

I can't do (taxes) until we do health care, because we have to know what the health care is going to cost and - statutorily - that's the way it is, so for those people who say, 'oh, gee, I wish we could do the tax first,' it just doesn't work that way. And let's go and test with the test tubes and the laboratories. But you never know what happens, right ? But I will absolutely firmly ask the question.īut we don't have time to go and say,' Gee, let's take a couple of years and test it out. I don't think you'll have any' Gee, I did it, I did it, you got me,' there won't be a Perry Mason here, I don't think.

They can say, 'We tried, but gee that governor is tough,' and Jerry Brown comes out looking like the skinflint he loves to look like. The system started to be shut down in the late 1960s, with the last station going off the air in 1970. It also saw civilian use, and a number of new Gee chains were set up to support military and civil aviation across Europe. Gee remained an important part of the Royal Air Force's suite of navigation systems in the post-war era, and was featured on aircraft such as the English Electric Canberra and the V-bomber fleet. Jamming reduced its usefulness as a bombing aid, but it remained in use as a navigational aid in the UK area throughout the war. For large fixed targets, like the cities that were attacked at night, Gee offered enough accuracy to be used as an aiming reference without the need to use a bombsight or other external reference. Gee was originally designed as a short-range blind landing system to improve safety during night operations, but it developed into a long-range general navigation system. Gee was devised by Robert Dippy and developed at the Telecommunications Research Establishment at Swanage. It was the first hyperbolic navigation system to be used operationally. It measured the time delay between two radio signals to produce a "fix".
#GEE MEANING CODE#
Gee was the code name given to a radio navigation system used by the Royal Air Force during World War II. Freebase Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes
