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I have stolen from a kid before, not to that degree though. Its minor things, like Smarties, and sugar cookies. Sometimes I steal his smiley face fruit snacks.
1. Which pagan holidays did the Christians "steal," exactly?
I do not even know where to start to tell you that you are so wrong in every way. I would love to see where you got your information and see your sources? For your thoughts are very ignorant, and because of ignorance like that people have died in the past...innocent people mind you. I am Pagan, I can tell you over the millenniums that my religion is as old as time itself and have evolved through those years. We are open and willing to admit that and that we have blended with other cultures and religions. Look up history and I mean real history not just what your local church tells you. The truth might shock you
2. Will Hillary "STEAL" the nomination?
you are forgetting that she's gonna pull a vince foster on him
3. A Bike Nobody Would Want To Steal?
Buy a $10 lock from Walmart, and no one will take the time or effort to cut it. A criminal may feel sorry that you have such a bike and leave money on the seat for you
4. Does the level of Steal materia affect steal %?
The only factors in the formula for Steal in Final Fantasy 7 are:For multiple potential stolen items, the items are organized into slots and checked sequentially until one steal attempt is successful or all items have been attempted. Thus, it is generally easier to steal items in the early slots, even without factoring in the lower item chance usually attributed to the later slots.Having the Sneak Glove equipped overrides parts of the formula related to the level differences, but otherwise does not change the system that much. There is an element of randomness to stealing, but it is unaffected by luck. The level of the Materia is also irrelevant
5. Baseball Trivia: Who is the only player ever to steal the same base twice in an inning & also steal first base?
It's widely believed that Germany Schaefer is the only person to do this but that's not true. There are at least two more cases where it happened. On August 13, 1902 Harry Davis of Detroit did it and on July 31, 1908, Fred Tenney of the Giants did it. Schaefer's occurrence happened on August 4, 1911. In addition it may have happened quite a few times in the 19th century.
6. Can I steal your electron?
Well, the wave function of the electron in the ground state of a hydrogen atom (and very similarly in other atoms) behaves like $$ R(r) sim exp(-r / a) $$ where $a$ is the Bohr radius, effectively the radius of the atom. The exponential is in principle nonzero for an arbitrarily large $r$, so the electron may be found arbitrarily far from the nucleus at a nonzero probability.Of course that the statement on Wikipedia is in principle correct. I do not believe that there is anything incomprehensible or ambiguous about that statement.In practice, if we are already 100 Bohr radii from the nucleus which is much less than a micron, the probability already drops $exp(200)$ times (because the wave function has to be squared). That's $Psim 10^-87$, smaller than the inverse number of particles in the visible Universe, so you can be pretty sure that the electron (in a low-energy bound state of the atom) wo not ever be found more than a micron from the nucleus. In most cases, it's not further than 3 Bohr radii from the nucleus. But again, in principle, it may be anywhere. The exponentially small probability is similar to the probabilities that we tunnel through a classically impenetrable barrier. The probability is nonzero but negligible for thick enough barriers. When talking about the stolen electron, one must realize that particles are constantly being stolen from and added to our bodies and two electrons can not even be distinguished from each other, so there is no reliable way allowed by the laws of physics that would allow one to say that "this electron is mine", "this electron is yours". Generic elementary particles, especially electrons, are being stolen all the time. In that case, the electrons immediatley become "shared". For two equally large pieces, within a very short moment of time, each electron has the same probability to be stolen as to be the from the original piece. This question really does not make sense because there's no invariant way to trace them.You might try to "block" electrons that deviate too far from the nucleus. Absorb them if they cross a "red line", for example. You must realize that by adding the "absorber", however, you are also changing the rules of the game. The energy levels of the electron will be modified in the presence of both the nucleus and the absorber. One can not really separate these two things - the behavior of the electron inside the atom and its interactions with the absorber - because the absorber is an example of a measurement apparatus and those always have to influence the measured object, according to the most general principles of quantum mechanics.