ΣΥΝΤΑΞΙΟΥΧΩΝ
26.ΤΟΝ ΕΥΧΑΡΙΣΤΩ ΤΟΥΣ ΑΜΕΡΙΚΑΝΟΥΣ ΠΟΥ ΠΑΡΕΔΩΣΕ ΣΤΟΥΣ ΑΠΕΝΑΝΤΙ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΟ ΕΔΑΦΟΣ
27.ΤΟΝ ΠΑΓΚΑΛΟ ΚΑΙ ΤΗΝ ΠΑΡΑΔΟΣΗ ΤΟΥ ΟΤΣΑΛΑΝ ΣΤΟΥΣ ΑΠΕΝΑΝΤΙ
28.ΤΟΝ ΠΑΠΟΥΤΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΤΟΥΣ 82 ΝΕΚΡΟΥΣ ΤΟΥ ΣΑΜΙΝΑ
29.ΤΟΝ ΑΛΛΟΔΑΠΟ ΤΟΥΡΙΣΤΑ ΦΙΛΕΛΛΗΝΑ ΤΣΑΝΤ-ΜΙΝΕΪΚΟ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΡΗΣΕΙΣ ΤΟΥ ΠΕΡΙ ΚΑΛΛΙΕΡΓΕΙΑΣ ΦΟΥΝΤΑΣ ΣΤΙΣ ΓΛΑΣΤΡΕΣ
30.ΤΟΝ ΑΛΛΟΔΑΠΟ ΤΟΥΡΙΣΤΑ ΦΙΛΕΛΛΗΝΑ ΤΣΑΝΤ-ΜΙΝΕΪΚΟ ΓΙΑ ΤΟ ΟΤΙ ΑΓΑΠΑΕΙ ΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΑΔΑ ΣΑΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΑΣ
ΚΑΠΟΤΕ ΚΑΙΓΑΜΕ ΤΑ ΝΕΑ ΤΟΥ ΛΑΜΠΡΑΚΗ,ΤΩΡΑ ΑΠΛΩΣ ΘΑ ΑΛΛΑΖΟΥΜΕ ΚΑΝΑΛΙ ,ΚΑΝΕΝΑΣ ΤΟΝ ΑΛΗΤΗ ΠΡΕΤΕΝΤΕΡΗ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚΑΝΕΝΑΣ ΤΟ ΒΗΜΑ ΤΟΥ ΨΥΧΑΡΗ.
7.43
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήbabis γερά, γερά η πούτσα είναι κοντά,
babis γερά, γερά η πούτσα είναι φαρδιά,
babis γερά, γερά η πούτσα είναι παχιά
KAΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ (όχι τοις εκατό - αυτό πάει πέρασε ανεπιστρεπτί)
ΕΔΩ ΤΙΣ ΑΓΩΓΕΣ ΣΑΣ ΜΕΧΡΙ ΝΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΦΥΓΟΥΝ ΤΑ ΣΦΡΑΓΙΣΜΑΤΑ:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΔΙΟΙΚΗΤΙΚΟ ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΙΟ
Α/Α
ΘΕΣΗ
ΟΝΟΜΑΤΕΠΩΝΥΜΟ
1
ΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΦΩΤΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΝΙΚΟΣ
2
ΓΕΝ.ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΜΠΟΥΖΟΥΛΑΣ ΕΥΑΓΓΕΛΟΣ
3
ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΣΤΑΜΕΛΟΣ ΗΛΙΑΣ
4
ΓΡΑΜ ΟΡΓΑΝΩΤΙΚΟΥ
ΡΙΖΟΣ ΡΙΖΟΣ
5
ΤΑΜΙΑΣ
ΣΤΑΣΙΝΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΔΙΟΝΥΣΗΣ
6
Β' ΑΝΤΡΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΥΠΕΥΘΥΝΟΣ ΤΥΠΟΥ
ΚΑΤΑΝΑΣ ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣ
7
Β ΑΝΠΛ. ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΠΡΟΣΚΥΝΗΤΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΑΡΗΣ
8
Γ' ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΚΑΤΣΑΡΟΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
9
Γ΄ΑΝΑΠΛ. ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΚΑΡΑΠΑΣ ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣ
10
ΑΝΑΠΛ. ΤΑΜΙΑΣ
ΠΗΛΙΧΟΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
11
ΕΦΟΡΟΣ
ΒΑΡΛΑΜΟΣ ΠΑΥΛΟΣ
12
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΔΗΜΑΣ ΓΙΑΝΝΗΣ
13
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΓΚΑΡΑΒΕΛΑΣ ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣ
14
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΚΑΛΑΙΤΖΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΙΟΡΔΑΝΗΣ
15
ΕΚΤΕΛ. ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΟΣ
ΚΟΥΤΣΟΔΗΜΑΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
16
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΑΓΓΕΛΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΑΓΓΕΛΗΣ
17
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΑΠΟΣΤΟΛΙΔΗΣ ΠΑΝΤΕΛΗΣ
18
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΖΑΚΟΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
19
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΛΑΙΤΖΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΑΠΟΣΤΟΛΟΣ
20
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΜΠΑΝΟΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
21
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΑΡΑΛΕΥΘΕΡΗΣ ΠΑΝΤΕΛΗΣ
22
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΟΛΛΑΤΟΣ ΕΥΓΕΝΙΟΣ
23
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΚΟΥΡΕΤΑΣ ΓΙΑΝΝΗΣ
24
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΑΝΙΑΣ ΚΩΣΤΑΣ
25
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΑΣΤΑΣ ΔΙΟΝΥΣΗΣ
26
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΟΥΚΟΥΒΑΛΑΣ ΑΝΕΣΤΗΣ
27
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΠΑΠΑΝΔΡΙΑΝΟΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
28
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΠΟΛΥΖΩΓΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΒΑΣΙΛΗΣ
29
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΤΡΑΧΑΝΑΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
30
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΡΕΛΙΑΣ ΣΤΑΜΑΤΗΣ
31
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΧΑΤΖΑΡΑΣ ΝΙΚΟΣ
ΕΞΕΛΕΚΤΙΚΗ ΕΠΙΤΡΟΠΗ
Α/Α
ΘΕΣΗ
ΟΝΟΜΑΤΕΠΩΝΥΜΟ
1
ΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ
ΧΡΙΣΤΟΓΟΥΛΑΣ ΒΑΓΓΕΛΗΣ
2
ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΡΟΣ
ΦΡΑΓΚΟΓΙΑΝΝΗΣ ΒΑΓΓΕΛΗΣ
3
ΓΕΝ.ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ
ΤΟΥΜΠΟΥΛΙΔΗΣ ΝΙΚΟΣ
4
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΟΥΝΤΡΙΧΑΣ ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ
5
ΜΕΛΟΣ
ΜΠΡΟΥΜΑΣ ΑΡΙΣΤΕΙΔΗΣ
ΓΕΝ.Ο.Π./Δ.Ε.Η.-Κ.Η.Ε.
Member of ICEM & EMCEF, Μέλος Γ.Σ.Ε.Ε.
Αριθ. Μητρ. Πρωτοδικείου Αθηνών 57
Αριθ. Απόφ. 262/27.02.1971
ΣΤΟΥΡΝΑΡΗ 73-75 Αθήνα, Τ.Κ.104-32
ΤΗΛ. 210.5215.700 FAX:210.5235.996
ΕΔΩ ΤΙΣ ΑΓΩΓΕΣ ΣΑΣ:
ΜΠΟΥΖΟΥΛΑΣ ΕΥΑΓΓΕΛΟΣ, ΓΕΝ.ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΕΑΣ ΓΕΝ.Ο.Π./Δ.Ε.Η.-Κ.Η.Ε.
Δημητρακοπούλου Ν 38
Αθήνα 11742
KΟΥΚΑΚΙ
2109224003
ΣΤΑΜΕΛΟΣ ΗΛΙΑΣ
ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ ΓΕΝ.Ο.Π./Δ.Ε.Η.-Κ.Η.Ε.
Μανωλιάσας 12-14
Καισαριανή 16121
ΙΛΙΣΙΑ
2107233972
παιδια σοβαρευτηται ο τσιπρας ειναι μια σοβαρη φρεσκια προταση για να ξεφυγουμαι απο τους πολιτικαντιδες που το μονο που σκεφτονται ειναι πως θα αποκτησουν καμια βιλλα με πισινα και το νεο μοντελο BMW μερσεντες σιγα μη κατευουν στο δρομο με τη ντουντουκα να τσαλακοσουν τι κουστουμια τους αρμανι και δε συμαζευται
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΕΔΩ ΤΙΣ ΑΓΩΓΕΣ ΣΑΣ.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚΟΤΑΣ ΚΑΡΑ ΑΜΑΝ ΑΛΗΣ Η ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ Η ΜΠΟΥΧΕΣΑΣ.
ΡΑΦΗΝΑ ΣΤΟΝ ΚΑΝΑΠΕ ΒΛΕΠΕΙ DVD.
8.39 σύντροφε κάνε αγωγή στον πατέρα σου που δε τραβήχτηκε
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΕ ΟΧΙ ΚΑΙ ΣΥΝΤΡΟΦΟ. ΕΓΩ ΣΕ ΕΒΡΙΣΑ ΓΑΛΑΖΟΠΑΙΔΟ ΤΟΥ ΚΕΡΑΤΑ;
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΑλέξη, γερά, πάρτους τα λεφτά
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚΑΡΑΜ ΑΛΗ ΦΑΣΙΣΤΑ ΧΟΝΤΡΕ ΠΑΡΕ ΤΗΝ ΝΔ ΣΟΥ ΚΑΙ ΔΡΟΜΟ ΚΑΡΙΟΛΗ ΤΑ ΕΧΕΙΣ ΚΑΝΕΙ ΟΛΑ ΠΟΥΤΑΝΑ.. ΕΧΕΙ ΓΙΝΕΙ Η ΕΛΛΑΔΑ ΜΠΟΥΡΔΕΛΟ ΠΟΥΣΤΑΡΑ.. ΠΑΡΕ ΜΑΖΙ ΣΟΥ ΚΑΙ ΟΛΟΥΣ ΤΟΥΣ ΓΛΥΩΔΕΙΣ ΔΕΞΙΟΥΛΗΔΕΣ ΣΥΜΦΕΡΟΝΤΟΛΟΓΟΥΣ ΠΟΥ ΚΟΙΤΑΝΕ ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΠΑΡΤΟΥΛΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΚΑΙ ΑΝΤΕ ΣΤΟ ΚΑΛΟ..
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΔΙΚΑΙΩΣΗ ΣΤΟΝ ΑΓΩΝΑ ΤΩΝ ΕΡΓΑΖΟΜΕΝΩΝ ΤΩΡΑ...
ΝΑ ΚΟΠΕΙ ΤΟ ΡΕΥΜΑ ΓΙΑ 1 ΜΗΝΑ ΡΕ ΝΑ ΧΑΘΕΙ Ο ΠΟΛΙΤΙΣΜΟΣ ΣΑΣ ΦΑΣΙΣΤΕΣ..
ΕΡΓΑΤΕΣ ΑΠΟ ΤΗΝ ΚΑΘΑΡΙΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΩΝ ΔΗΜΩΝ ΠΕΤΑΞΤΕ ΟΛΑ ΤΑ ΣΚΟΥΠΙΔΙΑ ΕΞΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΗΝ ΒΟΥΛΗ ΝΑ ΚΑΛΥΨΕΙ Η ΜΥΡΩΔΙΑ ΤΩΝ ΣΚΟΥΠΙΔΙΩΝ ΤΗΝ ΣΚΑΤΙΛΑ ΠΟΥ ΒΓΑΙΝΕΙ ΑΠΟ ΜΕΣΑ..
ΣΚΑΤΑ ΣΤΗΝ ΔΕΞΙΑ
ΕΤΣΙ ΟΠΩΣ ΠΑΝΕ ΤΑ ΠΡΑΓΜΑΤΑ ΘΑ ΑΝΑΓΚΑΣΤΩ ΝΑ ΨΗΦΙΣΩ ΠΑΣΟΚ
ΕΠΑΝΑΣΤΑΣΗ ΤΩΡΑΑΑΑΑΑΑΑΑΑΑΑ
ΤΟ ΕΝΔΕΧΟΜΕΝΟ ΣΥΓΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗΣ ΝΔ-ΚΚΕ ΤΟ ΕΙΧΑΤΕ ΣΚΕΦΤΕΙ? Η ΠΑΛΙΟΓΡΙΑ Η ΠΑΠΑΡΗΓΑ ΠΟΛΥ ΓΛΥΦΕΙ ΚΑΡΑΜΑΝΛΗ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΙΑ.. ΤΟ ΚΚΕ ΘΥΜΗΘΗΚΕ ΤΟΝ ΠΑΛΙΟΚΑΛΟ ΤΟΥ ΕΑΥΤΟ..
ΞΥΠΝΑΤΕ ΡΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕ
Α ΡΕ 17 ΝΟΕΜΒΡΗ ΠΟΥ ΧΡΕΙΑΖΕΤΑΙ!!
ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ ΡΕ ΚΟΥΦΟΝΤΙΝΑ ΝΑ ΒΑΛΕΙΣ ΤΑΞΗΗΗ???
ΓΕΝΟΠ ΠΡΟΧΩΡΑ
οι σωστα ενημερωμενοι πολιτες σε στηριζουν γιατι ξερουν οτι μετα απο την διαλυση της δεη το ρευμα θα φτασει στα υψη και θα γυρισουμε πισω στις σπηλιες..
ΓΕΝΟΠ ΚΟψε το ΡΕΥΜΑ ΤΩΡΑΑΑΑΑΑΑΑ!!!
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήνα χεστουν πανω τους οι επιχειρηματιες που μας πινουν το αιμα..
ΕΡΓΑΖΟΜΕΝΟΙ ΕΝΩΘΕΙΤΕ ΡΕΕΕΕΕΕΕΕ
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΑΛΑΒΕΙ ΤΗΝ ΔΥΝΑΜΗ ΣΑΣ
9.14 o πασοκοκίνητος σύντροφος κουφοντίνας είναι στη φυλακή - περαστικά σας
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ ΜΟΛΙΣ ΤΑ ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΣΕΙ ΟΛΑ Ο ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ ΜΟΛΙΣ ΤΑ ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΣΕΙ ΟΛΑ Ο ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ ΜΟΛΙΣ ΤΑ ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΣΕΙ ΟΛΑ Ο ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ ΜΟΛΙΣ ΤΑ ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΣΕΙ ΟΛΑ Ο ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ ΜΟΛΙΣ ΤΑ ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΣΕΙ ΟΛΑ Ο ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ ΜΟΛΙΣ ΤΑ ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΣΕΙ ΟΛΑ Ο ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ
ΧΟΥΝΤΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΘΑ ΠΕΡΑΣΕΙ ΜΟΛΙΣ ΤΑ ΞΕΠΟΥΛΗΣΕΙ ΟΛΑ Ο ΜΠΟΥΛΗΣ
εδώ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήτα λέει κάπως καλύτερα και με παραδείγματα της καθημερινότητας
ΝΑ ΚΟΠΕΙ ΤΟ ΡΕΥΜΑ ΓΙΑ 1 ΜΗΝΑ ΡΕ ΝΑ ΧΑΘΕΙ Ο ΠΟΛΙΤΙΣΜΟΣ ΣΑΣ ΦΑΣΙΣΤΕΣ..
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή----------------------------------
PeinasmenoSS PASOKoSS
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΗ ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
10 Μάρτιος 2008 1:52 πμ
babis ΠΟΥ ΕΙΣΑΙ!!!
Η ΘΕΑ ΔΕΣ ΤΙ ΕΓΡΑΨΕ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ BLOOPERS!!
Ανώνυμος Ο/Η Ανώνυμος είπε...
B itches
L oyal
O bsessive
O r
P assionatly
E gomaniac
R if rafs
S ervants to their ego.!!
xaxaxa pali egrapsaaaaaaaa!!
Gia ton 9:03 μμ
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήsan SYRIZAKI mou moiazeis
apanta loipon...
Για τα καλόπαιδα του
ΣΥΡΙΖΑ = ΡΗΓΑΣ ΦΕΡΑΙΟΣ
Πάντα Kikers φόραγαν,
Κωλωνάκι έμεναν,
και BMW τους καβάλαγαν.
CHIP + RASS
κάποια σχέση θα έχει!
(αστέρι έχει
αλλά όχι για την
Ελλάδα μας ρε γαμώτο.
Το πολύ πολύ τώρα που έφυγε
ο Κούρκουλος να πάρει την θέση του)
Σας γράφουμε Εγγλέζικα...
γιατί αυτή είναι η επίσημη γλώσσα
στα ιδιωτικά σχολεία που πηγαίνετε.
Dear poor friends,
we appreciate your effort for surviving,
but not on our Own Major Interest and History.
Honest Proposition:
The name at stake as you put it is "MAKEDONIA"
We are very polite and civilized people so we
let you get the first syllable, "MA".
We keep the second "KE".
So you can be called "MADONIANS".
This is a great advantage for you because:
1. You can have a modern emblem in the sun of your flag.
The famous singer "MADONΝA"
2. You will please the USA because you are the same kind
of products like Madonna,
made in USA.
____
Tο παίζετε Μαγκάκια ...
Με τα ροζ τα Kikerakia…
Και αν φοράτε παντελόνια
Είστε μόνο για σαλόνια...
Οι Μάγκες απαντάνε.
ΜΗ ΧΟΛΟΣΚΑΤΕ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΑΛΗΤΕΙΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΕΣΣ ΤΖΙΑΡ.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΑΝ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥ, ΠΕΦΤΕΙ ΚΑΤΑΚΟΡΥΦΑ.
ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΊΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΕΠΕΣΕ ΣΤΑ ΕΠΙΠΕΔΑ ΤΟΥ ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ.
ΣΕ ΜΙΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΜΕΝΟ ΣΕΠΤΕΜΒΡΙΟ.
ΤΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΡΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΑΛΗΤΙΚΗ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΙΚΗ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΑ.
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΟΥΝ Τ'ΑΡΧΙΔΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΟΥΝ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ.
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΕΘΑΜΕΝΟΙ.
ΚΑΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ.
ΧΩΡΙΑΤΗΣ
----------
ΜΗ ΧΟΛΟΣΚΑΤΕ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΑΛΗΤΕΙΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΕΣΣ ΤΖΙΑΡ.
ΑΝ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥ, ΠΕΦΤΕΙ ΚΑΤΑΚΟΡΥΦΑ.
ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΊΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΕΠΕΣΕ ΣΤΑ ΕΠΙΠΕΔΑ ΤΟΥ ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ.
ΣΕ ΜΙΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΜΕΝΟ ΣΕΠΤΕΜΒΡΙΟ.
ΤΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΡΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΑΛΗΤΙΚΗ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΙΚΗ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΑ.
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΟΥΝ Τ'ΑΡΧΙΔΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΟΥΝ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ.
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΕΘΑΜΕΝΟΙ.
ΚΑΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ.
ΧΩΡΙΑΤΗΣ
----------
ΜΗ ΧΟΛΟΣΚΑΤΕ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΑΛΗΤΕΙΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΕΣΣ ΤΖΙΑΡ.
ΑΝ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥ, ΠΕΦΤΕΙ ΚΑΤΑΚΟΡΥΦΑ.
ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΊΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΕΠΕΣΕ ΣΤΑ ΕΠΙΠΕΔΑ ΤΟΥ ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ.
ΣΕ ΜΙΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΜΕΝΟ ΣΕΠΤΕΜΒΡΙΟ.
ΤΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΡΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΑΛΗΤΙΚΗ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΙΚΗ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΑ.
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΟΥΝ Τ'ΑΡΧΙΔΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΟΥΝ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ.
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΕΘΑΜΕΝΟΙ.
ΚΑΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ.
ΧΩΡΙΑΤΗΣ
----------
ΜΗ ΧΟΛΟΣΚΑΤΕ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΑΛΗΤΕΙΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΕΣΣ ΤΖΙΑΡ.
ΑΝ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥ, ΠΕΦΤΕΙ ΚΑΤΑΚΟΡΥΦΑ.
ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΊΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΕΠΕΣΕ ΣΤΑ ΕΠΙΠΕΔΑ ΤΟΥ ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ.
ΣΕ ΜΙΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΜΕΝΟ ΣΕΠΤΕΜΒΡΙΟ.
ΤΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΡΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΑΛΗΤΙΚΗ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΙΚΗ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΑ.
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΟΥΝ Τ'ΑΡΧΙΔΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΟΥΝ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ.
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΕΘΑΜΕΝΟΙ.
ΚΑΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ.
ΧΩΡΙΑΤΗΣ
----------
ΜΗ ΧΟΛΟΣΚΑΤΕ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΑΛΗΤΕΙΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΕΣΣ ΤΖΙΑΡ.
ΑΝ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥ, ΠΕΦΤΕΙ ΚΑΤΑΚΟΡΥΦΑ.
ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΊΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΕΠΕΣΕ ΣΤΑ ΕΠΙΠΕΔΑ ΤΟΥ ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ.
ΣΕ ΜΙΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΜΕΝΟ ΣΕΠΤΕΜΒΡΙΟ.
ΤΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΡΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΑΛΗΤΙΚΗ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΙΚΗ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΑ.
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΟΥΝ Τ'ΑΡΧΙΔΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΟΥΝ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ.
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΕΘΑΜΕΝΟΙ.
ΚΑΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ.
ΧΩΡΙΑΤΗΣ
----------
ΜΗ ΧΟΛΟΣΚΑΤΕ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΑΛΗΤΕΙΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΕΣΣ ΤΖΙΑΡ.
ΑΝ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥ, ΠΕΦΤΕΙ ΚΑΤΑΚΟΡΥΦΑ.
ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΊΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΕΠΕΣΕ ΣΤΑ ΕΠΙΠΕΔΑ ΤΟΥ ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ.
ΣΕ ΜΙΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΜΕΝΟ ΣΕΠΤΕΜΒΡΙΟ.
ΤΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΡΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΑΛΗΤΙΚΗ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΙΚΗ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΑ.
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΟΥΝ Τ'ΑΡΧΙΔΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΟΥΝ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ.
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΕΘΑΜΕΝΟΙ.
ΚΑΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ.
ΧΩΡΙΑΤΗΣ
----------
ΜΗ ΧΟΛΟΣΚΑΤΕ ΜΕ ΤΙΣ ΑΛΗΤΕΙΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΧΕΙΡΙΣΤΩΝ ΤΟΥ ΠΡΕΣΣ ΤΖΙΑΡ.
ΑΝ ΔΕΙΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥ, ΠΕΦΤΕΙ ΚΑΤΑΚΟΡΥΦΑ.
ΜΟΝΟ ΤΗΝ ΤΕΛΕΥΤΑΊΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΕΠΕΣΕ ΣΤΑ ΕΠΙΠΕΔΑ ΤΟΥ ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ.
ΣΕ ΜΙΑ ΒΔΟΜΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΕ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΤΟΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΜΕΝΟ ΣΕΠΤΕΜΒΡΙΟ.
ΤΑ ΕΧΟΥΝ ΒΡΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΟΥΝ ΑΛΗΤΙΚΗ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΙΚΗ ΠΡΟΠΑΓΑΝΔΑ.
ΔΕΝ ΕΧΟΥΝ Τ'ΑΡΧΙΔΙΑ ΝΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΟΥΝ ΤΙΠΟΤΕ.
ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΕΘΑΜΕΝΟΙ.
ΚΑΛΑ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΑ.
ΧΩΡΙΑΤΗΣ
ΕΛΕΟΣ ΜΕ ΤΟΝ ΜΠΑΝΑΝΑ [ΑΠΟ ΤΟ ΠΑΛΑΙΟΜΟΔΙΤΙΚΟ ΤΣΑΝΤΑΚΙ ΜΠΑΝΑΝΑ ΠΟΥ ΖΩΝΕΤΑΙ]
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΚαλα αυτος ο Τσιπρας ΝΑ ΜΟΥ ΤΟ ΘΥΜΗΘΕΙΤΕ θα παθει μεγαλη πλακα σε λιγο καιρο ,γιατι ειναι ψευτικος ,οπως ψευτικος ειναι ολος ο ΣΥΡΙΖΑ.Λεω ψευτικος ειναι ο συριζα γιατι ενω καμωνετε οτι ειναι ειναι το κομμα του εργαζομενου και του φτωχου Ελληνα , αν πιασεται ενα -ενα τα στελεχη του, μονο φτωχοι δεν ειναι, ΕΙΝΑΙ ΤΟΥΝΑΝΤΙΟΝ ΠΛΟΥΣΙΟΙ ΚΑΙ προκλητικα κυριλε. Αλαβανος -Κωνσταντοπουλος - Δραγασακης-Κουβελης-Παπαγιαννακης--Λαφαζανης- Μαργαριτης-Παπαδημουλης--Βουτσης-Στρατουλης -Ειναι αληθεια κανεις απο αυτους φτωχος; Αυτοι ολοι τους εχουν τεραστιες περιουσιες , εχουν εκμεταλευθει πληρως την εκλογη τους στο βουλευτικο αξιωμα και στη θεση του Ευρωβουλευτη.ειναι μια κλικα ανθρωπων που πουλαει καλα το σοσιαλιστικο παραμυθι οπως εκανε παλια το καταποντισμενο ΠΑΣΟΚ.Λεω μια κλικα, διοτι μου κανει εντυπωση οι πολλες συνεχιζομενες θητειες στη Ευρωβουλη των ιδιων ανθρωπων απο δυο και τρεισ ς τετραετιες εκαστος Παπαδημουλης ,παλαιοτερα Αλαβανος Παπαγιαννακης. Επειτα αν τους παρατηρησετε ολους στις συζητησεις που κανουν ειναι πολυ εγωιστες και ξερολες και παρολο που το κομμα τους ειναι μικρο ,οι απαιτησεις τους ειναι πολυ εγωιστικες και θελουν να γινει το δικο τους και οχι αυτο του μεγαλου κομματος που επελεξε ο Ελληνικος λαος .Αυτο δειχνει οτι δεν ειναι και δημοκρατες αλλα φασιστομουτρα του κερατα αφου δεν σεβονται την αρχη της πλειοψηφειας.Τους φανταζεστε αυτους με τον χαρακτηρα που εχουν να αναλαβουν την εξουσια στη χωρα ,κουνια που μας κουναγε μπροστα τους οι νεοδημοκρατες φανταζουν σαν αρνακια.Φανταζεσαι τον Στρατουλη Υπουργο και να τον κανει ο δημοσιογραφος ελεγχο οπως κανει στους Νεοδημοκρατες υπουργους και καθονται οι ανθρωποι ηπια και προσπαθουν να απαντησουν σε καθε μαλακα δημοσιογραφο.Φανταζεσαι λεω τον Στατουλη υπουργο και να καθησει να απαντησει στον δημοσιογραφο ; το αποκλειω ειλικρινα, διοτι αυτη την γνωμη εχω σχηματισει για τον χαρακτηρα αυτου του ανθρωπου οτι ειναι ψευτικος και υποκριτης αφου παντα παιρνει ακραιες θεσεις υπερ των κουκουλοφορων και τρομοκρατων και ποτε δεν τον ακουσα να πει μια καλη κουβεντα συμπαθειας για τον μαγαζατορα που του καψαν το μαγαζι οι αναρχικοι.Ειναι ολοι τους ψευτικοι, γιατι ενω διατυμπανιζουν μεγαλες ιδεες ,για διαφανεια , ολα στην φορα,και τιποτε κρυφο, μολις τους προεκυψε μεσα στις οικογενειες τους καποιο θεμα το κουκουλωσαν , οπως η κορη στελεχους που πιασθηκε για ναρκωτικα και αλλονου ο γυιος που πιασθηκε σαν κουκουλοφορος ,τα απεκρυψαν σαν πουτανιτσες ενω δεν εκαναν το ιδιο οταν ζητουσαν την κεφαλη επι πινακι του Νεοδημοκρατη Κατσικη στην περιπετεια με το γυιο του. Ουτε καυτηριασαν ενεργειες αλλου κορυφαιου στελεχους που εδερνε την γυναι κα του .Γιαυτο σας λεω ο Τσιπρας ΘΑ ΞΕΦΟΥΣΚΩΣΕΙ ΓΡΗΓΟΡΑ ΓΙΑΤΙ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΑΙ ΣΕ ΚΟΜΜΑ ΨΕΥΤΩΝ.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή