
U615-A Triangular Flange
Triangular flange fixed on pipe to join dispenser.
Features:
Enclosure is made of casting aluminium alloy, Surface is sprayed with plastics.
Connection with tube or through wiring.
Materials:l
Body:
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Gross Weight Dimension
U615-A 550g/case of 1
570g/case of 1 10.5x10.5x2.7 cm /case of 1
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rstwhile party of fuel dispenser the Protestant hegemony. And the takeover has coincided with the worst
scandal in the Catholic church s history in America a paedophilia crisis involving dozens of abusive
priests and cover-ups by the Catholic hierarchy.
So why have the Republicans been so keen to tap Catholics? The most obvious reason is political
the Catholic vote is up for grabs. Catholics were once a solid Democratic constituency, up there
with blacks and Jews. They began to turn against the Democrats in the 1970s when the latter
moved to the left on issues such as abortion. Ronald Reagan won the Catholic vote easily in 1984
(Catholics were the archetypal Reagan Democrats). But they are not reliable Republicans. Bill
Clinton won a plurality of the Catholic vote in 1992 (41%) and a majority in 1996 (53%). Catholics
voted for Al Gore in 2000 (50% to 47%) but then George Bush in 2004 (52% to 47%).
One of the perks of being swing voters is that politicians have to work hard to woo you. The
Republicans recruited 50,000 Catholic “team leaders�in 2004 and Mr Bush even put up with an
earwigging from John Paul II over Iraq so that he could get his picture taken with him (the picture
appeared on his website over the slogan “Catholics for Bush�. And what better way of wooing
Catholics than nominating their intellectuals to the Supreme Court? This not only delights
Catholics. It also embarrasses Democrats, who face a choice between annoying left-wing interest
groups or insulting Catholic voters.
There is more than just vote-counting at work here, however. Conservative Catholics have formed
a close alliance with one of the Republican Party s most powerful constituencies—Protestant
evangelicals. Evangelicals were the very heart of Protestant anti-Catholicism. But the two groups
united in fury at the Supreme Court s decision to make abortion a constitutional right in Roe v
Wade (1973); and they have now broadened their alliance on issues from school choice to family
values.
The Catholics bring fuel dispenser fuel dispenser