The answer is a whole-society approach, AND heavy regulation. You provide information from a whole host of sources, government and private, and you basically ban disinformation (read: advertising) from contradicting or subverting it.
The answer is a whole-society approach, AND heavy regulation. You provide information from a whole host of sources, government and private, and you basically ban disinformation (read: advertising) from contradicting or subverting it.
Right on red
Not a cyclist, I see.
When I was a dumb kid, me and other dumb kids found some paving tiles and decided to break them by throwing them in the air. Unfortunately, I was really bad at aiming, caught it on my head and caused permanent spinal damage.
The doctor recommended strength training, because my muscles would overtaxed by compensating for my wonky spine, which I promptly ignored because, again, I was a dumb kid and girls don’t lift weights. So from age 10 to 19 ish I basically had debilitating neck pains every few months which had me stuck in bed on painkillers and muscle relaxants.
After 9 years of being an idiot, I started listening to the doctors, lifted weights, and basically never had a sore neck again. The main downside is that clothes shopping is hard now.
Well, apparently not.
And damage from chlorine gas NEVER heals. That reduced lung capacity is for the rest of your now-shortened life.
Yes, they’ll definitely shoot down their planes and missiles with rifles, and stop armored vehicles with their harsh words and survival instinct.
Right behind the Power armor brigades.
Let me throw you a little binary choice set:
A1: HR are great, and I trust them.
A2: HR are great, and I don’t trust them.
B1: HR sucks, and I trust them.
B2: HR sucks, and I don’t trust them.
Obviously option A1 and A2 have the same outcome, while B1 has significantly worse outcomes than B2. What’s worse is that, by your own post, HR can go from A to B in an instant, because they’re following orders.
Obviously it’s in my own best interest that I district all HR.
It’s not the Ukrainians faults they dropped the VDV in the sea.
And extremely predictable
Flares have fire though.
Well, they’re burning UDMH, which is some scary fucking shit. I can’t imagine being in an underground tombbunker with several dozens of tons of it.
I’ve got the audiobook, which is not the ideal form for a book with two separate narratives, but is still quite good!
Ukrainian drones are apparently made out of antimatter or something.
Whatever the fuck we wanted? What a weird question…
Turns out that blowing up a hundred tons of rocket fuel underground will make some dirt land on top of roads.
The ones closer to the silo are probably part of the rubble, the ones further away are likely just buried.
If you want some idea of what blowing up an ICBMs worth of rocketsfuel will do: in 1980, a US serviceman dropped a spanner in a nuclear missile silo. That led to a fuel leak and the explosion from it sent the warhead flying THROUGH the 750 ton silo door and over threehundred meters away. There are some amazing books on the Damascus Silo incident.
James Acton, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, wrote on X that the before-and-after imagery of the Sarmat missile silo was “very persuasive that there was a big explosion.”
Glad they got an expert to weigh in on this…
It’s completely normal behaviour, it just turns out that normal people are fucking morons.
Ah yes, I too start my day by snorting half a cup of tapwater.
Some of the wiring seems original