gotta admit, that is a lot safer approach than trying some shit on the real thing
retired engineer, former sailor, off grid, gamer, in Puerto Rico. Moderating a little bit.
gotta admit, that is a lot safer approach than trying some shit on the real thing
In that case, Krasnodar and Rostov to Ukraine as buffer zones - maybe Belgorod and Kursk too?
I think there was a time when he could have apologized for a dumb mistake and everyone would have moved on. It is world news now because HE chose another and unfortunate path - which probably has no route back to the sunlit lands.
at 9000 feet deep, the pressure is 273 atmospheres or 4100 psig - they never knew what hit them.
Long ago, I was a midshipman on a submarine. The crew LOVED to watch submarine disaster films - with water spraying in all frothy and fire-hosey. But the reality would be a flooding time measured in fractions of a second, in most cases - people are not used to dealing with pressures in the tons per square inch except at the nozzle of pressure washers where the flow is tiny. So, on the bright side, most submarine failure deaths are quick ones.
46.673,09.593 if you look for it on Google Earth or such.
this inspired me to paper over all my old comments and posts with clippings from random washington post articles from today. A labor of … love
he is not wrong about moderators being like “landed gentry” in a lot of cases; but on the other hand the blackout already did the damage. Time will tell if he is dead-man-walking, but I already deleted all my content (posts and replies) and unsubscribed from all. Some people may feel angst that the blackout did not “win”, but it was a very useful occasion to focus on the reddit phenomenon and recognize our commoditization. I had been glad to contribute content, but if reddit is going to <do what they did> then I am done. That is all the win I need. I will contribute it here (lemmy servers) instead.
fwiw, this story is also covered here, imho a more credible source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/2/1/palestinians-demand-international-inquiry-after-mass-grave-found-in-gaza