Youtube comments of Rob Fraser (@krashd).
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There is 14.5lbs of pressure pressing against every inch of your body but you don't feel it because it has always been there, humans (and all sea-level dwelling creatures) have evolved to effortlessly endure this, it is the pressure from the atmosphere (air) pushing down on you and is known as "1 atmosphere" of pressure. In space 200 miles above our head there is no atmosphere, just vacuum, so no pressure aka zero atmosphere.
But although the difference between zero and 1 is 200 to 300 miles upward, the difference between 1 and 2 is just 33 feet (a tiny bit over 10 metres) downward. This is because we move from air in to water and water is so many magnitudes denser than air, it is seriously heavy. Also for every 10 metres after that pressure again increases by 1 atmosphere.
Humans can safely dive to about 60 metres, or 6 atmospheres, before the pressure becomes detrimental and exhausting to move around in. A typical submarine can safely operate around 400 metres (40 atmospheres) and even then the pressure is like having the entire weight of a car pushing on every single inch of the submarine's surface, any weak spot could cause a submarine to implode like someone standing on a balloon.
The Atlantic ocean is typically about 3 and a half kilometres deep, that's 3,500 metres, at that depth anything containing air, even a thick sold steel barrel, would be crushed like a beer can. This is why the stern of Titanic was utterly wrecked while the bow wasn't - the bow filled up with water over two hours as Titanic was slowly sinking, when the bow broke off and fell to the ocean floor it was full of water and so it wasn't crushed, but the stern which was raised up out of the water was empty of water, so when the bow snapped off and the stern started to fill with water it fell faster than it could fill up and all of the pockets of air - cabins, corridors, tanks, containers, air pockets between compartments - all crumpled and imploded sending bits of the stern flying as they burst inwards under the pressure. This is why the stern has little or no plating still on it and why it has a massive debris field around it.
I know this post is a bit more info than you asked for, but no, no one would be alive by the time the stern reached the bottom, anyone still inside it (and there were hundreds unable to get up on deck) would have died in the first minute as it plummeted beyond 300 metres, all of the spaces people were in would have smashed in on them killing them instantly. As scary as it would have been it still would have been a much faster death than the hundreds who spent 5 to 15 minutes freezing to death up on the surface.
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I knew the UK was at the forefront of video games in the 90's but being responsible for an entire third of all videogame content is mindblowing, though I'm not surprised since I was an Amiga user and almost every major developer on that machine was British; Core, Bullfrog, DMA Design, Team 17, Sensible Software, Bitmap Brothers, Rebellion, Psygnosis, Ocean, Flair, Gremlin, Graftgold, Image Works, Reflections, U.S. Gold, etc
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MaiCohWolf, it's basic displacement, it's also why people tell you to get as far away as you can from a ship that is moments away from sinking. There is a suction effect when something drops below the surface of a fluid, the surrounding water (and any lifeboats or people) in it will be dragged in to fill the gap that is left behind and everything will get dragged under. This force actually keeps going straight to the bottom, as a 100,000 tonne ship falls through the water it will drag anything nearby in to the void behind it and when that ship finally comes to a halt on the ocean floor the enormous pressure of the water following it will hit like an enormous sledgehammer. That is known as downblast.
Anything moving through a fluid, be it a ship through water or a hand through air, will drag that fluid with it to fill the gap left behind. The best way to observe this force is with a fluid that is very viscous like syrup or honey, if you push a spoon in to something like syrup you will see the syrup try to fill the hole left by the spoon, now in water the force is much faster, and with something the size of a passenger liner the force is a trillion times stronger.
This is why the lifeboats were ordered to withdraw and then come back later, to avoid being pulled under with the ship, they waited to long however before returning and everyone froze.
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+Sam Smith Americans speak English, I would say the subtitles are for people from India, Thailand, Greece, France, Belgium, Zimbabwe, DRC, PRC, Argentina, Albania, Macedonia, Switzerland, etc, etc, etc
You know.. those places who don't speak our language? There's quite a lot of them.
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@chrisgomez3078 Yes, all four died from crushing injuries to the chest and/or abdomen although one was nearly decapitated also.
Of the two who were seated both became trapped very quickly because as the raft came to be completely upright the weight of it combined with the motion of the conveyor caused the raft to drop around 4 feet into the gap between the conveyor and the support rails in one sudden jerk. This is the same jerk that caused the two other seated adults to be ripped from their velcro straps and thrown onto the top of the conveyor whereby both fell through gaps in the conveyor to the inner mechanisms.
So all 4 people basically disappeared below the waterline in a matter of seconds, to put it bluntly, as the raft fell into the gap.
The two who were seated died from blunt force trauma to the chest caused by the planks on the conveyor moving over them, this caused broken ribs and chest trauma to both. The male victim was also internally decapitated and had various injuries to his neck but the cause of death was chest trauma meaning his head must have been pulled by a passing plank after he had died. He was the only victim to have anything close to gruesome wounds and those injuries were internal neck and head injuries after he died.
Of the man and woman who fell onto - and then through - the conveyor they died from crush injuries also but mainly to the abdomen, both had damaged livers and abdominal trauma comparable to something extremely heavy being placed on their belly but it was not surmised how they came to get those injuries. My guess is after falling through the top of the conveyor they also fell through the bottom and were caught between a plank and a hard place - this would explain how rescuers couldn't get to them any easier than they could to the other two.
Inside the conveyor itself there was a large cog very close to the accident and a heavy chain that was used to drive the conveyor, these are the reason people often believe that the victims were dismembered, but if either of the two who fell into the conveyor had come into contact with that there would have been amputations, not crush injuries to the chest.
I believe the planks on the conveyor killed all four, it took around 14 seconds for the conveyor to come to a halt after all four victims 'disappeared' under water and that means the planks of wood that made up the conveyor were "rolled" over the bodies of the two seated victims more than a dozen times snagging on and breaking anything hard like ribs, while the other two victims possibly fell straight through to the floor of the ride and were crushed between the conveyor planks and the concrete floor, trapping them there.
Had the stop button been pressed at the moment of the accident rather than 8 or 10 seconds after it started then it might have saved the two who fell into the conveyor from being crushed against the floor, but it would not have saved the two who were strapped into seats as although they possibly may not have been crushed they definitely would have drowned as it took about ten minutes to fully drain the ride and they were trapped underwater.
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And what comes around leads to escalation, be careful what you wish for. The other side has China on their team and China has more industrial might than all of the other 196 nations combined - they are the USA of 1941, they can build 20 destroyers for every one we sink, they have more materials, more men, more factories than we do.
In 1941 the USA was not even in the top 10 militaries of the world, we were 13th, WW2 made us what we are today, it created us, war made us learn quickly and adapt. It can do the same for any other nation and China has 100 times the resources and manpower that we had in 1941, if they are forced to learn on the job they will leave us in the dust.
So again, I say be careful what you wish for. China and Russia are not friends but China will not let the Russians be defeated, they need Russia.
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+TheGroucho66 I can't be arsed going in to one of my long diatribes, so I'll try to be succinct and hope it comes across. Capitalism is bad. Worse than communism, worse than socialism, worse than nationalism. Capitalism is getting the most out of the least invested, this gives birth to formulae, the tried and tested, the "if it works replicate it".
90% of US shows and sitcoms don't get past the pilot, those that do are quickly hijacked by the network who hire 12+ writers to join what was once an original idea of a handful of episodes to then create 24 each year, every year. This leads to a lowering of standards but a show that is still watched. It's dumbing down of the masses. 2,000 shareholders make money, 20 million Americans learn to laugh at jokes that would otherwise fail to hit the spot outside of the US.
There really is a divide between US and UK/World humour, but thanks to the Internet age all of that is changing and people are globalising. US shows now have to step up to the mark or won't get syndicated and non-US shows like IT Crowd are now available on the likes of BBCA and Netflix. American comics, with the exception of a handful of greats, have been forced to rely on obvious, easy, toilet humour. Easy being the catchword.
Fuck, I created a diatribe anyway,
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If a missile launch was detected in the northern hemisphere the likelihood of the UK being the target is very small, it is far more likely that the target would be either the US (in which case the responsibility is to notify them) or a NATO partner (in which case the responsibility is to notify the head of NATO, the US). We built and run the site but it is funded by the US because it's goal is to primarily protect the US, in turn it also protects us and everyone else in Europe since it can see 3,000km in every direction.
In fact between the three sites in the UK, Greenland and Alaska this system can detect just about anything that takes off, flies over, or lands in the northern hemisphere with only the very centre of Russia being a blind spot (which incidentally is where they have all their ICBMs - just as the US has theirs in Kansas).
The Russian equivalent of this system is the Duga over-the-horizon radar which ingeniously uses alternating high and low frequency bursts that bounce off the stratosphere on their way to a target and on the way back allowing the system to see 8,000km in a single direction over the curvature of the Earth. They built one in the Ukraine looking west over Europe, one in Siberia looking north over the arctic and one on Kamchatka island looking east over the pacific and all of them could see right into the heart of the US mainland.
The huge downside for everyone in the northern hemisphere in the 70's and 80's was that the Duga system caused massive interference with almost every electrical device as it caused radios, TVs and most other receivers to make a chirping sound leading amateur radio enthusiasts to nickname the mysterious Russia-orientated signal "the Russian woodpecker". The US finally got the Russians to admit that Duga was the cause and talked them into switching the system off in return for the US agreeing to some compromises - though ballistic subs replacing ICBMs kind of made Duga (and the US system in this video) redundant anyway.
Incidentally the agreement to switch Duga off was made just weeks after the Chernobyl accident which if you are a conspiracy theorist nutcake must have been like finding a huge pot of gold...
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@BR-it2qe A single image on a gore site convinced me never to set foot on a motorbike, it was a dude in biking leathers sitting up on a hospital bed, he was fully intact from the neck down but had lost a couple of pounds from the neck up. His jaw, upper jaw, nose, cheeks and sinuses were all gone, leaving just his eyes and forehead jutting out above a gore-filled void of arteries, tendons and a chunk of tattered windpipe - like someone had scooped the lower two-thirds of his face out as far back as his spinal column.
No idea if the guy survived but if he did my guess is his face is now just a mound of folded and tucked skin grafts with two plastic valves sticking out, one for breathing and one for injecting liquid food, his days of chewing, tasting, smelling and verbal communication all behind him.
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@matthewread7220 The conservatives are completely conservative - a conservative person is an aristocrat, one of the landed gentry who has no intention of letting the status quo change, i.e. paying workers more or giving the plebs more rights. do you actually know anything, I mean ANYTHING, about politics?
Your local labour MP went to a school like yours, was raised in a scheme like yours and lives in a home like yours, your local Tory MP was privately educated, was raised in an upmarket suburb and wouldn't be seen dead in a terraced house....
Not that I like labour, I did, but Corbyn has bent them all out of shape but if you think the Tories have ever given a single fuck about you, your family or the plight of your neighbourhood then you are delusional mate.
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@Odo-so8pj Gobbling up whatever nonsense you see on YouTube about Agenda 31 and other conspiracy theories is not critical thinking, it is the very opposite of critical thinking, it is gullibility. People who believe in conspiracy theories are not "enlightened", they are just the 21st century equivalent of the poor saps who have bought snake oil for thousands of years. You even admitted you are a Christian so that rules out critical thinking capacity straight off the bat - religious people are hard-coded to believe in bullshit.
Today's quacks don't sell their wares on horse-drawn carts, they sell them from their badly-made, completely unresearched websites. "Read my article then buy my book", "Read this blog and then buy this survival kit!", "Watch this video and then subscribe for just $199 per year.", "The doctors don't want you to know this and that's why I'm charging for it!" No offence but calling yourself a critical thinker is an insult to anyone with an education, you are the sheep, Tammy. The very definition of a sheep.
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There are far too many classes to get into, a typical navy - such as the US navy - has had around 100 ship classes in the past 100 years, a class of ship is a bit of a misnomer because a class doesn't mean a type of ship, it means a model/make of ship, with every new design being a new class. Did you maybe mean ship types? Types are easier to explain...
Ships:..
Aircraft carrier - self explanatory, these are floating airbases with lots of planes, lots of pilots and enough support crew that they function like small floating cities. In a conflict the side that controls the sky controls the battlefield so getting aircraft to a conflict zone wins the conflict
Helicopter carrier/Amphibious assault ship - these are smaller than aircraft carriers but carry lots of helicopters and lots of marines, they can put a lot of people on shore in a very short time, like aircraft carriers but their purpose is to get ground troops to a conflict.
Battleship - these are now obsolete but up until WW2, and slightly beyond, they still played a strong role - battleships were massive floating monsters with huge cannons (referred to as guns) and extremely thick armour - the job of battleships was to fire huge 1-ton chunks of metal at each other until one of them gets hit enough times to sink. They were the naval equivalent of tanks.
Cruiser - these ships are not used by many navy's anymore but can still serve a purpose in the navy's that do, cruisers are large (not as large as carriers or amphibious assault ships) mixed-use platforms, they are fast for their large size, have a very varied mix of weapons designed to attack other ships, aircraft and land targets, they are also very prestigious - navies tend to protect cruisers because they are useful in lots of roles and losing one hurts badly.
Destroyer - these are some of the most numerous ships in any navy, a destroyer is like it's name, these are small-to-medium sized ships who have good speed and good weaponry and they are tasked to hunt down and kill - historically it was their job to find and destroy (hence the name) enemy submarines, which they were very good at and had specialised weaponry to kill subs. These days destroyers are still the best ships to kill an enemy sub but they also have a bunch of missiles that make them a pain-in-the-ass to other ships or land targets and they have excellent anti-air abilities which makes them ideal for protecting bigger ships like carriers and cruisers from enemy aircraft and missiles.
Frigate - these are feisty little ships that think they are destroyers, they don't tend to get thrown in to conflicts a lot, most navies use them as coastal defence or patrol ships - they don't have much of an armament to go up against other warships but they have enough firepower to give pirates (yes they still exist) and drug smugglers a very bad day. The US and UK do however use frigates to guard places like the Panama canal and the Suez canal respectively and their frigates often roam quite a distance from home but frigates of other nations tend to guard the waters of their homeland.
Submarines:..
Ballistic submarine (aka "boomer" in the US or "bomber" in Europe) - Ballistic submarines carry nuclear weapons, usually between 16 and 24 missiles, with each missile containing between 6 and 10 nuclear warheads. The sole purpose of a ballistic submarine is to annihilate the enemy, that is it, they carry enough nuclear weapons to obliterate even the largest of nations. Ballistic submarines are often referred to as "the deterrent" because the point of having them is to remind the enemy that if they attack you your submarines will retaliate and then no one wins. Ballistic submarines tend to not move around much, when they leave port they will find somewhere secluded and just hide there for 4 months waiting for an order that no one on the submarine ever wants to receive - the order to end the world. Their biggest enemy is the attack submarine.
Attack submarine (aka "fast attack sub" in the US or "hunter-killer" in Europe ) - attack submarines are much smaller than ballistic submarines (because they don't have to carry 20 x 30 ton missiles), the job of an attack sub is two-fold - kill anything on the surface and kill anything below the surface, attack subs are predators, in a time of war they might be ordered to find and kill the enemy's aircraft carriers, or if there is a danger of the war becoming nuclear they might be tasked with finding and destroying the enemy's ballistic submarines. At the end of the day killing ships and subs is what they do and they are pretty good at it.
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We already trade with every single country on Earth, that's how trading works, the difference will be that all of our new deals we write between 2020 and 2025 will be for the same things except we'll either have to pay more for them or we'll have to compromise and accept regulations being dropped.
This is what you numpties don't get. In a trade negotiation the larger economy gets the better deal because they can say "take it or leave it", for the past 50 years every one of our deals has been between Brussels and the other party, Brussels is the capital of the largest economic bloc on Earth (it dwarfs even the US), so when bargaining with other nations on our behalf they got us solid deals. The US did not want British Beef after the 1994 BSE scare so Brussels sanctioned them and it cost the US a fortune, Japan in the 80's tried to stop European car imports and the EU said "we'll match you", if the UK had tried that then Japan would likely have just called our bluff because Japanese cars are not popular in the UK so it'd hurt us more than them.
When you are negotiating for anything you want to ideally have the best hand, do you seriously think that an independent UK is going to get a fantastic deal from an "America First" US administration? Are you that stupid? Of course the US is eager to get started on a deal with us, they have likely already drawn up a big list of all the things that we are going to buy that we really have absolutely no need for, look forward to JCB disappearing as British construction firms are told to buy Caterpillar instead. Look forward to Mann's trucks and tractors going under as Farmer's are given subsidies to instead buy only John Deere machinery. Look forward to the the high street filling up with more and more American fast food places like Wendy's and White Castle as we are "told" by the American negotiator to sign off on letting more US companies in and with less restrictions.
Yeah, the future is bright if you have the integrity of a damp sheet of toilet paper and don't mind the UK becoming readied for acceptance as the 51st state. We've just traded our seat at the largest table in Europe for a doggy basket under the largest table in America.
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@BaldingClamydia Western European languages have two ancestral routes, Germanic and Latin (also known as Romance), the northern languages of German, English, Danish, Swedish, etc come from the former while the southern languages of Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, etc come from the latter. If you speak one member of a family you can pick up on the syntax and meaning of words in another member of the family but it is still another language entirely, not a dialect.
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Your eyes can pick up around 3,000-9,000 images every second depending on the part of the cone in use (we don't use two cameras, we use millions of them and they all have different timings), but your cognitive ability can only make sense of the most miniscule part of the wide field of view ahead of you. The human brain works in what we call real time, which is not in fact "the real time" but our own cognitive real time. The brain is fed constant imagery at a spectacular speed and makes sense of it in different ways for different things, flash up two images together and by 25-90 frames per second we will see the two images merge yet our brain is clearly seeing them flip back and forth, one after another in what would not even be blurry, it would be like one of Gav and Dan's videos, crystal clear. But only our brain sees it, not us. Again though, a few thou is a lot different to 100k+
These cameras are still faster than our amazing eyeballs. Amazeballs? I'll patent that.
The human body is superfantastic, edge-of-tomorrow hardware, but the software it runs on (us lot, the human psyche, the bunch of electronic, chemical synapses that inhabit the squishy bit at the top) is slow and glitchy and only gets an upgrade every few hundred thousand years.
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I enjoyed all of your points, but I have to disagree with you on Selena not being in the wrong. Something about the photo just gave me the vibe that she was like "Yeah, I was told what is correct and incorrect, but I'll show these guys that I am a western woman and that we do as we please." Fair play to her if she was in a store and someone was trying to force a clothing policy on her, but she was in a place of worship where it is understandable for there to be rules.
And besides, she doesn't just show her ankle accidentally, like she was walking briskly or she had not patted down her clothing when she stood up. She consciously hitched her clothing up and bent her leg in defiance, baring it.
I have no problems with Muslims, I say live and let live to everyone, but I can understand where anger stems from when we westerners show complete disregard for tradition. In Abu Dhabi they don't bat an eyelid if you wear revealing clothing, but this was in one of the few buildings where you are asked to respect the culture.
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This may sound anti-equality, it's not, but humans are animals, one sex defends the other. For millions of years, hundreds of millions, right back to dinosaurs there have been two roles where one would fend and the other nurture, it's not always the male that fends, look at nature, birds, fish, insects, females dominate in all of these! But in all species that have two sexes one fights off all enemies and the other protects the offspring.
It's built-in, organic programming. I believe 110% in equality, because humans are different to any other mammal or animal, we are intelligent and we can adapt, ergo anything a man can do a woman can do also, I support this, but there are pre-programmed instincts in humans that are a quarter of a billion years old that can't be easily undone just because women burned their bras in the 1960's.
I want women to be treated equal, to be paid equal, to do the same jobs, to be respected the same, but I also know that any time I am out with my girlfriend and I see a group of guys acting like dicks up ahead the first thing in my mind is putting myself between her and them. That's not sexism, it's instinct.
As to the nurturing bit, the way guys are towards their woman is how women are towards their children. Instinctively protective! We spoke about this one day after watching a movie about a family attacked and I said "so, would you jump towards me or the bambino?" and she said "Bambi obviously because you'd have our back." Our son ain't called Bambi, btw.
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If you don't include engines, sports cars, luxury cars, prestigious cars and all of the other things we do better. The Mustang is nice but it's one of a few US cars that doesn't start falling apart after 12 months.
What a weird insult. You could have attacked our teeth, or suggested we need rescuing during wars, but instead you attacked the country that created Aston Martin, Bentley, Rolls Royce, TVR, Lotus, Jaguar, McLaren, AC, etc... Wow.
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This is a very ironic comment seeing as we on the left view the right as being fearful of everything, government, foreigners, progress, A.I., science, dyed hair, aliens, a tennis ball that isn't yellow, you name it and the right have aimed a pitchfork at it. So nice one, Dennis, thanks for the chuckle! 😂
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Bentley, Rolls Royce, Lotus, Morgan, Jaguar, McLaren, TVR, Lagonda, Aston Martin, MG, Triumph, etc, etc
Tell me you know very little about the UK or cars without telling me you know very little about the UK or cars.
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@ashecbtb9509 Clearly you don't have a clue what Brexit is or what it entails if you think it'll transition in any way smoothly, and no it won't affect the EU even remotely anything like it will affect us since there is 27 members of that bloc and only one UK. This idea people have that we "keep the EU afloat" is so absurd it could be a Monty Python sketch. This time next year the EU will have all the same deals it has now with the exception of the UK, whereas the UK will have no deals whatsoever and will be in the process of creating them while buying all of it's goods on a 30% WTO tariff, at the same time the other 193 nations on Earth will know that we have no deals and will be able to offer us any terms they please in the knowledge that we will be desperate to get them done and dusted.
"Japan is lining up, the US is lining up, the Indians are lining up to trade with us" as someone once said, as though it was a positive thing, just shows you that we will be weak prey for countries who look forward to dealing with us not as part of the #1 economy on the planet with 193 trading parters as the #5 or #6 largest economy with no trading partners. I envisage most trade discussion to feature lines similar to this one, "We get all the beef we need from Argentina and the US so knock 60% off that figure before we resume these talks next month!"
Yeah, it's gonna be Christmas for the other nations, the first time in history that a global power has been without trading partners and they will pick us apart like loiterers at a car boot sale, leaving it very late in the day so we'll happily accept whatever offer they give us. Well done to the 17.5 million rats that chewed through the hull, the sooner we Scots get off this sinking ship the better.
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For the past decade or so each time I have got in to an argument with someone on the right I have satiated myself with the thought, or belief, that those of us on the left will inevitably be victorious, whether it takes five years (for people to recognise Trump's folly, again) or 20 years, eventually truth and integrity and intelligence will prevail, they have to prevail - like in a comic book where the good guy wins. In the past year or two, however, it has started to dawn on me that in the coming war, be it civil or otherwise, the good guys might not triumph this time.
When Hitler, Mussolini and the IJN were barking right wing propaganda in the 1920's and 30's there were opponents who would go on to free the world of their bullshit - the UK, US, France, the Commonwealth, and the rest of the free world. Who will rescue the world this time if those same heroic countries are now on the same wavelength as the nations they helped to destroy 80 years ago?
I'm an optimistic person at heart but I don't like the look of the shapes on the horizon.
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@billfoster6479 Oh man, you would love Bottom. After the Young Ones came Filthy Rich & Catflap, and then after that came Bottom. Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson wrote all three shows. The show that Rik hinted at at the beginning of this interview when he said he and Adrian wanted to go in a new direction was Filthy Rich & Catflap, it starred Rik, Adrian and Nigel Planer (Neil from the Young Ones), so it was basically the Young Ones without Mike. Rik was a useless out of work actor called Rich, Nigel was his sleazy agent called Filthy and Adrian was his drunk and violent bodyguard called Catflap. It was decent but it wasn't the Young Ones.
Rik and Adrian's biggest success came in 1991 when they also ditched Nigel and decided to write a show that featured only the two of them and it was a huge hit because it was just Rik and Adrian writing jokes for themselves, it was the Young Ones without Mike and Neil, and so they basically became drunk with power and created a show that pushed every boundary possible. In Bottom they play a pair of housemate losers on the lowest rung of the ladder, Rik is a neurotic virgin and Adrian is an alcoholic psychopath and the show is about them trying to get out of the gutter, a place where their particular sense of humour utterly shines.
Bottom ran from 1991 to 1995 and then spawned a live show that toured the country and lasted for another five years, the live shows were out of this world because Rik and Adrian would forget their lines, break props, go off piste, and wrangle the audience into their insanity. I highly recommend you find the show and the live DVDs.
Bottom also spawned a movie called Guest House Paradiso in 1999 where the two deadbeats try to run a hotel. You should probably try to get the movie too.
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@dedeferreira98 Then you would be annexed and you would have no country, just like the thousands that no longer exist, Bohemia, Schleswig, Brittany, Corsica, Pomerania, Venice, etc etc etc
I would rather be a partner in a union I helped create than become a vassal of someone else, which is what England will be in the second half of this century when all nations have formed continental unions.
It's good to see you support independence for the likes of Scotland and Catalonia, etc though.
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In 1914 the British Empire was by far the strongest power, but from the late 19th century right up until the end of the Nazis Germany spent 60-70 years as the most technologically advanced nation by a large margin. Industrial machinery, weapons, chemicals, photography and filmography, physics research, communications, combustion engines, rocket engines, jet engines, the Germans were strides ahead in a technological golden age of their own. That is why they pretty much could hold their own against large coalitions in both wars.
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atgod6 You seen 'Bad Taste'? The first time I saw Brain Dead, I just thought "This is gory, but it's not Bad Taste.." Brain Dead was the first time he had a studio and decent funding, but Bad Taste was just him, friends, a camera, a weekend and lots of home-made FX, and the sheer greatness of that 80's movie shows how he could go on to something like Lord of the Rings. He had a budget of about 3,000 New Zealand dollars, a garage full of tools and no serious actors and he created a cult classic. Spielberg's first teenage experiment was a precursor to Jaws, filmed in his dad's pool with an 8mm and his sister's dolls, Peter Jackson's first teenage experiment is now in the Oceania hall of fame.
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Scots generally talk in dialects so we have to tone it down a lot when conversing with other Brits or when on TV, sort of why few Scottish-made shows are shown outside of Scotland, if they are ever to be shown south of the border then they have to be shot in very mild lowland Scots. For instance, depending where you are from, the word for 'one' can be either ane, wan or yin, which said very fast together probably sounds like a Star Wars character, incidentally.
We are also found to be indecipherable from city to city because of the dialect offshoots, non-Scots often think Scottish is Scottish but then they move from like Edinbugh to Inverness and the arse falls out of their world as they have to learn yet another English dialect.
>Edinburgh generally has a very understandable lilt thanks to being a fairly international place and the place that tourists flock to, though you would recognise any one of them as being definitely Scottish you would likely understand them, even if you were from Taiwan. Ewen Bremner (sitting on the couch) is a typical Edinburgher.
>Glasgow has the heaviest mainstream accent, that is the accent that foreigners come in to contact with most and consider "broad", Glasgow being our biggest city means that that is not a surprise, if you are going to run into a Scot it is likely a Glaswegian since it's one of the biggest cities in the UK and 1 in 5 Scots lives there. Kevin Bridges is a typical Glaswegian.
>Aberdeen is where things dive into the surreal as even fellow Scots often have to just nod and say "Aye, good one" at whatever noise is emanating from the face of someone from Aberdeen. Aberdonians can construct quite a considerable sentence using just words that rhyme with 'it' and often start a conversation with "Fit like?" which can mean anything from "What's up?" to "Get in this car". The rest of us are still trying to get our heads around Aberdonians to be honest. Annie Lennox is from Aberdeen, but she communicates in English.
>Dundee. Crikey. Er, we speak at about 100 words a minute and we often have our own versions of words so imagine someone spouting "Ye ken the mister men, hen? Wee squiggly people, ken?" as some sort of sonic burst where all the words arrive in your earholes at the same time and you have Dundonian. We often get told by other Scots to slow down. Even by coke heads. Even when delivering eulogies. There's not many examples of Dundonian celebs because you have to learn how to speak in first gear in order to make it big outside of Tayside. Kyle Falconer from the view speaks the native tongue in some interviews and the interviewer usually has an earpiece connected to a translator who slows down and analyses Kyle's answers before translating them.
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Isen gard F-22's and F-35's would be better? One is grounded and relies solely on being unseen (very easy to do seeing as they are all in hangers at the moment), the other has a myriad of technical issues that at best make it unreliable and at worst can kill it's own pilot at crusing altitude.
Also Captmiller1995 is one very weird person because the systems in a Typhoon are second only to the F22, the F22 has the best electronics on earth, it is an ECW bird after all whereas the Typhoon is a complete dogfighter and has 70 systems designed simply to calculate how best to pull off whatever the pilot pulls on the stick without killing him or her. In a modern 4th gen jet you are taught what you and your jet can handle, in a Typhoon you are only taught what the jet can handle because it's computers will translate any extreme stick adjustment to move the jet in a manner that reaches a human extreme but does not go beyond it.
In short the jet is designed to keep you alive, even against your own actions, so you don't have to hesitate when pulling off a climb in order to avoid losing consciousness, you just yank the stick backwards and the computers adjust the pitch to the maximum a human can safely handle.
This is why videos of a Typhoon show them pirouetting, barrelling, nose diving and generally making the sky look like it's made of a vacuum. It is the most advanced dogfighter ever constructed, and those that detract from it always say "well we don't need dogfighters, we have stealth". Yeah, use the same excuse when the enemy has weapons that can see through your stealth like the Russians did in the 1980's with their SAMs. When that happens your F22 and F35 pilots will wish they were in F16's. When the US made jets to be agile instead of unseen.
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@eder6727 Marxism done correctly is man's future, you don't have to accept it but it is inevitable, we accept it or we kill each other. Capitalism and automation are mutually exclusive, once a machine can do 99.5% of jobs there will be no incentive to pay humans and the only way the elites will be able to handle eight or nine billion people who require food and shelter is either to give it to them, or kill them.
I can personally see the US opting for the latter method, probably using some sort of anarchy system where the rich lock themselves in their gated, ivory towers and let the cities turn into free-for-all's of people killing each other over a can of food. While Europe will adopt evil, socialist solutions like giving people a home and then giving them food. "But, but.. who will pay for such things?!?" Why would anyone require paying? Machines don't require compensation for their work and the land and it's resources belong ultimately to the nation, regardless of what a little scrap of paper called a 'deed' says.
It has always amazed me that the one country that has never had a monarchy is the only one with citizens who will fight to defend someone's right to own half of Nebraska, 900 cars, 30 houses, a 300 foot yacht, etc. Sorry, you probably aren't even American, it's just that it's usually Americans that come out with the "Socialism is teh devil!"-style of indoctrination.
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She had no reason to backtrack, Caley was right, obviously equality is still an issue, a really big issue, but she makes the same money her male co-stars get - that would never have happened on Cheers, progress is happening. There really is nothing that satisfies a person with an axe to grind, sadly. Nothing damages feminism or any other inequality more than someone who bleats about minor shit. The woman is aware of inequality, she acknowledges that it happens, but she stated that it hasn't happened to her because she makes about 22 million a year, she wasn't rubbing it in that "other bitches can struggle while I roll in the cash" she was simply stating truthfully that she has managed to succeed because of the great work that women did before her. But people still bitch... smh
If anything a woman making the same as her male counterparts when as recently as the millennium Jennifer Aniston, Courtney Cox and Phoebe Kudrow had to fight to equal their co-stars in pay shows that Caley is a success story for the movement.
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I'd love to know what would have happened had the UK fell during the Battle of Britain as we were the only major power fighting Germany in 1940, the government and monarch would likely have moved to Canada to operate in exile but would then have to sue for peace if they didn't want the brunt of Germany's forces turning towards the Commonwealth. The lack of a European staging area should the US join the war in 1941 would mean that Germany could afford to send more troops east, plus the likely surrender of commonwealth forces in Africa would have freed up even more troops that Hitler could send east.
Russia could have been forced onto the back foot much easier and before they could turn the tide at Stalingrad, possibly leading to a German victory at Moscow. I just wonder how the US involvement would change. The Japanese would still hit Pearl Harbor as they desperately needed Philippine oil fields and knew the US would declare war should they try to take them, Hitler would still declare war on the US as it is what he did, but with no Britain to act as a staging area and no Royal Navy in the Atlantic there would likely be some sort of stalemate on that ocean with neither Germany or the US having any strategy, or need, to cross it.
The Japanese would still lose to the far more industrious US, but likely with greater US losses as the commonwealth presence in the Pacific would be diminished and the Manhattan project delayed (unless all of the European scientists that took part had escaped London for North America). The war would then likely devolve into a fractious cold war with the US and European exiles on one side and the German-Italian empire on the other side, with China and whatever was left of Russia signing a non-aggression pact with Hitler.
It would be a race for the atomic bomb, one that would very likely still be won by the allies by 1950 but the question would be what to do with it? And what will happen once the Germans have one?
Hmm, I should really get around to reading 'The Man in the High Castle' one of these days. 😆
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They are ballistic missiles, it's not fuel that gets them to their target, it is the trajectory they were on when their engines cut out. ICBMs and SLBMs are just rockets designed to go up into space but fall back down to Earth, if you want to hit something 3,000 miles away you calculate the ballistic arc needed to make something go up and then fall back down and then the rocket stage of the weapon just has to burn sufficiently long enough for the weapon to achieve that arc, usually just the first 10 minutes of the journey since by that time the rocket would be in such low gravity that it could travel quite some distance before gravity brings it back down to Earth..
The alternative is a cruise missile, they do need to burn fuel for the entire duration of their journey and that's why most use jet engines instead of rockets, as you can't burn a rocket for a long period. A bit of trivia for you: Nazi Germany invented both the ballistic missile and the cruise missile, they used both against the UK in WW2 - The V1 was a jet-powered missile that travelled horizontally at a set altitude before falling onto it's target, the V2 was a rocket-powered missile that travelled vertically on a ballistic arc that meant it went straight up and then came straight back down, reaching it's target thanks to a very short spell at the edge of space.
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We rise when there is a legitimate threat not when a bunch of conservative fluffties get their panties in a bunch over the slightest thing. Honestly the Daily Mail could have "Brown fella touches white woman's tit" as a headline and you all start jumping up at our heels and barking like a field of Jack Russells, it's frankly hilarious and sad at the same time.
Honestly, every time a nutjob mutters the word 'Allah' and squashes someone in his Ford Capri you act like it's Pearl Harbor allover again, the irrationality of it is just mindboggling, it reminds me of how my son came squealing in to the lounge one day to tell us he had found a snake and when we followed him to the back door there was an earthworm on the doorstep. He was five and it was the most exciting thing he'd ever seen.
"Steve, you seen the new Pakistani couple that moved in to number 6?"
"MORE MUSLIMS, LORD WHY DO YOU TEST ME SO?!?! Truly it is the end of days, you must build a bunker, a bunker capable of taking 2 of every animal."
"Nah.. I'll probably just say hello over the fence."
I probably shouldn't feel so good, I'm mocking people with mental health issues, but you don't have crack me up :)
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No, he won't, he is adored now, but he will be hated in centuries - like every populist.
He is a liar that manipulates people to further his cause... he spent 19 minutes antagonising a Muslim, saying the worst shit you could ever say to a Muslim until that Muslim finally snapped and punched him. Did Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon* post that full 19 minute clip to his channel? No, of course he didn't, he edited it, like right wing liars always do, to make it look like he simply asked the guy a question and got punched for it. That video of him asking a Muslim a question and getting punched went viral.
A wise me once said if you can only spread your belief by lying, manipulating, and stretching facts then is your belief worth having?
*Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon is Tommy Robinson's real name. He chose the name Tommy Robinson when he co-founded the far-right British National Party because he believed that "working class folk" wouldn't rally behind someone with a middle-class name. He was trying to mislead people right out of the gate... He sees working class people as mindless cattle that he can exploit to make sure that pakis and darkies and gays and anyone else his ilk don't approve of are kept in their place.
Do you really want to get behind this man? If so then you are a bigot. Right wingers like to say "We're not bigots - it's not bigotry to want closed borders and sovereignty" but a lot of those right wingers really like very bigoted people...
Like Tommy Robinson
If the shoe fits?
I will leave this planet some day, likely soon, but I will leave it clear of conscience and knowing that I never once backed the kind of people my grandfather had to fight in 1944
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@BigfootInAStetson I don't know about that, Stockholm is a capital so many more people will know Stockholm, Waco is just known to me because I'm 40 and I've heard of it's use in relation to David Koresh over the years from news stories, TV shows and things like that.
Saying that though I would say it is quite a well known place as what Koresh did became notorious, like 9/11, Timothy McVeigh, Columbine, places, people or dates in the US that sadly become globally known for something horrific.
Invent a cure for cancer and your town will become famous in the scientific community, have someone shoot up a bunch of people and your town will become famous to everybody. It is shitty how that works, but it's the same everywhere - two of the most famous towns in Scotland to non-Scots are Dunblane and Lockerbie, both because of horrific events that had a global audience.
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In 50 years they will wish they had joined the EU. Asian countries, excluding China, have an economic union already (Association of Southeast Asian Nations - ASEAN), while African nations and South American nations are in the process of forming an African union (known simply as the African Union - AU) and a South American union (the Union of South American Nations - USAN) respectively in order to compete with economic giants like the US, EU and China. As resources dwindle and populations grow safety in numbers will become very important and the US, EU, China, ASEAN, AU and USAN will likely bicker - and even fight - over resources, if your nation is not in one of the big six you will be pecked clean.
This is why I was against Brexit, the EU might have it's pitfalls today but tomorrow it will be a necessity for every one of it's members. Hopefully they let Scotland in once we're independent, then when the Tories get their wish of England becoming the 51st state of the US the England/Scotland border will also mean a land border between the US and the EU 🤣
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A Rangers fan (who would rather hold a Union Jack at matches than dare touch a Saltire) and a man who has the Union Jack as his avatar, it's no surprise where your fealty lies. I think it is you guys who will be surprised when we get another referendum. I hate the SNP, I've never vote for them once, and never plan to, but I would vote yes to independence. That probably shocks you because you have both assumed that the SNP and independence go hand in hand but there is a lot of us that can't stand the SNP but still want independence.
And why? Because Brexit was a mistake, two thirds of Scots were against it because we don't believe in it, but it's happening and very soon it will ravage this island and destroy what little industry the Tories haven't sold off, in fact anti-Brexit sentiment has grown so much in England and Wales now that people are starting to see what reality feels like and so I imagine the 63% of Scots who were against it is probably closer to 80% by now. It only takes a little over half of them to think - like me - that England and Scotland no longer want the same thing, England wants to be the centre of something big, Scotland just wants to be part of something big - kinda like we currently are until the 31st of December (how's the trade talks going by the way?)
"United we stand, divided we fall" - So long as it's the UK that is united but not Europe...
"Sovereignty means everything" - So long as that sovereignty is in London but not Edinburgh...
The hypocrisy is not lost on most intelligent Scots. I made a mistake in 2014 by voting against independence, I felt British then, now I don't feel British. I wonder how many Scots since 2014 are going to change their vote like I am? Do you think more Scots will change their vote from a yes to a no now that England has signed us up for the destruction of our economy, or do you think more will change from a no vote to a yes vote in this current climate of Anti-Scottish sentiment where the Daily Mail continually parrots the line that we are stealing English money?
Stay tuned, the answer will be here within a couple of years.
#IndyRef2
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@donaldcarey114 Time is exactly what we need though. Also we can't adapt to live without food. Climate danger is not about "Oooh, it'll be uncomfortable outdoors", climate danger is about the fact that every major food crop we rely on only grows in a small window, too cold and the harvest fails, too hot and likewise.
If the planet heats up then the tropical band we call the equator will increase in size, this means the land that is perfect for growing our food (much of the northern hemisphere) will shrink as we are forced to plant crops closer to the arctic in order to harvest them in the right temperatures.
Look at it this way, if much of the US, Europe and Russia (the world's three food bowls) were to become arid like north Africa then where do we find the land to grow food for a population of 9, 10 or 11 billion people?
An ever increasing population requires more land to plant food, not less land, and if the world warms by more than a degree or so ambiently then our green and arable lands will become dustbowls and we will have to rely on the rocky, dead soil of Canada, Scandinavia and Siberia growing enough food for all XX billion of us in 2100.
So far there is something like 7 billion humans and 20 billion livestock on Earth and between us we eat a lot of corn, wheat and soy every day. Three notoriously temperature-sensitive crops.
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When you learn a new skill does someone have to reprogram you? No, they don't, you reprogram yourself because you are intelligent and you have the capacity to learn, just like any intelligent machine will...
And yes, everyone becomes evil on their own, do you think Hitler came out of the womb hellbent on genocide? No, he learned using his intelligence and developed preferences. An A.I. would also learn using it's intelligence and develop preferences, the clue is in the name: artificial INTELLIGENCE. Yes, it's artificial too, but so what? Just because a human birthed it doesn't mean a thing, Hitler's mother probably didn't want him to murder millions of people but by the time he was in his teens she had no more say in what he did or didn't do because he was now teaching himself by that point, making decisions and altering his programming with every book he read...
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As much as I believe in not punishing wild animals for being wild animals the park rangers did the right thing by tracking down and killing these coyotes because once wild animals realise that humans are edible they are a hundred times more likely to do it again. Grizzly bears, polar bears, lions, tigers, hyenas and just about any other major predators do not have human on the menu so they don't see us as a foodstuff, they can when desperate, but when well fed they will tend to ignore us because we are not their prey, to them we may as well taste like cardboard.
That is until one of them eats one of us and realises that we are just as succulent as the salmon, gazelle or seal they normally eat. When that happens a wild animal goes from being curious and/or disinterested in humans to actively seeking out humans. I still believe humans should stay the hell away from the wild, after all it is usually us trespassing in another creature's territory that gets us eaten, but when a wild animal eats a human it must be killed or it will start to hunt humans.
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@UltimatelyEverything No, mate, you don't. If you did you'd know anyone living then would swap places with you in a heartbeat.
As another commenter replied to someone equally as ignorant.. "Much better yes, the poverty, the rickets, tuberculosis, diphtheria, fatal bacterial infections, insanitary freezing slums, safety in the workplace non existent, and income inequality beyond our wildest nightmares. So yes pass the hankies around and let’s dab our eyes as we mourn the passing of MUCH better times."
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We don't need to build 2km straight up, we need to build wider, we need to build archologies, buildings that are pyramid in shape with flora around the edges or have multiple towers with a flat table along the top covered in flora - like the building in Malaysia that looks like three towers with an enormous surfboard resting on the top. If we build structures that have "parks in the sky" and residential floors then the issue of getting 100,000 people in an out of them at 9am and 5pm every day is moot, they could work on one floor, live on another floor, and eat their lunch outside on one of the green floors covered with plants.
I personally like the idea of a table top building, imagine 4 towers of equal height (say 600 metres) that are three blocks apart similar to the legs of a table - then using counterweights and a cantilever design to connect the roofs of all four towers creating a 4x4 block of open space above the 4x4 block of occupied space below. Two residential towers, two commercial towers, and a large open space for greenery or even sports and music events.
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All rechargeable batteries gradually wear out due to the electrolyte not playing nice with the other materials in the battery. A battery has two electrodes separated by an electrolytic medium, when you charge the battery ions move through the electrolyte from the anode to the cathode for storage, when you use the battery ions from the cathode pass through the electrolyte to the anode for use, this back and forth can weaken the electrolyte depending on what it is. Liquid electrolytes like acid can slowly evaporate or breakdown into gas while solid electrolytes like lithium can become pitted (or 'Loss of Lithium Inventory' as it's technically known).
It's just wear and tear in chemical form, no matter what combination of anode, cathode and electrolyte (aluminium, copper and lithium in this case) scientists experiment with the electrolyte eventually breaks down, evaporates, or corrodes the anode, given enough charge/discharge cycles.
Solid state batteries should be just around the corner though and they will be a game changer when they get here, hopefully within five years.
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@susannamarker2582 The Great Deception basically explains how the end goal of the EU is to build a single, strong entity capable of surviving whatever the 2050's and 2070's and so on can throw at us. We've always known this, every remainer wants this, a United States of Europe that gives us the kind of punt that Washington has. A bloc that no one fucks with.
Africa is building an economical and political union called the AU (African Union), South America is building MERCASUR, the non-Chinese aligned south east Asian nations have formed ASEAN, the middle eastern nations are building up the Arab League.
Which part of "United we stand, divided we fall" are you struggling with?
Either way, by 2030 Scotland, Northern Ireland and I really hope Wales will either be back in the EU or part of the EFTA like Norway and Switzerland.
The UK used to sit at the head of the biggest table in Brussels, alongside France and Germany we wrote all of the rules. If England thinks they will ever be more than a lapdog to the US then you are more deluded than people think.
You traded a seat at the most powerful table in the EU for a comfy doggy bed beneath a table in Washington where Americans will feed you scraps and tid bits.
Pathetic doesn't even begin to describe this.
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@dedeferreira98 In Florida you have to be 18 years old to have sex. In Illinois you have to be 17. In Washington state you only have to be 16.
Don't you think that's weird? The US is a single country and yet it has 50 states that all have their own laws, their own customs, their own way of doing things, and their own political leanings, and - if you've ever visited any of them- their own particular cultures and nuances. The only thing that every American will ever agree on is "We're American". They rarely agree on anything else.
The US is a single nation by sovereignty but it is and always has been a union of 50 separate entities. For 244 years now they haven't changed it, they have no wish to change it, they have no need to change it, and yet they are 50 different peoples that take the world head-on due to their combined economic, industrial, technological and military strength. And since 1948 they have kicked ass at doing just that - using their combined might to get rid of obstacles in front of them.
United you stand, divided you fall. strength in numbers.
OK! All of that was off topic, now I'll answer your question.
1. The EU can't make a law that only affects Portugal. Just as the US can't make a law that only affects California. The EU can only make laws that affect every state in the EU and even then they have to be ratified and accepted by three quarters of all member states. Because of this it rarely happens and so far almost every single time it has happened it has been something that has bettered the lives of all of us like agriculture standards, import standards or animal welfare.
Individual states still make more than 97% of their own legislation, the 2 or 3% that comes from the EU are mostly to do with free trade and happen to streamline said trade.
When we "signed on" to Brussels we lost about 3% of our sovereignty, we still maintain the rest. If we did not then every single thing we have done as the UK since 1973 must not have happened. We Brits fought Argentina without needing permission, we blockaded the Suez canal without needing permission, we opened a new base in Antarctica without needing permission, we launched a dozen satellites without needing permission.
Being in the EU does not mean answering to Brussels. It never has.
This whole sovereignty excuse is actually an insult to us Scots as we handed about 40% of our sovereignty to London in 1707 but England can't deal with the fact the UK gave around 3% of our combined sovereignty to Brussels in 1973? That's a fucking insult to us Scots. Sovereignty means everything to England but it shouldn't mean anything to Scotland?
You can be pro-Union or anti-Union you can't be both, hence why so many of us Scots are fucking disillusioned by Westminster's hypocrisy over the past 4 years.
Anyway, long story short - in 40 or 50 years the world will look nothing like it does today and a handful of supernations will have formed out of a need for protectionism against China, there will be an Asian Union, African Union, a South American Union, a North American Union and a European Union. The UK can be a part of one of them or we can be picked apart by all of them. It's completely down to us.
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D.A.R.Y.L (1985), Flight of the Navigator (the robot that brings him his lunch, RALF?)(1986), Batteries not Included (1987), Deadly Friend (1986), just some more to add to your robot montage. The 80's really did have robots everywhere. In fact so did many songs and much of pop culture in general (everybody do the robot dance), there were robots or A.I. depicted in everything, I think it's because we thought humanity had peaked or something and so the robots had to be just around the corner. we had cities in space (Skylab and Mir), spaceships that could go into space and return (Space Shuttle), supersonic planes (Concorde), giant hovercraft that could cross the English channel in 20 mins, and computers that could fit on a desk so every office and many homes could have one.
The only things missing were flying cars and hoverboards but we all thought they'd arrive in the 90's, hahah 🤣
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