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00:16
Russian sushi company issued a public apology for posting an ad that featured a black guy surrounded by three white girls. It removed the ads.
The words in red says "We apologize"
It was forced to do this because of intimidation from Male State, a Russian male movement that stands for "traditional" values and suppression of female activism
 
1 hour later…
02:29
> Here we report the case of a young adult patient who lost the subjective experience of hunger following an ischemic stroke localized in the posterior left insula. The loss of hunger was not attributable to medication, substance use, or a clinical disorder, and lasted for a period of 15 months.
 
4 hours later…
06:51
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Email in answer, potentially bad ip for hostname in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (80): Is it correct to say "We start tomorrow"? Shouldn't it be "We are starting tomorrow"? (present simple vs continuous for future event) by David on english.SE
 
2 hours later…
08:52
Is "early ending" correct? (The anticipated end of a videogame)
09:11
@tchrist Yes, this morning first snow has fallen in Yakutia
Summer's almost gone.
 
3 hours later…
12:33
@Curio yes, it's correct
12:44
@Robusto Nice, a gullywasher
The Russian vaccination counter now says "160 days till 50% total vaccination"
Based on the last week of data.
A couple of weeks ago it said "140 days till 50% total vaccination".
There is an overabundance of available doses now, but people don't want to get a shot.
This coincides with public polls that said in early summer that only about 30% of Russians were actively willing to vaccinate. And now we've reached 29.8% of total vaccinated population.
A representative of a large grassroots movement that collets vaccine efficacy data said yesterday that he estimates that up to 30% of people who are now getting vaccine certificates are really not getting shots but just paying bribes to doctors.
I'm not sure about that. The police might find it easy picking if fraud were conducted on such a large scale.
The police usually loves to pick up low hanging crime fruit to increase its productivity ratings, so in case of 30% people getting fraudulent vaccination certificates, the police would catch the perpetrators by the dozens.
@CowperKettle reminds me of Plague.Inc
Some of Russia's research flasks are broken
35 degrees C
q_q
This is my eyes sweating
@CowperKettle That sounds overly pessimistic. 30%?!
@M.A.R. Yes, I also don't believe in such estimates. Although my friend, a woman about 35 yo, yesterday asked me for a third time whether I know where she could buy a fake vaccination certificate
I mean, to compare, if you have 30% of a department embezzling it'd be some NY slums gangster shit
@CowperKettle well, these are trying times, it's easy to depress oneself with anecdotes
@M.A.R. Here, it was +10°C in the morning. I already rolled the compact heater into my room, in case I need it.
@CowperKettle quick jealous exhales
Or maybe it's flushes due to the heat. I dunno
13:00
Why don't they built new cities in the mountains in Iran and other southern countries? It's cooler in the mountains, and with new technology people could easier travel here and there.
Well because Rome wasn't built in a day
I know there's a mountain city in India where the climate is mild in summer.
My sister once traveled there. I always forget its name. It was the summer capital during tne British Raj.
Especially when you have crippling recessions
Our city is actually pretty high up, and pretty mild as far as weather goes, FWIW
Shimla (English: ; Hindi: [ˈʃɪmla] (listen)), also known as Simla, is the capital and the largest city of the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. In 1864, Shimla was declared as the summer capital of British India. After independence, the city became the capital of Punjab and was later made the capital city of Himachal Pradesh. It is the principal commercial, cultural and educational centre of the state. It was the capital city in exile of British Burma (present-day Myanmar) from 1942 to 1945.Small hamlets were recorded prior to 1815 when British forces took control of the area. The climatic...
Here. It's cool. European-type architecture and cool climate.
We're at about 1200 meters from sea level
13:02
> Elevation 2,276 m
Phew. They must be floating there
Walking around in astronaut suits
Because it's too high?
No there are no drug cartels there
Maybe
Potosí, known as Villa Imperial de Potosí in the colonial period, is the capital city and a municipality of the Department of Potosí in Bolivia. It is one of the highest cities in the world at a nominal 4,090 metres (13,420 ft). For centuries, it was the location of the Spanish colonial silver mint. A considerable amount of the city's colonial architecture has been preserved in the historic center of the city, which - along with the globally important Cerro Rico de Potosí - are part of a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site. Potosí lies at the foot of the Cerro de Potosí —sometimes referred to...
Potosi is 4000 meters' elevation
Either way it's 35 degrees here and I demand compensation
Those stuck up UNESCO World Heritage sites, being all high and mighty, thinking they're above us
13:05
I would move Russia's capital from Moscow to Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. Because it's close to Japan, and it's 1000 km to the south of Moscow.
The climate is warmer there.
But not hot, because of the ocean.
Whoa, how north is Moscow
Russia is too big. Why did you need so much land I wonder
Moscow is the same latitude as Yekaterinburg, but much warmer.
@M.A.R. The habitable portion is probably smaller than the habitable portion of China.
Yeah see my previous question
Russia was not protected by mountain chains, and hence it had to expand, in order not to be overrun again by steppe peoples.
Russia tried to be small, but then the Mongols came and destroyed everything.
I mean, did people back in, what, 1750 decided, "let's go trekking east and not stop till we get to water and claim all of the land as ours"?
13:08
@M.A.R. In the 1550s
They constantly built new forts to the east.
First Moscow had to conquer Kazan, which was repeatedly invading Russia.
@CowperKettle Step relations are always problematic
Kazan was a very strong Muslim city.
Also a great director
The Russo-Kazan Wars was a series of wars fought between the Khanate of Kazan and Muscovite Russia from 1439, until Kazan was finally captured by Ivan the Terrible and absorbed into the Tsardom of Russia in 1552. == General == Before it separated from the Golden Horde, the Kazan region was part of Volga Bulgaria (c. 630–1240) and then the Bulgar Ulus of the Golden Horde (c. 1240–1438). They adopted Islam in 921, 67 years before Russia became Christian. The boundary between Muscovy and Kazan was near Nizhny Novgorod, about half way between the two cities. The land east of Nizhny Novgorod was fairly...
@M.A.R. They didn't stop at the water. They also invaded Alaska.
13:10
Can't blame them. There were no cellphones or Skyrim back then.
The great Cathedral in the very center of Russia is even built in honor of finally being victorious over Kazan.
How were people supposed to spend time then
@tchrist Oh it was just for good measure.
The Khanate of Kazan (Tatar: Казан ханлыгы; Russian: Казанское ханство, romanized: Kazanskoye khanstvo) was a medieval Tatar Turkic state that occupied the territory of former Volga Bulgaria between 1438 and 1552. The khanate covered contemporary Tatarstan, Mari El, Chuvashia, Mordovia, and parts of Udmurtia and Bashkortostan; its capital was the city of Kazan. It was one of the successor states of the Golden Horde, and it came to an end when it was conquered by the Tsardom of Russia. == Geography and population == The territory of the khanate comprised the Muslim Bulgar-populated lands of the...
I would definitely go for a bigger share of the pie if no one is looking
Knitting. Crocheting. Playing croquet in the park.
13:11
The Kazan Khanate was as big as Russia.
And it was still quite independent as far back as 10 years ago.
@tchrist People knew they were boring even then. Historical fax
Until Putin decided to grab all the tax money for Moscow and redistribute it back to Kazan.
They still have their Turkik language.
Genghis was just rebelling against all the crocheting their way of life imposed on him
Not enough pleasure domes.
@CowperKettle well not if China has anything to say about that.
Or how different are Uighurs?
13:49
@M.A.R. Thanks!
15:10
Amazing.
> After two renovations and two deep cleanings of the restaurant in 2018, officials still detected Salmonella in the restaurant. So the establishment voluntarily closed in late 2018. "Food, dishes, storage, soft goods, chairs and tables were destroyed," and the "building was deemed ineligible for food production or storage," the report said.
15:32
The new chronology is a pseudohistorical conspiracy theory proposed by Anatoly Fomenko who argues that events of antiquity generally attributed to the civilizations of the Roman Empire, Ancient Greece and Ancient Egypt, actually occurred during the Middle Ages, more than a thousand years later. The theory further proposes that world history prior to AD 1600 has been widely falsified to suit the interests of a number of different conspirators including the Vatican, the Holy Roman Empire, and the Russian House of Romanov, all working to obscure the "true" history of the world centered around a global...
This freak, Fomenko, is popular in Russia.
> Central to Fomenko's new chronology is his claim of the existence of a vast Slav-Turk empire, which he called the "Russian Horde", which he says played the dominant role in Eurasian history before the 17th century.
15:43
According to Fomenko, Jesus was born in Crimea, part of a huge Russian empire, haha, in the 1090s.
And this is the map of the ancient Russian empire 1000 years ago.
I like how it covers even Japan and Indonesia.
@Xanne Nice finds... I looked some more and I recognize the following as how I learnied of it:
It's all questionable (ie there are reasons to think that it show that Revere was somehow central, and reasons to think that all that graph drawing and cluster analysis is just cherry picking on sparse data). That said, I'm sure the NSA is using those methods right now.
@CowperKettle That seems to be literally an overreach.
 
3 hours later…
19:06
@CowperKettle nom chocolate
 
4 hours later…
23:24
@tchrist Hmm how odd!
At least he was fair in the end...

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