divorce rate
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A little brutal on the man ain't you?
VS2010/Atmel Studio 6.1 ToDo Manager Extension You're about to exceed the limitations of my medication.
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Worldwide the divorce rate is in average about 40%, but inside the NSA it is only about 2% Why: The NSA is able to listen ... :-)
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Klaus-Werner Konrad wrote:
Worldwide the divorce rate is in average about 40%
Wow, just wow! That must mean I'm one of the privileged persons to know people that don't have this shortcoming. Maybe it has something to do with being brought up in a time when we were taught to fix things instead of just throwing them away. Cheers!
"I had the right to remain silent, but I didn't have the ability!"
Ron White, Comedian
The numbers are skewed by people who marry and divorce several times. i.e. if you and someone who'd been divorced three time were the source, it's be a 75% divorce rate.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Klaus-Werner Konrad wrote:
Worldwide the divorce rate is in average about 40%
Wow, just wow! That must mean I'm one of the privileged persons to know people that don't have this shortcoming. Maybe it has something to do with being brought up in a time when we were taught to fix things instead of just throwing them away. Cheers!
"I had the right to remain silent, but I didn't have the ability!"
Ron White, Comedian
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The numbers are skewed by people who marry and divorce several times. i.e. if you and someone who'd been divorced three time were the source, it's be a 75% divorce rate.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
The 50% figure thrown around years ago was counting all divorces. The actual divorce rate is very hard to determine since you'd need to track people over time. In the end, it does appear that the divorce rate for first marriages is between 28% and 40%, with most studies I've seen leaning toward the higher number. Subsequent marriages fail at an increasingly and much higher rate.
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Klaus-Werner Konrad wrote:
Worldwide the divorce rate is in average about 40%
Wow, just wow! That must mean I'm one of the privileged persons to know people that don't have this shortcoming. Maybe it has something to do with being brought up in a time when we were taught to fix things instead of just throwing them away. Cheers!
"I had the right to remain silent, but I didn't have the ability!"
Ron White, Comedian
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I will NEVER understand, why someone can make an error / fault more than one time ...
Klaus-Werner Konrad wrote:
I will NEVER understand, why someone can make an error / fault more than one time ...
You must live in a box then. Certainly don't program. After all have you never burned dinner more than once? Only failed to put a semi-colon on a line of code once? Never hit your thumb with a hammer more than once? Never fell off a bike more than once? Never tripped over your own feet more than once? Never slipped on ice more than once? Never mistyped a word more than once? Never let slip an inappropriate comment more than once? ...and on and on and on....
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Klaus-Werner Konrad wrote:
I will NEVER understand, why someone can make an error / fault more than one time ...
You must live in a box then. Certainly don't program. After all have you never burned dinner more than once? Only failed to put a semi-colon on a line of code once? Never hit your thumb with a hammer more than once? Never fell off a bike more than once? Never tripped over your own feet more than once? Never slipped on ice more than once? Never mistyped a word more than once? Never let slip an inappropriate comment more than once? ...and on and on and on....
All of your examples, and not only morethan once, but often ! But all of your examples are not errors /faults in the manner I spoke about; they are all little accidents, caused from inattentiveness or a intertupting phone call. If you ask the MIQ (most important question, I hve a patent pending on this acronym :-)) you think about it beforehand for a while - it's (mostly) not an ad hoc decision, likewise if you ask yourself about founding a Company with someone. THIS is what I meant with 'never make an error / fault more than once.
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Manfred R. Bihy wrote:
Maybe it has something to do with being brought up in a time when we were taught to fix things instead of just throwing them away.
Or that you don't get out much and do not meet new people.
Pretty close to the truth. ;)
"I had the right to remain silent, but I didn't have the ability!"
Ron White, Comedian
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The 50% figure thrown around years ago was counting all divorces. The actual divorce rate is very hard to determine since you'd need to track people over time. In the end, it does appear that the divorce rate for first marriages is between 28% and 40%, with most studies I've seen leaning toward the higher number. Subsequent marriages fail at an increasingly and much higher rate.
Hey, you researched it! Cool, now I can quote your figures :)
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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All of your examples, and not only morethan once, but often ! But all of your examples are not errors /faults in the manner I spoke about; they are all little accidents, caused from inattentiveness or a intertupting phone call. If you ask the MIQ (most important question, I hve a patent pending on this acronym :-)) you think about it beforehand for a while - it's (mostly) not an ad hoc decision, likewise if you ask yourself about founding a Company with someone. THIS is what I meant with 'never make an error / fault more than once.
Klaus-Werner Konrad wrote:
THIS is what I meant with 'never make an error / fault more than once
However you didn't qualify it in your first response. And regardless... In the context of marriage people don't marry the same person they divorced (the few cases that occur are below the noise level.) And due to the passage of time from one marriage to the next neither participant is the same person anyways. So it isn't the "same" mistake.