View allAll Photos Tagged Protection,

data protection phone

 

Credit www.thoughtcatalog.com with an active link required.

  

Image is free for usage on websites (even websites with ads) if you credit www.thoughtcatalog.com with an active link.

1966 Duplex - VanPelt 85' 1250 gpm pump, former Contra Costa County Fire Protection District in California - now in Cabo San Lucus, Mexico used for tourist rides

Original Caption: Billy Taylor of Richlands, Virginia, Is a Shop Mechanic for Virginia-Pocahontas Coal Company. A Member of the Repair Shop Safety Committee He Repairs Underground Shuttle Cars Which Take the Coal to the Conveyor Belts. Taylor Belongs to United Mine Workers Local #1671 04/1974

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-13863

 

Photographer: Corn, Jack, 1929-

 

Subjects:

Richlands (Tazewell county, Virginia, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/556315

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

via Instagram ift.tt/2vf6nnr Protection #bw #blackandwhite #p9 #huaweip9 #huaweishot #instadaily #daily #protection

One of 4 gun emplacement turrets dotted around the windmill on top of Halnaker Hill, protecting the landscape from Axis invasion during WWII

Protection Island National Wildlife Refuge. For more information visit

www.fws.gov/refuge/protection_island/

 

Photo by Brent Lawrence / USFWS

Fujifilm Instax mini EVO + Fujifilm Instax Mini Monochrome film

 

Big Male Mallard, will keep his Mate Protected from Danger.

From a 1958 Government pamphlet about Fallout protection.

Midlands Fire Protection Toyota Operational Support Unit. Seen at ESS, Stoneleigh - 25.11.10

A defensive shield around this British armoured fighting vehicle offers the first line of defence against explosive armaments, seen here at the Kendrew Barracks Open Day.

Impossible PZ680 color protection / spectra

A member of the Parliamentary Protection Service stands guard on Parliament Hill during the ceremony for Fallen Police Officers on Sunday September 24 2023.

History - The early years

 

A dispute and riot at St Mary's Abbey in York led to the founding of Fountains Abbey in 1132. After pleading unsuccessfully to return to the early 6th century Rule of St Benedict, 13 monks were exiled and taken into the protection of Thurstan, Archbishop of York.

 

He provided them with a site in the valley of the little River Skell in which they could found a new, more devout monastery. Although described as a place "more fit for wild beasts than men to inhabit" it had all the essential materials for the creation of a monastery: shelter from the weather, stone and timber for building, and plenty of water.

 

Within three years, the little settlement at Fountains had been admitted to the austere Cistercian Order (founded in France in 1098). Under its rules they lived a rigorous daily life, committed to long periods of silence, a diet barely above subsistence level, and wore the regulation habit of coarse undyed sheep's wool (underwear was forbidden), which earned them the name "White Monks."

 

One of the Abbey's most important developments was the introduction of the Cistercian system of lay brothers. They were usually illiterate and relieved the monks from routine jobs, giving them more opportunity to dedicate their time to God.

 

Many served as masons, tanners, shoemakers and smiths, but their chief role was to look after the Abbey's vast flocks of sheep, which lived on the huge estate stretching westwards from Fountains to the Lake District and northwards to Teesside.

 

Without the lay brothers, Fountains could never have attained its great wealth or economic importance.

 

1200 - 1539

 

By the middle of the 13th century it was one of England's richest religious houses and, as well as farming, was mining lead, working iron, quarrying stones and horse breeding. But the seeds of failure lay in the very success of the system. The lay brothers encouraged the monks to extend their estates beyond what was necessary for monastic self-sufficiency.

 

In the 14th century economic collapse followed bad harvests and Scots raids, and the Black Death exacerbated the effects of financial mismanagement. The community of lay brothers reduced in size, many of the monastic granges were leased out to tenant farmers, and in the late 15th century dairy farming replaced sheep farming.

 

Despite its financial problems, Fountains Abbey remained of considerable importance in the Cistercian Order. The abbots sat in Parliament and the abbacy of Marmaduke Huby (1495-1526) marked a period of revival.

 

Fountains once again flourished, but its life was brought to an abrupt end in 1539 by Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries. The abbot (Marmaduke Bradley) received a pension of £100 pa, his prior received £8, and 30 monks each received £6.

 

For a few months after the Dissolution, the Abbey buildings stood empty in the hope of being the site for the cathedral for a new Dales bishopric.

 

This was not to be, and by 1540 glass and lead from the dismantling of Fountains had found their way to Ripon and York.

The buildings and parts of the estate were sold to Sir Richard Gresham, whose family subsequently sold them on to Stephen Proctor, the builder of Fountains Hall.

 

Then the abbey passed through several hands until it came into the possession of the Messenger family. In 1767 it was sold for £18,000 to William Aislabie, who landscaped the abbey ruins as a picturesque folly to be viewed from the Water Garden.

 

gbr309.redbubble.com/works

My recently acquired Walther PPK .32 ACP pistol.

 

Just for the curious, PPK stands for Polizei Pistole Kriminal Modell or Police Pistol Detective Model. It was first issued in 1931 in 7.65mm (.32 ACP) and made to be used for undercover police work. They were also issued to German military police, Luftwaffe and Nazi Party members during WWII. Hitler committed suicide with his PPK. Also famous for being James Bond's sidearm.

 

Most PPKs in the US were made under license by INTERARMS or Smith & Wesson (which is who made this PPK) due to laws on importing firearms this small.

 

(Note: This is a PPK and not a PPK/S, which uses a larger frame to hold an extra round of ammo)

Shot yesterday in Wells - this is the male swan protecting its eggs and nest!

Not a great photo, but worth sharing as I've not seen this before. There were a pair of adult cuttles, and one had a small adolescent hovering directly underneath. Wherever the adult went, the adolescent followed. Camp Cove

Sogar

 

⚫️

 

CD :

 

Sogar

Stengel

List

L2

 

Sounds . Jürgen Heckel

 

Design . Emmanuel Allard

 

Postcard :

 

Pantone 102

Zucker

 

Use Hearing Protection

 

GMA

"I stand in front of you

I'll take the force of the blow."

Original Caption: Coho Salmon in Columbia River Fish Hatchery. (From the Sites Exhibition. for Other Images in This Assignment, See Fiche Numbers 92 93, 94, 95, 96.) 05/1973

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-11419

 

Photographer: Falconer, David

 

Subjects:

Portland (Multnomah county, Oregon, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=553878

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

Checkpoint Charlie, Berlin

Safety, security, well-being, control, privacy, protection, online protection

 

When using this image please provide photo credit (link) to: www.bluecoat.com/

Secretary Johnson addresses DHS employees during a town hall meeting hosted by CBP Laredo Sector.

(Photo by Barry Bahler, DHS)

I chose this frame for its simple mess and strength. I prepared a version in B&W and I like both of them.

Edward Snowden should have been at the European Parliament this week to give his testimony

 

Instead, MEPs failed to support a Green call to protect him as a whistleblower. This display of cowardice sends out a negative message that whistleblowers who expose injustice will not be protected.

 

It's a cop-out, from a desire not to "offend" the US, whose own citizens are equally shocked. And it's made worse by the failure to support calls for a suspension of negotiations on an EU-US trade agreement (TTIP) until the US ceases its mass surveillance of EU citizens.

 

Read more at www.greens-efa.eu/nsa-scandal-ep-inquiry-12026.html

 

See our campaign for protection for Edward Snowden, and respect for our privacy

 

blamethegame.respect-my-privacy.eu/

#blamethegame

 

And the EU-US trade agreement

ttip2014.eu/

  

Photo in action on NSA scandal/asylum for Snowden.

 

"C European Union 2014"

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