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cichlisuite

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Everything posted by cichlisuite

  1. i try to understand, why all the individuals and organisations that are communicating these warnings, are not at the same time proposing actual measures. like how is there not an organisation connecting scientists from different fields across the world already (they had 6 years from the Paris Agreement at least), or even one university of world-status, sticking their heads together, do a mammoth-study, connect the dots, etc... and come up with a list: here, folks, this is what you can do, as a citizen, an individual, blabla, to start with, and be the example... and like why aren't there state universities and at least NGOs, offering (non-)formal education in matters of: climate basics, water cycles, soil, ecosystem, gardening, biology, fixing shit yourself, selling/buying used shit, conservation of basic everyday resources, etc etc... feature and push forward content creators that have this knowledge,... while they go lobby and campaign the shit out of politics, and use their knowledge and prestige to push the change. so, all they do is repeat the same shit and keep telling how bad it is and how much worse will it get. the only people i know, who had long before set on a path to be the least-consumers, are ordinary people who want to grow their own food, who have to work around all the bureaucracy and system-wide hurdles that always favor the plans of the corporations, and leave the work-willing, single citizen ignored and even prosecuted for exercising their own rights. so why don't they play the ticking watch sound and thrill the decision-making suits in private and public sectors? because everybody gets paid, and wont move a finger until gets paid, and it's all fucking business
  2. it's like you'd have a bomb in case a bomb goes off.
  3. it is bizarre, but it also shows some similarities with ww1. the technological advances of military at the time reached a certain culmination point, where doctrines and firepower dictated a fixed-front stalemates to be a 'natural' course of events. things started moving again with the introduction of combined arms (tanks + aviation + infantry + artillery) -- ww2. Ukraine in 2023 is a sign of a similar culmination point in terms of technology and doctrines.
  4. tried and finished spy/master because it promised a lot, and i kind of feel down about it, because i so wanted to enjoy this (i want cold war spy stuff!) the screenplay tried to do something, i can see it, but it feels amateurish/naive idk it's a weird pace, and the actors are not really invested in the characters that well it seems, rather shallow. but the story / timeline setup (idea) is very good, native romanian language, the scenes with nicolae and elena caucescu are great, and they are the best part of the series. unfortunately all this is spoiled by everything else; cliche (of course the young daughter will drink cocacola at the end!), predictable, unconvincing. the 'spies' show ZERO tradecraft, and that's just does it. it's like you'd want to film a tractor plowing a field, but you focus on the surrounding bushes instead, waving in the wind and all, with the tractor sound rattling in the background / 10.
  5. @marf if you live in a city, get out, for a while. change the landscape. use your feet.
  6. when you cross hanks and walken you get young buscemi
  7. interesting explanation of the hyperbolic universe theory
  8. listening to z*f mixed with muffled sounds of an open air schlager music concert is a great experience! distant echoing shouts and instruments really fits well with these two:
  9. Three episodes into Spy/Master ( https://www.imdb.com/title/tt22325698/ ), a story set in cold war where the main intelligence officer of the Causescu's regime defects to the west. They really nailed the looks and characters of Elena and Nicolae Causescu which is enjoyable. The main antagonist is the Romanian counter-intelligence operative who can be a bit cartoonish at times, the dialogues could be better, and of course the americans are the best and most ethical as always (rolls eyes), the main actor does a great job, and the stasi agent is hot (actually they are both hot) but all in all quite good series I think..... so far....
  10. This is so fascinating; a family living deep in Siberian taiga, far away from any nearest settlement, completely isolated. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/for-40-years-this-russian-family-was-cut-off-from-all-human-contact-unaware-of-world-war-ii-7354256/
  11. 100 ethels equals 100000000 bitcoin no one has that kind of money
  12. i have definitely found nudie magazines in abandoned shacks and even in hunters' lookouts (where you can also found a full beer or even a sixpack, especially in summer). i can also confirm that woods and meadows in full spring blossoms, with that cricket ambience really gets my blood flowing if you know what i mean, so sexy times in tall grass under the warm sun is def the most idm thing ever. might be related to woodsporn, idk, there might be some correlation, i will investigate
  13. i'm finding out about this these days. so excuse me while i rant this out: our company was bought by american investors, and the ceo immediately started putting fellow americans in key executive positions (some positions were opened just for the sake of it). all dandy and whatever, but the problem arises with the recent reorganization that consolidated branches which have nothing to do with the professional profile of that certain executive. so now we have to explain to him why certain things are what they are, and it's silly. it become downright bizarre when he makes uninformed sweeping decisions that turn everything upside down. but we are unable to explain his wrongdoing because he refuses to listen for more than 15 seconds, because apparently they've all developed attention deficit disorder from the "sell me this pen in 15 seconds" shtick they think makes the world turn. to top that off, he immediately fired two of our competent operations managers, because they voiced their disagreements loudly. the latter bothers me, because it appears to be a symptom of some superiority complex, with an explicit desire to 'teach us' or make thins go their way. it reminds me too much of that movie trope, where the american protagonist in an international assembly of characters is always the one with the most knowledge and guts and is a de-facto leader. only in the case of movies (because they are movies) they tend to be right, but in this case (because it's real life) they aren't.
  14. never worked with americans before. we touch base a lot, we do everything "moving forward". they complain we only work 8hrs a day, fake positivity, very friendly when they need help, half-assing shit when you ask them to help, lot's of bravado, but little to show for it.
  15. agreed. one tries to be positive, and hope for the best, but the reality is that we are helpless until the concentrated power of super rich entities is equaled by a power of coherent mass initiative that will have to act as a counterweight, continually sustained in order to maintain the balance of powers (not just campaign-like, single purpose mass initiative, but a continuous one). not just for ai, but for many other pressing things. the next best option (and that's saying something), and far more probable (unfortunately), is to continue to be a reactionary force, always lagging behind with legislature initiatives, far later when the damage is long done, and our ways of life accepted it and adopted it with another source of anxiety, while the legislature only barely contains the fringes of capital rampage.
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