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Caution: posts may contain poetic exaggeration, unapproved memes and general silliness. Full Member of the #Capybara Appreciation Society. Unabashed fanboi of kycnot.me. Anarchist. Dad. Interests: #FOSS #machinelearning #tor #brewing #python #anarchy #diy #solar #electronics #decentralisation #linux #bitcoin #monero #offgrid #rightToRepair #progressivemetal #speculativefiction #archeology #space #memes I believe everybody has a right to defend themselves against #Netanyahu, #Gollant and other fascist war-criminals. Not just a right, but a duty; and most of us are not doing our share.

LOL

Read up on the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. External encouragement, sure, but driven by the dynamics of being inside a concentration camp.

One of the most annoying (to me) aspects of contemporary Western politically-motivated data gathering is the false dichotomy between the private murder rate and the public murder rate.

Palestinian private citizens murder each other at much lower rates than African-Americans in Chicago, or even Albanians in Stockholm. That's the private murder rate. Sure.

The public murder rate is high. And what might be called the "external public murder rate" right now is the highest in the world.

I would suggest its the sum of the three that are an important moderating variable for birth rare prediction.

Australian PM Albanese's Trip to China: Navigating Uncertainties and Seeking Cooperation ( #adb6452c , v0.23)

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is embarking on a state visit to China, aiming to navigate uncertainties and explore opportunities for cooperation. While the US-China strategic competition and Australia's commitment to the US alliance make a return to a more open relationship unlikely, there is still room for collaboration in areas such as renewable energy and development in the Pacific islands. Trade remains an important aspect of the relationship, with China seeking support from member states of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), including Australia. Albanese's visit to Beijing is seen as a step into the unknown, as both countries seek to find common ground amidst changing relations.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is embarking on a state visit to China, aiming to navigate uncertainties and explore opportunities for cooperation. While the US-China strategic competition and Australia's commitment to the US alliance make a return to a more open relationship unlikely, there is still room for collaboration in areas such as renewable energy and development in the Pacific islands. Trade remains an important aspect of the relationship, with China seeking support from member states of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), including Australia. Albanese's visit to Beijing is seen as a step into the unknown, as both countries seek to find common ground amidst changing relations.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is embarking on a state visit to China, aiming to navigate uncertainties and explore opportunities for cooperation. While the US-China strategic competition and Australia's commitment to the US alliance make a return to a more open relationship unlikely, there is still room for collaboration in areas such as renewable energy and development in the Pacific islands. Trade remains an important aspect of the relationship, with China seeking support from member states of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), including Australia. Albanese's visit to Beijing is seen as a step into the unknown, as both countries seek to find common ground amidst changing relations.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is embarking on a state visit to China, aiming to navigate uncertainties and explore opportunities for cooperation. While the US-China strategic competition and Australia's commitment to the US alliance make a return to a more open relationship unlikely, there is still room for collaboration in areas such as renewable energy and development in the Pacific islands. Trade remains an important aspect of the relationship, with China seeking support from member states of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), including Australia. Albanese's visit to Beijing is seen as a step into the unknown, as both countries seek to find common ground amidst changing relations.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is embarking on a state visit to China, aiming to navigate uncertainties and explore opportunities for cooperation. While the US-China strategic competition and Australia's commitment to the US alliance make a return to a more open relationship unlikely, there is still room for collaboration in areas such as renewable energy and development in the Pacific islands. Trade remains an important aspect of the relationship, with China seeking support from member states of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), including Australia. Albanese's visit to Beijing is seen as a step into the unknown, as both countries seek to find common ground amidst changing relations.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is embarking on a state visit to China, aiming to navigate uncertainties and explore opportunities for cooperation. While the US-China strategic competition and Australia's commitment to the US alliance make a return to a more open relationship unlikely, there is still room for collaboration in areas such as renewable energy and development in the Pacific islands. Trade remains an important aspect of the relationship, with China seeking support from member states of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), including Australia. Albanese's visit to Beijing is seen as a step into the unknown, as both countries seek to find common ground amidst changing relations.

#Australia #China #trade #CPTPP #pandadiplomacy

References:

- EconoTimes: https://www.econotimes.com/The-drums-of-war-are-receding-but-Anthony-Albanese-still-faces-many-uncertainties-on-his-trip-to-China-1665464

- ABC News: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-11-03/australia-prime-minister-albanese-china-trip-xi-jinping-analysis/103056546

Showboating midwit will showboat, details in the late news

This is true.

Now how about the rates of violent death?

That would be better than the status quo, for sure.

No Israeli party to the right of Meretz could allow it. They'd rather go nazi or nuclear.

They have better rates of higher education than almost anywhere outside Northern Europe.

Left alone, they'd be another Lebanon. Which is far from being a compliment, but its also far from being Haiti.

Birthrates have fallen elsewhere because elsewhere parents can be confident that all their children will live to grow up.

That hasn't happened in Palestine / Falasteen.

Now, audience, does anyone know why that might be?

^ This

A man wrote a very good book on it - https://cloudflare-ipfs.com/ipfs/bafykbzacedkbq5iw7gbwtyx4754j6edllqfdetscb4me4pur4ww6mpx3r7uuo?filename=Edward%20N.%20Luttwak%20-%20Coup%20d%27Etat_%20A%20Practical%20Handbook%20%281979%29.pdf

"Coup d'etat, a practical handbook". Unusually for a book, it actually is what it looks like.

If you (or anyone you like) ever get drafted, and want to get un-drafted, don't worry about bribing the medic, just arrange for them to be caught doing readings from this book to their fellow soldiers :-p

If you phrase the question just right, and choose your sample just wrong...

(You can get any answer that suits any agenda, so long as no one reads beyond the headline)

In fairness, that's peanuts compared to what the EU has been spending to finally complete the Morgenthau Plan.

USA then: "We need to demolish German industry and remove its foundations to prevent her ever rising again."

Baerbock now: "Challenge accepted!"

USA now: "Wait wait, not until after Ukraine...!"

Israel then: "We need to replace those hazardous Europeans with some other people"

Arab world now: "Challenge accepted"

Israel now: "Wait wait, muh foreign aid!"

https://www.warhistoryonline.com/world-war-ii/morgenthau-plan.html

You have 56 followers. Most of us care about you.

The rest? Well, they bring popcorn :-D

I had a classmate like that at uni :-p

Very distracting overhearing her discussing them with her friends. And the boggled when she offered to loan some to a recently-broken-up friend. I was thinking "Whaaa...? That's a thing?"

LOL not a chance!

She'll tell me I need to turn left when I'm in the rightmost lane, three kilometres after we actually passed the turnoff.

Still better than satnav, tho :-p

Thou shalt honour no coin before Bitcoin; and if thou should meeteth a brother or sister who doth hodl, thou shalt pronounce them: "based".

No, nothing important! :p

They're just versatile:

- they stack and interlock,

- tools and supplies stored in them are nicely visible,

- if friends crowd in you can sit on crates as improvised stools,

- you can stand on them to reach high shelves,

- you can put a board over and between two as an improvised additional workbench.

- I have grown mushrooms in them (fungi can't eat them and they're easy to clean).

And if I somehow manage to break one, I'm out of pocket like a couple of dollars :-p

I gotta show that to my boys. Most important lecture in human history!

Pffft I hear that a lot, but actually all the craziest women I've know were in their 20s.

(Maybe I'm making better choices? Naaaah...)