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I grew up in South Africa, toward the end of my time there, about 4 years ago, power cuts, what we call load shedding typically only happened twice a week for 2 hours a day
Having recently visited to see my family it was horrendous. 8 hours of daytime with no power, in fact when I landed a power substation had malfunctioned, leaving my hometown without power all day
The effect this is having on people is brutal. Can't effectively freeze your food, can't run small businesses without a generator, can't live in a country loaded with natural wealth
The government is crippled with corruption, there's no future for the vast majority of people, and it's unfortunately why I left my home
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@patrickcleburneuczjsxpmp9558 lol the "no u" response, classic.
I already have done better Patrick, I've read the secession documents, both Georgia and Texas call out Lincoln by name and occupation, and assert their disgust at him.
"The party of Lincoln, called the Republican party, under its present name and organization, is of recent origin. It is admitted to be an anti-slavery party... anti-slavery is its mission and its purpose."
-Georgia Declaration of Secession
So yes, they did have a problem with Lincoln, and what he and his party represented. Now you do have a point that they had a problem with the Republican Party at large and the political will they represented, that being the abolition and noncompliance of slavery and I find that hilarious.
The southern states were a bunch of hissy fit throwing hypocrites, preaching from the mountains about States' Rights, about their right to self determinate, but what they actually had a problem with was Northern States not letting them send their bounty hunters and law enforcement into the North to kidnap escaped slaves, the fact that the North had chosen to eliminate slavery in their territory and those southerners couldn't exert their southern laws in northern territory, apparently States rights to self determinate didn't matter then.
No matter how you try to spin this, slavery was the forefront of the reason for the civil war
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@antoniobrown8726 "astronomy is still for the isolated tribes that still need them" do you realise how utterly ridiculous that statement sounds?
Astronomy is the reason we know of the other planets in our solar system, astronomy is the reason we know of our galaxy, of the universe, astronomy is the reason we knew how to develop calenders, seasons, navigation etc.
Astronomy has been one of the backbones of human civilisation so remember it
2. As a said before half your first paragraph is completely unintelligible so work on your grammar because no it doesn't make sense
3. Space exploration is the reason you've got YouTube, GPS, mobile phones, Google maps, nappies, baby food, firefighter equipment, laptops, running shoes, LED lights, Wireless headsets, insulin pumps, artificial limbs etc. etc. Your life is easier today because of the advancements of the men before you who made these discoveries
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When I was an awkward teenager I had my red pill, anti-feminist phase for a year or two and wow looking back on it just makes me cringe.
Here's the kicker though, everything telling me that feminists were radical crybabies was all online, particularly other anti-feminist men telling me what feminists were, in real life they were lovely, well reasoned people who just wanted equal working opportunities and safety.
The loneliest I ever was was during that phase, and I believe it's easy for boys to fall into a victim mentality when they see the feminist movement but don't feel like they're privaleged, so they falsely equate their lack of fullfilment with the rise of feminism. If I had any advice to give to my past self it would be to talk to people irl, where you get real opinions from real people who can't hide behind a screen, and to have empathy, no one wants a selfish prick for a partner.
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@herbbowler2461 and back then the mortality rates for measles, the flu, polio, tuberculosis were claiming lives in almost every family. People had 8 kids because they feared not all would survive.
Oh yes and cancer who can forget, it's funny how back then there wasn't nearly as much cancer, seeing as you are far likelier to develop cancer in old age, it goes to show that people didn't live long enough to die of cancer. Other diseases had already claimed their lives. As for people dieing from treatment, that's a straight up lie, people die from cancer if the treatment fails.
Back in your day they made house calls because they didn't have the resources to do anything more than that, they didn't have computer systems, analysis machinery, all they had were their tools and surprise surprise a lot of people died
Today Polio is eradicated, Malaria, one of the biggest killers of humanity, can be vaccinated against, Tuberculosis can be cured, Measles is nothing but a fringe illness. Medicine saved more lives than anything else in history
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@jegamespeed5399 laws against theft and murder are as old as civilisation, and depicted as such in recovered artifacts, but when we have sarcophagi recovered with male skeletons intertwined in a loving embrace, bearing in mind this type of burial is only for the upper class, it is clear that homosexuality was culturally accepted in many parts of Africa. Homophobia rose to unprecedented levels as a result of colonialism and new religion reshaping culture, you're not outlawing "crimes against nature", nature itself has homosexuality in it, you just fear what they told you to fear
I have absolutely no respect for anyone who seeks to persecute and murder my family, the same sort of people who stoned one of my congregation's priests to death for coming to the defence of a gay man along with him. Believe what you want, but I don't have to respect it, I abhor it
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@samwinchester7844 as I have already stated the use of those langauges is highly *regionalised*. The "central government" as you would call it only broadcasts in English and Hindi as well as most documents. You can call it official but what it really is, is regional. The UK for example only has English as their official language but state governments also release documents in Welsh, Scottish and Irish depending on where you are. Those langauges are regional langauges. In practice India only has two official languages, Hindi and English, it's not different from most nations in the international community in this regard
As for my "entitlement" that Indians need to know Hindi or English to survive, no they don't, nor did I insinuate that. Indians do however need to be able to speak either of those langauges if they want to thrive, because thriving requires trade, and trade requires language. As for "a language is just a language, just a means for communication" that's wrong, a language isn't a means for communication if no one else speaks it. There's a reason English is a much more valuable language to know than Latin
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@jessybrenner9789 lol yeah you pretty much fit the stereotype perfectly. Aggressive, accusatory, makes assumptions, biased use of data and above all hypocritical
You like to cherry pick data just as much as the "libtards" but won't admit it. Want to throw shade on leftist countries so you name Venezuela but convienantly forget Norway, Finland, Switzerland, Ireland, New Zealand, Denmark and many many other extremely successful leftist countries
You throw shade on liberal cities for being rampant with crime when in actual fact if you look at crime rates per capita crime is more influenced by economic prosperity not politics but that doesn't fit your narrative so you'll try and name off the worst cities but conveniently forget that they are the reason your country is prosperous
You throw shade on the "liberal media" but convienantly forget the huge conservative media corporations like Fox News that will praise ultra conservatism until time's end
I'm sure you're quite an intelligent individual, most people who dabble in politics often are, but if you want to make a compelling case i suggest not using points that are easily associated with your own ideology's faults. By the way liberalism has serve me quite well I have access to a free healthcare system, make a decent living wage and am afforded opportunities I wouldn't get elsewhere
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No, you don't. Aluminium and Steel mills take years or decades of investment, and even then they're not a one size fits all type of deal, they have to be specialised for the end product.
Similarly Canada has ample space for it's timber industry, the US doesn't at present, and planting for a bigger forestry industry takes time, unless you chop down all the natural parks.
Then there's goods you simply cannot produce in the US, be it by climate, circumstance or trademark, like avocados, tequila, parmesan and to an extent, eggs.
Trade keeps countries alive, look at North Korea if you want to see where lack of trade gets you
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@Yourlocalbrunette_13 I respect that you don't want to beef, neither do I, but I am slightly frustrated that people seem to think he's an engineer, he's not, he's a fantastic marketer and a very competent businessman but he's not an engineer.
I got my masters in aerospace engineering at the University of Sheffield and now work at BAE Systems, without going heavily into detail, Elon describes products in a way someone with an entry level skill set would understand and uses that to make it appealing to investors and consumers, but he never goes into details.
As I said, any true engineer would understand the difference in the mass and impact zone differences between say a 9mm round and a steel ball, it's the difference between a piercing force and a bludgeoning one, and he really should have tested it.
Like I said though he's a marketer, he's good at creating a brand, and this didn't slow him down too much.
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@agw5425 you are removed from reality, all I see talking is spiteful bitterness
You complain about how writers used to make residuals, saying no other jobs do that, when that is blatantly a lie.
A salesman makes a base salary and a commission on top of that based on how many sales he makes, his final salary is partially dependent on his performance.
A book writer makes base pay from a publisher when he releases a book, and makes royalties beyond that is based on how many books he sells, with the publisher expecting a certain threshold to be reached
This is basic knowledge, many jobs offer bonuses or royalties based on performance and for a TV or movie writer it should be the same, any company making profit on showcasing a show or movie should be paying residuals, that's how cable has worked for decades, but not how streaming works
Moreover it's utterly insulting to tell people who've invested years or decades into a career to just get another job, is that what you told minors who striked for better working conditions, to just quit if they didn't like it? Well if everyone had that sentiment we wouldn't have experienced career professionals, how would you like your toilet to be fixed by an apprentice who's only worked 5 months because he hasn't been sick of his job once in his life
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@patrickrada2923 interesting opinion, I can't say I agree with you on your assessment of Penny's attraction to Leonard, the show obviously suffers "main couple" syndrome like Friends and How I Met Your Mother before it, but they do a great job of showcasing the complexity of Penny and Leonard's relationship, in the sense that both of them feel insecure, one about his attractive qualities and the other about her professional qualities, but they grow to understand and find solace in each other.
As for career advancement, yes I think they nerfed the pay and progression of main casts' careers, but I think they suffered there due to trying to keep the main group in that comfortable sitcom bubble
Regarding your brother, you obviously know more about the situation than I so won't pester further on that matter as I'm not in a position to do a proper analysis
Overall I think Penny's progression was handled very well, they missed a few marks but the heart and soul of it was there, she was a supportive friend for the entire group, a woman who started the show in a low, in denial about her chances, and ended up in a really good place through hard work and solidarity
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@Far-East-Beast comparing video games and product based goods is apples and oranges, but I'll humour you.
We've also got Nike, The Last of Us TV show, Andor, God of War Ragnarok, Spiderman 2, Jedi Fallen Order and Survivor, Alan Wake 1 and 2.
On top of that Harley-Davidson sales are up over 11% this year. So perhaps, like I've previously said, the quality of the advertising, TV show or game matters more so than its wokeness, given the fact that woke elements are seen in both successful and unsuccessful ventures
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@Michael-t8u2s I know, but if you want to think about this seriously then you must consider degrees of scale, most of the world has falling birth rates with the exception of Africa simply because it's going through its industrialisation boom.
France has the highest birth rates in all of Europe, some of the most progressive women's rights in Europe and extensively invests in family affordability. Its healthcare system is among the best in the world. France has been a first world nation for decades, among the first to industrialise and see its birth rates fall and has invested heavily in keeping that fall minimal. There is a world of difference between 1.83 birth rate and 0.68 birth rate
Israel is an incompatible comparison, the nation is new and possibly has the most complicated social structure in the world. It has an extremely strong sense of cultural survival and responsibility not seen anywhere else, it's simply too unique in circumstance and response.
South Korea has a misogyny problem, it's rated near the bottom of the world for Gender Equality by the WEF, the president Yoon Suk-yeol called for the abolishment of the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family. It's certainly not the only problem facing South Korea, I think its extreme work culture plays a large part in this decline, but they are factors with tangible evidence to support this claim.
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@MrChaos619 no at the end of the day he, and his predecessor, perpetuated company wide policies that reduced quality assurance, stagnated wages, repealed benefits, further outsourced and bullied contractors and perhaps most importantly lobbied the government to reduce FAA oversight and funding.
This is a joke, that golden parachute is 4000 times what a machinist makes in a year. One man who made nothing but losses got a bonus equivalent to the annual salaries of 12% of the staff on strike.
It's disgraceful, CEOs are always willing to take credit and responsibility for the wins, but never the losses. They are responsible and they can pay their workers a proper salary, and hire a few more supervisors if they feel like they're not getting a fair day's work, but this culture of for every penny a worker makes the CEO gets a crisp Ulysses S Grant is moronic
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@w3s77 Boeing has stagnated wages for over 10 years, since from when they were making record profits, labour was never the issue, but as Boeing cut more and more corners it eventually came back to bite them in the ass with the Max, all the subsequent order freezes, groundings and fines crippled them.
Boeing's failure is almost entirely greedy and short sighted leadership, if they can't find a CEO for less than an 8 figure salary then they're looking in the wrong place for one. These revolving door executives join Boeing with one motive in mind, join Boeing to profit at any cost, and then they leave, just like the previous CEO did.
43 billion dollars were spent on stock buybacks in the last decade, they can sell those stocks again and recoup the cash to pay their workers, but they're too greedy to give in
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@RandomAutist uh yeah I have, same goes for my girlfriend, my old boss and her partner did it twice, a couple of my mates did it once or twice.
Yes you're right it is addictive, but so is sugar, caffeine, tobacco, alcohol, painkillers and a host of other substances.
Being aware of your own state and limitations is very important, and I'd always recommend trying out new things in the safety of your friends, but cocaine is not some impossible hook that you can't get out of
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Well it's not really campaign finance raising, he's just capitalising on his spotlight with a product launch. The money doesn't go to the campaign trail, it goes to his business accounts, to be spent how he sees fit. Sound business move, but ethically ambiguous.
He doesn't put the country first though, granted many politicians are the same, he encouraged the republicans in Congress to vote against the recent bi-partisan immigration bill in a last minute 180 that would have seen millions of dollars sent for border security, because his campaign benefits the worse a job Biden is doing.
He's actively sabotaging the country, and his own principles, so he can stand a better chance at re-election.
As for what he promised in 2016, he pretty much never touched the idea of imprisoning Clinton, despite going on about it all campaign either. He's a politician and a showman, very charismatic but also very self serving
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@JackBurton-q8l no it's not, just because it happened 55 years ago doesn't mean it's feasible now.
In 1970 for example the demographic of retirement aged people in the UK (age +65) was 13%, now it's almost at 20%. That is millions worth of more people taking out pensions, public services and the NHS, net negatives to the economy. Also in 1970 the UK was a much better manufacturing centre, with manufacturing contributing 30% to the total GDP, now it's at roughly 17%.
The actual output of British products has dwindled dramatically and the strain on public services has risen steadily, the service sector is unreliable, if taxes are raised companies start setting up in foreign countries with low corporate tax rates, the UK is in an uneasy situation right now.
The only way to hit 5% is to completely scrap a load of public services, that will immediately result in a massive uproar and then Labour is voted out in the next general election and the defence budget scrapped again.
The only way for this to work is to make sustainable increases to the budget, pledging an extra 13 billion pounds is already a tall order, 150 billion is just ludicrous.
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@fotiosvrettos4728 Christ...
Alright fuck it I'm bored let's do this. "Jinx's turn to evil is stupid" I genuinely do not know how you missed all the signs and tells and how much sense it made, from the get go Powder is shown to be weaker than the rest of the crew and is called a jinx by one of them, she's desperate to be useful and when that culminates in Vi leaving her to go solo she has a minor psychotic breakdown, already laying the groundwork of her weak mental state.
Desperate to prove herself she releases a bomb that blows up the entire factory and gets half her crew and adoptive father killed, her entire family except for Vi who immediately turns on her and calls her a Jinx, she's abandoned, sobbing over her father's corpse and disowned by her sister when in swoops Silco, becoming her new father figure. If you can't connect the dots then there's truly no hope for you there, she's raised by his extremist ends justify the means approach for the next 7 years and clearly her mental state further diminished, she's not purely evil, she's just unhinged and moulded by Silco.
I could go on but honestly it's a lot to type for someone who will probably just hand wave it off as "you have no taste" type responses, but this show is popular and critically acclaimed, that doesn't happen by accident. It's okay if it's not your cup of tea but don't insult me
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@nathanhardin8530 the A320 was released in 1987, that is 5 times the time period and less advanced technology, you make a disingenuous comparison.
If you want to compare the A320, it ran up against the 737 Classic Series, which encompassed about 1,300 deaths from dozens of crashes, far more than the A320 including per capita
As for the 737Max yes Boeing are responsible for the crashes because they were not due to lack of maintenance. The MCAS system was designed to be read off of a single sensor with no redundancies, a severe oversight, and it overrode pilot control, causing the crashes. The door blowout on Alaska Airways was due to faulty manufacturing by Spirit Aerosystems, the contractor Boeing hired. These are manufacturing defects by a greedy corporation that lobbied the government to reduce FAA oversight of them.
Boeing is indisputably less reputable than Airbus at present, which has an undeniably greater safety record than Boeing.
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@MommaFig1 well you are the one who said "what we see now as Palestine" and every mainstream source shows modern, effective Palestine as the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, the former of which accounts for over 40% of the Palestinian population.
And while 2% of the population dead is not a massive percentage, the fact remains that so far Israel has unleashed death upon a people 30 fold what has been done to itself, any other country in the region operating as such would have been branded a dictatorship or rogue state by the west.
Is it not a genocide? I wouldn't be so sure, in the opening hours of the war Israel cut off water access to Gaza, closed its crossing and bombed the crossing at Rafah, causing the Egyptians to close their side. No supplies, no food, no water and no fuel for electricity to what essentially became an open air prison for 2 million people. International pressure forced Israel to make concessions and reopen humanitarian corridors, but what would have happened without such pressure, and what will happen in the future if that pressure is eased off.
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@tnttiger3079 a fair argument but again, it doesn't address the issue of, if funding has to come from, atleast in part, somewhere other than directly from the viewer, how do you know the information is trustworthy.
My opinion on that is you have to go through it on a case by case basis, and in this case I haven't seen anything to suggest they've compromised themselves in any way. They were honest about their sponsorship, they still included references and details about their videos' research and what they did talk about is further corroborated by other scientific organisations not tied to the Gates Foundation.
You said drastic political change would hurt the Gates' bottom line and that's why they aren't advocating for it, but you've shown no evidence to suggest that is the motivator. Drastic policy change doesn't work as well as incremental change, our shift into environmentalism has been noted by thousands of small changes not a handful of drastic ones.
Your point thus far seems to be an ideological one, but is that accurate without grounding to stand on?
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I worked hospitality just before Brexit kicked in and you know what I saw? Pot washers, chefs, cleaners, maintenance, all the grimy jobs that Brits didn't want to do but Eastern Europeans gladly did, they made minimum wage, paid their tax and spent their money here and the hotel kept operating because of that.
After Brexit and after Covid you know what the result was? All those workers are gone, operations are downsized and standards are dropped because there aren't enough people working there.
Congratulations, the local industry suffered, less people spending money, less work to go around.
Most immigrants get to the UK and go straight to work, no free accommodation and no handouts but we do get emergency tax at 40% for the first three months, isn't that lovely.
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@jakoflynn2560 fair enough, I understand your reasoning and oddly enough there's just been a report on the BBC that addresses your exact question and I suspect it confirms what most of us suspected.
The use of the word "militant" is to try and be objective, they fear that labeling HAMAS as a terrorist organisation will create a perception that they view all the Palestinians of Gaza as terrorists or terrorist supporters, they want to appear aware of the nuances of this conflict and so choose language that doesn't outright vilify either side, take that answer for what you will, I'd be happy to share the link if you want to hear it from them
On a personal note I will say that what HAMAS has done to civilians is reprehensible and evil, however Israel's retaliation is no better. The blockade established to stop food, water, electricity and medical supplies into Gaza is going to starve a lot of people to death if it carries on. Most of all I fear that innocent Israelis and Palestinians are going to suffer the most in this war, I hope it doesn't last, but I think it will
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Capitalism is to blame, monopolies are the ultimate destiny of any exclusively capitalist society and it's not even subtle. The best way to make money in your industry is to buy out your competitors either overtly or discreetly and then control the market, double points if you sell something that everyone needs like say Steel or Oil, almost reminds you of a certain old family name that went toe to toe with Roosevelt in the 19th century.
It wasn't "free market trade" that gave us labour protections, affordable food, third party repair services or even the best products, since planned obsolescence is very much real with products today.
China is a very obvious example of how a free market capitalist society isn't absolutely necessary for manufacturing, of course they have their own monopolies but they were forged from different forces. In China the party runs the country and the companies, they impose monopolies, in the US the companies inflitrate and run the government, lobbying to keep their power enriched. The EU managed to both standardise systems and infrastructure to allow for easier trade whilst also removing trade barriers and unnecessary bureaucracy between member states, it's not a perfect system but it does more for most people than arguably anywhere else
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@gustavorivas6734 I am using "unfair" in the context of it's importance to letting a territory choose governance, they're not first, second or even third generation settlers, they've been there for 200 hundred years, they predate the nation of Argentina. Furthermore Argentina's succession Spain was a choice, one the Falklands were not involved in as they did not answer to spain, hence Argentina has no standing in its claim.
Secondly I used the Mayans as an example, they were known to move south to the mountains of Chile but yes perhaps I should choose more carefully. So why is it that the descendants of the Tupi, Toba, Mapuche, Kolla and other natives have no say in governance over the land that was stolen from them by the Argentinians, yet the Argentinians cry imperialism at Britain while benefiting from it themselves. Seems hypocritical
Thirdly self determination is a modern concept. In the days of old no one cares about self determination among the great powers, it became important due to the United Nation's influence. Today Scotland, Northern Ireland, Gibraltar and yes the Falklands can leave if they do choose. Singapore left the UK through self determination, as did Malta, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. It's been done many times so to call it a convenient political maneuver with no precedent is false, especially since it was the UN that called for the referendum, not Britain alone
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@damncars2618 ah yes, I deserve jail time for supporting unions, glad the 1st amendment is still around, keeping lunatics like you at bay.
No I'm not a loyal employee, that is beyond stupid, I'm a resource to a company that wants to pay me as little as possible, I want to be paid as much as possible, so I'll negotiate that at every turn.
These machinists haven't had a raise in over 10 years, and they damn well deserve one, take your ass back to the bingo hall, you haven't a clue what's going on.
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@miscaccount9438 if Ukraine was just about Donbass it would still be illegal, there are many English speaking areas in Canada, that doesn't give the US the right to just invade them under the guise of cultural protection
Moreover it's not about Donbass, it's about all of Ukraine. Why did the Russian army try to take Kiev, why are cities being shelled and civilians slaughtered, the Russian army is already beyond Donbass, and the answer is blatantly obvious, Russia is trying to overthrow the government through military force and set up a puppet government to rule Ukraine
This is an illegal military invasion that has resulted in the deaths of thousands of people, military and civilian, and has utterly destroyed infrastructure that was meant to support people's lives for years and decades to come
I take it you haven't seen many refugees come in, but I have. We employed a father to a newborn baby after they were evacuated, he lives in government assisted accommodation and cycles to work for 45 minutes each way everyday when we can't get him a lift. His home town is a ruin that he can't return along with many family members and friends fates' left unknown to him, but it doesn't matter to you does it, you're so far removed that it's all just geopolitics
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@jamesmooney8933 that's not necessarily true, many pieces of old tech were dispanded due to health and safety concerns, both humanitarily and environmentall
Original microwave ovens did not have the proper mesh to stop microwave radiation from spilling out, often into the person using it, which caused many cases of cancer. We shut those down because they were a hazard.
Most very old refrigerators used were producing CFCs as a byproduct, a chemical that was highly volatile to the ozone layer, when this was learned these fridges were phased out and by 2000 none of them produce it
Coal mines were highly subsidised at onset of industrialization because America needed power for it's rapidly growing factories and homes, this highly intensivised companies to set up mines and power plants
The government has never acted as a for profit system, it's not designed to do that, the government acts to push and pull the market, sometimes offering incentives, sometimes tariffs, and sometimes bans, so that the people get what they want and how they want it
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@rogeriopenna9014 ultimately that's your preference, the game doesn't try to be realistic though, it tries to be captivating and immersing, which it succeeded at to great effect.
As I said I prefer smaller, denser maps, it doesn't break my immersion, especially since these maps are broken up into at least 7 different distinct areas, better emphasising the scale of the world.
Your preferences are your own and I won't change that, but BG3 is an excellent game, universally acclaimed, it's just not the right fit for you.
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@cnote2458 I've read batman comics, watched batman animated movies and the original animated series (still some of my favourite batman material) and this dark knight trilogy, they're all great in their own right. The problem is they are different mediums, you can't make a comic book into a movie, liberties have to be taken and creative vision has to remain authentic
Nolan was not a cash grabber, he was approached and asked many times to do the batman for the DCEU and refused, citing he had already told his story, if he was after fame or money he would have done it again. Nolan took on the project to tell a batman story, he does not have to make it into a comic book movie. You face a problem, you know batman as you have read it, that is your perception of him and I don't think you can overlook that to appreciate Nolan's work.
If his movies were such a blatant cash grab they wouldn't have revitalised the batman character and wouldn't have been some of the best selling and critically acclaimed superhero movies to date. I can't make you appreciate his work, nor should I, just as you should not put down people who do appreciate his work
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@azteclegalgroup7604 how very American, profit as much as you can and damn the people.
Greenland is already protected by NATO from hostile action overseas, the only real threat it faces right now is America jeopardising its sovereignty. The Inuits have worked for decades towards independence with Denmark, and intend to achieve it, they are far better off with Denmark as their protectorate, they get stable leadership that doesn’t flip flop every 4 years, free education and healthcare, both of which America lack, and consistent funds.
Ultimately it’s their decision, not yours, not Trump’s
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The problem is you, like many Americans, think Israel is the undoubted victim, when that's just not the case
You look to the 6 days war when Israel was the legitimate victim of aggression and believe that the following 56 years of occupation the Palestinians have been put through is still right and just.
In what country is it acceptable where people of a different ethnicity are not allowed to vote, are not allowed to hold the same property, or prosperous jobs. In what country is an occupation that kills hundreds of civilians every year acceptable, or the imprisonment and persecution of people who peacefully call for a free Palestine
The Palestinian authority in the west bank has sought a 2 state solution for years, but Israel has rejected it time and again, and then surprise surprise, rebellion takes hold. HAMAS are blatant terrorists, but Israel perpetuates the system that creates these terrorists. This cycle of violence will never stop unless Israel can work with a peaceful Palestinian authority, like the one in the west bank, and recognise an agreement that promotes equality and trade
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@abbajabba7 thank you for your response, you have been polite and respectful and you have my gratitude for that, I can see you've studied this matter extensively but I do think that your perceptions are skewed by the pro-Israel sentiment common in America which while admirable in its goal of defending the last Jewish state, is also highly unwilling to hold Israel accountable for its misdeeds
Firstly I'll start off with the 1850 Ottoman census which was the period where Jewish migration really started. At the time the general Palestine region was populated by about 350 000 inhabitants, only 4% of which were Jewish, so suffice it to say claiming they were nothing more than scattered villages is completely false. Jerusalem has always been the cradle of religion in our era and there have been many cities dotted throughout the land.
In fact the Palestinian rise in population is far more in line with worldly averages than the Jewish population, which is largely attributed to mass immigration followed by a baby boom.
This, of course, lead to hostility, as the Palestinians attempted to resist this largely changing demographic, ironically what Israel is doing today, but Palestine tried to accomplish it through blood and failed. Now say what you will but immigration has always sparked anger, America voted in a president who's primary policy was to build a wall to keep the Mexicans out, Poland has recently swung right in politics to resist the mass of Ukrainian refugees and Germany saw a similar shift during the Syrian refugee crisis. The difference here was Palestine attempted to use lethal force to evict or kill the Israelis and had to be stopped, which they were
And yet what has happened since then, over half a century of occupation, IDF arrests over supporting Palestine in social media posts, protestors gunned down frequently and worst of all, the regions Israel assimilated into their state were not given the same rights.
You have talked a great deal about Israel's persecution by Palestine, and yes there was a time where the world needed to band behind and defend Israel, but now they are the presenters, stripping Arab Israelis of their rights, occupying and settling in Palestine, and we all know to what end, Israel seeks to culturally dominate Palestine with its own people so that it can achieve a mandate to take it over entirely or atleast keep control over it
The Palestinian Authority in the West Bank proposed a two state solution for decades, and negotiations have persisted but in recent years deteriorated highly due to Netanyahu's unwillingness to cease increasing Jewish settlements in Palestine and East Jerusalem. Followed by the US recognising Jerusalem as Israel's capital and proposing its deal which was heavily skewed in Israel's favour while simultaneously cutting UN aid funding and you can see why Palestine has had little success. No country in the world is being offered statehood while also being shackled to a demilitarisation along with yet more territorial concessions in the west bank
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A few points worth mentioning. Women still are the vast, vast majority of rape victims, victims of domestic abuse and often seen socially as less capable than men, especially in stem careers.
The school grades disparity is an increasing issue that needs to be addressed, but that is largely due to girls' being more inclined to work cooperatively and not make as much disruption, which creates a knock on effect of teacher favouritism, good grades and as such higher university acceptance. They didn't get there due to a systemic advantage, they got there by genuinely outperforming boys. That said there should be a push for more male teachers and greater empathy when dealing with boys in school so they don't feel discouraged.
Abortion or not is just something we have to live with. Pregnancy is very dangerous and extremely taxing on the body. It puts your career on hold, practically forces you to take leave and there are numerous health risks, women are the only ones who get that decision because they are the only ones intimately affected by it on a physiological and far greater sociological level.
Divorce courts are not insanely in their favour, that myth was debunked by numerous studies. Child custody almost always is split when both parents fight for it barring extenuating circumstances like abuse or criminality.
Men today suffer a loneliness epidemic, suicide is high and feelings of inadequacy are augmented by social media, but that does not mean we are systematically held back. We are not, there is infrastructure out there to help men but most of all there needs to be a push back towards treating other people like people again and not just representations of problems
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1) Trump said he would not rule out using military force to acquire Greenland, that’s a threat
2) yes the US does colonise other territories, albeit in a modern sense, look at Puerto Rico, they have to follow US federal law but aren’t allowed to vote in the general elections, sounds like taxation without representation to me.
3) The US doesn’t have a good track record of respecting indigenous people’s sovereignty, look at all the native Americans and the broken promises made by the government, slowly but surely kicking them out of any valuable land for centuries. Just because you were forced to assimilate doesn’t mean you have the right to force that onto others
4) Greenland right now has a large degree of autonomy, they have support from Denmark and work together with them, joining the US means their voices are swept away in a sea of hundreds of millions, they’d become a drop in a bucket in the eyes of the federal government, and they know that, that’s why Greenland isn’t for sale
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@savvageorge "equally intelligent when it comes to staying alive" that is the most ridiculous and blatantly wrong thing I've heard thus far. It wasn't "independent thinkers" who discovered penicillin, chemotherapy, antibiotics, anaesthetics, Insulin, vaccines it was doctors and those trained in the medical field. People who had dedicated their lives to medicine and making breakthroughs are the ones that saved the lives of hundreds of millions and to think that you, an "independent thinker" know just as much about surviving is laughable at best
You want to bring up the other deadly diseases that still exist, do you realise the reason we don't lock down for them is because we already have the medicine for them. The flu, polio, smallpox, chicken pox, measles, whooping cough, we have both preventative and reactive medicine for that, we don't have the same for Covid-19 and anyone can understand that
What you're describing as an "independent thinker" is someone who will never get anywhere in life because no matter how knowledgeable he thinks he is, he still needs someone to fix his house if it's destroyed, fix his car if it's damaged, cure him if he's sick, repair his appliances if they're broken etc. etc. There will always be someone that knows more than you in a field and if you think you don't need to hear what they have to say then you're dead wrong
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