Израел, нови савезник Русије

Alekasandar2

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Израел педесет година је имао само једног стратешког партнера, Америку, али у последњих 15 година, су се ствари промениле. Мало људи то види, али русија ј емного погоднији партер од Америке.

У колико Израел смањи зависност од Америке и приближи се Русији у партнерском односу, то би значило и смањење подршке Русије Ирану

То би значило могућност договора Израела са суседим аи нестајање утицаја САД у региону.

рат у Либану је амерички рат, палестинци, Јевреји и Либанци плаћају цену тог рата.

Циљ САД је контрола над нафтом и у прилог им иде константно вреење на Блиском истоку.

Ослањане на сругу суперсилу (Русе) да ослабе подршку другима у региону јер би се савезништвом са Израелом добио много вреднији партнер.

- АМЕРИКА ЈЕ ЦАРСТВО У РУШЕЊУ, А РУСИЈА СТОЈИ ЕКОНОМСКИ ВРЛО ДОБРО. БЛАГОСЛОВЕНА ВЕЛИКИМ ПРИРОДНИМ БОГАТСТВИМА, ОНА НЕ МОРА ДА ИГРА ИГРЕ ОКО СВОЈЕ НАФТЕ. НАЖАЛОСТ ИЗРАЕЛ ЈЕ УВАЉЕН СА АМЕРИКОМ ЗБОГ РАТА ПРОТИВ ТЕРОРА КОЈИ ЈЕ ИЗГОВОР ЗА ИМПЕРИЈАЛИЗАМ.

Изреал мора да каже Америци "Било је лепо док је трајало, увек ћемо имати наше успомене, али гушиш мој напредак, верме је да се венчам са Русијом"

http://web.israelinsider.com/Views/9795.htm
 
Alekasandar2:
Бивши председик Светске Банке Ѕејмс Волфесон каже да би САД могле да изгубе интересовање за Израел.

http://web.israelinsider.com/Articles/Diplomacy/9815.htm

Pa za koga ratuju u Iraku (sprema se napad na Iran i Siriju) nego za Izrael ... Inace, poslednji put kad su Rusi bili u savezu sa Izraelom, falilo ih je nekih tridesetak miliona ... :roll:
 
Deratizator:
Pa za koga ratuju u Iraku (sprema se napad na Iran i Siriju) nego za Izrael ... Inace, poslednji put kad su Rusi bili u savezu sa Izraelom, falilo ih je nekih tridesetak miliona ... :roll:

Ратују за нафту брате не з аизраел. Израелу одоговра мир са арапима. Америка ратује за себе.
 
Alekasandar2:
Бриљијантан чланак.
Хвала Вич

Почиње лагано да ме интригира твоја опседнутост Израелом због које њихову улогу у светској политици потпуно видиш у кривом огледалу. 8-)

Ако се Израел "окрене РУсији" - то само значи да су намерили да тамо почну да се гребу и опседају ресурсе - ништа друго.
 
eremita:
Ако се Израел "окрене РУсији" - то само значи да су намерили да тамо почну да се гребу и опседају ресурсе - ништа друго.

Cunning Weed Sniffs Out Victims

It may look like a benign spaghetti noodle, but a bizarre parasitic plant has some cunning moves. When the stringy dodder plant emerges from the earth, it sniffs out a plant victim in the first known example of an amazing form of plant communication.

Then it ***** the life out of the other plant.

Considered an agricultural pest, the dodder relies solely on other plants to survive and infests a variety of crops, including tomatoes, carrots and alfalfa, earning it a spot on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Top Ten Weeds List.

Now, scientists from Pennsylvania Statue University have discovered the parasitic weed can sense airborne chemicals released by host plants and then steer in that direction. The finding, detailed in the Sept. 29 issue of the journal Science, shows for the first time that plants can "chatter" with one another, helping to resolve a decades-long debate about whether volatile chemicals are involved in plant-to-plant interactions.

Attack of the dodder

Once a dodder seedling pops its head above the soil, the clock starts ticking before it latches on to another plant or dies.

"One thing about dodder that makes it essential for them to be able to find this host is that they don’t form roots," said co-researcher Consuelo De Moraes. The dodder can’t even produce its own food through photosynthesis like other green plants.

Its only resource is a pocket of food stored in its seed, which lasts just days, allowing the plant to grow no more than four inches.

"If they take the wrong direction they are pretty much doomed," De Moraes told LiveScience.

Once the dodder sniffs out a host, it slithers counterclockwise up the host’s stem. Small bumps along the dodder’s surface puncture the host’s stem and begin sucking out nutrients from the phloem, a tube that conducts food up a plant.

"So they just have the phloem flowing right out of the host into themselves, and bringing with it all the stuff that’s in there, all the resources that are floating around," said co-researcher Mark Mescher.

Plant stalker

Scientists had thought the parasitic plant used a hit-or-miss tactic, and any hook-up was the result of a chance encounter.

But a lab experiment found 80 percent of the dodders grew toward a tomato plant. And when they tried to trick the dodder with artificial tomato plants and pots of moist dirt, the dodder didn’t take the bait. Its shoots didn’t grow in any particular direction.

In an even more impressive feat, the dodders could distinguish between a good host plant, such as the tomato, and a poor one such as wheat. When placed in the middle of wheat and tomato plants, the dodders swayed aboveground in circular movements in the direction of the tomato plants.

"I think the more interesting thing is that they could make choices based on the volatiles. They could use that information to distinguish between a good host and a poor host," De Moraes said.

Chemical tests revealed the dodder plants were attracted to three airborne chemicals known to be released by tomato plants. One chemical produced by wheat plants actually repelled the dodders.

The researchers suspect the dodder is equipped with sense receptors that can sniff out hosts. Next, the researchers hope to figure out how this odor-sensing mechanism works and also how host plants defend against the stifling attack.

It seems we have a pretty obvious suspect
 
Blonde Knight:
Cunning Weed Sniffs Out Victims

It may look like a benign spaghetti noodle, but a bizarre parasitic plant has some cunning moves. When the stringy dodder plant emerges from the earth, it sniffs out a plant victim in the first known example of an amazing form of plant communication.

Then it ***** the life out of the other plant.

Considered an agricultural pest, the dodder relies solely on other plants to survive and infests a variety of crops, including tomatoes, carrots and alfalfa, earning it a spot on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Top Ten Weeds List.

Now, scientists from Pennsylvania Statue University have discovered the parasitic weed can sense airborne chemicals released by host plants and then steer in that direction. The finding, detailed in the Sept. 29 issue of the journal Science, shows for the first time that plants can "chatter" with one another, helping to resolve a decades-long debate about whether volatile chemicals are involved in plant-to-plant interactions.

Attack of the dodder

Once a dodder seedling pops its head above the soil, the clock starts ticking before it latches on to another plant or dies.

"One thing about dodder that makes it essential for them to be able to find this host is that they don’t form roots," said co-researcher Consuelo De Moraes. The dodder can’t even produce its own food through photosynthesis like other green plants.

Its only resource is a pocket of food stored in its seed, which lasts just days, allowing the plant to grow no more than four inches.

"If they take the wrong direction they are pretty much doomed," De Moraes told LiveScience.

Once the dodder sniffs out a host, it slithers counterclockwise up the host’s stem. Small bumps along the dodder’s surface puncture the host’s stem and begin sucking out nutrients from the phloem, a tube that conducts food up a plant.

"So they just have the phloem flowing right out of the host into themselves, and bringing with it all the stuff that’s in there, all the resources that are floating around," said co-researcher Mark Mescher.

Plant stalker

Scientists had thought the parasitic plant used a hit-or-miss tactic, and any hook-up was the result of a chance encounter.

But a lab experiment found 80 percent of the dodders grew toward a tomato plant. And when they tried to trick the dodder with artificial tomato plants and pots of moist dirt, the dodder didn’t take the bait. Its shoots didn’t grow in any particular direction.

In an even more impressive feat, the dodders could distinguish between a good host plant, such as the tomato, and a poor one such as wheat. When placed in the middle of wheat and tomato plants, the dodders swayed aboveground in circular movements in the direction of the tomato plants.

"I think the more interesting thing is that they could make choices based on the volatiles. They could use that information to distinguish between a good host and a poor host," De Moraes said.

Chemical tests revealed the dodder plants were attracted to three airborne chemicals known to be released by tomato plants. One chemical produced by wheat plants actually repelled the dodders.

The researchers suspect the dodder is equipped with sense receptors that can sniff out hosts. Next, the researchers hope to figure out how this odor-sensing mechanism works and also how host plants defend against the stifling attack.

It seems we have a pretty obvious suspect

А како ти, брале, одговараш на мој пост који је написан ЋИРИЛИЦОМ на енглеском језику који ја не разумем. Који ти је то штос? Ти, дакле, разумеш
ћирилицу, а мене масираш са језиком и писмом који ја не разумем ???8-)
 
eremita:
А како ти, брале, одговараш на мој пост који је написан ЋИРИЛИЦОМ на енглеском језику који ја не разумем. Који ти је то штос? Ти, дакле, разумеш
ћирилицу, а мене масираш са језиком и писмом који ја не разумем ???8-)


Stop your damn bitching. I didn't write it, I'm just reporting it.

Try this:Free Online English to Serbian Translator
 
Blonde Knight:
Stop your damn bitching. I didn't write it, I'm just reporting it.

Try this:Free Online English to Serbian Translator
Што нам не кажеш одакле си,кад већ пишеш на енглеском језику?
Немам ништа против што пишеш на енглеском,али бар да знамо разлог... :D
Мислим,ово је,ипак,српски форум,јел`?
 

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