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00:02
@FaheemMitha Yes, the irony. And the fact that just after the Bolsheviks won over the Whites, whole regions in Siberia and Central Russia launched uprisings under the motto "For Soviets without Bolsheviks".
The West Siberian rebellion was the largest of the Russian peasant uprisings against the nascent Bolshevik state. It began in early 1921 and was defeated at the end of 1922, due in part to the brutal repression of the militarily superior Red Army, and the famine that the region suffered. == Background == At the beginning of the 20th century, the Russian peasantry experienced two wars against the Russian state, both the product of revolutions and both ended with the imposition of state power: 1905–1907 and 1917–1922. === Rebellions in Central and Eastern Siberia against whites === The re...
The Tambov Rebellion of 1920–1921 was one of the largest and best-organized peasant rebellions challenging the Bolshevik government during the Russian Civil War. The uprising took place in the territories of the modern Tambov Oblast and part of the Voronezh Oblast, less than 480 kilometres (300 mi) southeast of Moscow. In Soviet historiography, the rebellion was referred to as the Antonovschina ("Antonov's mutiny"), so named after Alexander Antonov, a former official of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, who opposed the government of the Bolsheviks. It began in August 1920 with resistance to the...
Aleksandr Stepanovich Antonov (26 July 1889 – 24 June 1922) (Russian: Алекса́ндр Степа́нович Анто́нов) was a Russian revolutionary, member of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, and one of the leaders of the Tambov Rebellion against the Bolshevik regime. == Early life == Antonov was born in Moscow in 1889 to Nataliia Ivanovna Sokolova and Stepan Gavrilovich Antonov, however his family moved to Kirsanov in his father's native Tambov Governorate soon after his birth. Parish documents record the family as lower middle-class. In Kirsanov, Nataliia worked as a seamstress and milliner and Stepan, a former...
The Kronstadt rebellion (Russian: Кронштадтское восстание, tr. Kronshtadtskoye vosstaniye) was a 1921 insurrection of Soviet sailors and civilians against the Bolshevik government in the Russian SFSR port city of Kronstadt. Located on Kotlin Island in the Gulf of Finland, Kronstadt defended the former capital city, Petrograd, as the base of the Baltic Fleet. For sixteen days in March 1921, rebels in Kronstadt's naval fortress rose in opposition to the Soviet government they had helped to consolidate. Led by Stepan Petrichenko, it was the last major revolt against the Bolshevik regime on Russian...
@jlliagre The only English parallel I can think of for the hate Spain has sometimes generated in her former colonies is what you sometimes find in the Subcontinentals who lived under the British Raj. It doesn't happen in the US etc. The Irish might have a word about the British though.
The whole imperial-overlord thing is bound to generate resentment.
00:29
So even Spanish-speaking people living in former colonies might hate Spain?
00:41
Is Don't Look Up a good movie?
@CowperKettle Some may.
I wake up and feel tired. This venlafaxine does not seem to work.
It's a bumpy ride in terms of side effects. Very unlike milnacipran
@CowperKettle I don't recall ever hearing that.
The Spanish colonies were lost centuries ago, weren't they?
In about 1820s?
00:46
I liked how they initially created a big Bolivarian Republic. Sadly, it broke apart.
Maybe it would have been better as a big state.
> Not all countries in Latin America suffer from a general anti-Spanish attitude. It depends on the history of each country and whether or not they had to fight very hard to win their independence from Spain. The countries that did usually have resentments towards Spain, while the countries that got their independence rather easily from Spain or even from another country in this hemisphere (for example, Uruguay got its independence from Brazil) don't have a general anti-Spanish feeling. Countries usually develop a general resentment whenever they had to fight very hard to gain their indepen
@tchrist Hmm not very clear.
The Black Legend (Spanish: Leyenda negra) or the Spanish Black Legend (Spanish: Leyenda negra española) is a theorised historiographical tendency which consists of anti-Spanish and anti-Catholic propaganda. Its proponents argue that its roots date back to the 16th century, when it originally was a political and psychological weapon that was used by Spain's European rivals in order to demonize the Spanish Empire, its people, and its culture, minimize Spanish discoveries and achievements, and counter its influence and power in world affairs.The Protestant Revolutionary propaganda which was published...
Do you feel that there is a lot of anti-Iberianism in Latin America now?
I never hear of it, though that is no proof.
Not "a lot". But I have certainly encountered it in some South Americans.
00:59
OK.
I'd say, get over it.
> Leyendo ciertos comentarios sobre una noticia de estrechamiento de lazos
entre Perú y España, me dio mucha pena. Existe tanta desinformación y odio
entre los países de habla hispana, que me avergüenzo solo de pensarlo.

La mayoría de latinos dan el típico argumento de “los españoles nos robaron
el oro”, y razón no les falta, pero por ello, ¿vamos a estar 500 años más
tarde echándonoslo en cara? Todas las naciones colonizadoras han robado,
humillado y matado a los conquistados. O, ¿es que acaso los aztecas no
He says what you said: get over it.
Specifically: La mayoría de latinos dan el típico argumento de “los españoles nos robaron el oro”, y razón no les falta, pero por ello, ¿vamos a estar 500 años más tarde echándonoslo en cara? Todas las naciones colonizadoras han robado, humillado y matado a los conquistados.
@CowperKettle What does that mean? Right now?
@CowperKettle Messing with neurotransmitters is never certain science.
@CowperKettle It was only 17F again this morning here.
01:08
-8°С... that's cold
It's +2°C here
Today is the last day with visible grass.
Starting Monday, it will hit minus 8C here too
I have visible grass, but it is not visibly green. It gets frozen out and browned out.
@CowperKettle All of the things that adjust neurotransmitters change your energy levels. The reuptake inhibitors may quell anxiety and so make one sleep more but at the cost of waking up with enough energy. But if you don't sleep well, worse things happen. The NT boosters, be that caffeine or stronger, increase energy but risk other issues.
A news website published an interview with a mobilized man who got tired of training and wants to get to the frontline sooner. In the comments section, one guy wrote "just lay down in a puddle and stay there for three days without food. Well, let someone throw you potatoes now and then from the 5th floor. That will be just like on the frontline".
Venlafaxine increases noradrenaline, and thus is supposed to "activate" a person, but I have episodes when I just sleep for 12 hours/day for a couple days.
Yes, it acts differently on different people.
Milnacipran was much better in this regard. And I would like to try some ADHD drugs, maybe they activate even more, but they are prohibited here.
Being sanctioned is good publicity.
@CowperKettle They work for me. The reuptake things do not.
@tchrist You are taking them? You have adult ADHD? My psychiatrist friend recently published a video in Russian about adult ADHD
@CowperKettle Yes.
I don't think I've ever not had it.
01:23
I haven't watched the video yet though.
I remember reading Kurt Vonnegut trying out an ADHD drug, and feeling horrible.
He described it himself.
In Russia, some kids with ADHD get antipsychotics prescribed to them. Which makes it only worse.
That's terrible.
Yes. Because proper drugs are prohibited. If the parents are wealthy, they go to Turkey or somewhere to buy a stash of drugs.
A small amount of pharmaceutical ADHD medication is much easier on you than self-medicating with caffeine — or, far worse, any "street" drugs. It calms you down and lets you get things done without wandering off and forgetting what you are doing. It does not interfere with sleep when taken as directed.
ADHD involves things in your brain "short-circuiting" impulsively. The reason increased neurotransmitters fixes those unnaturally foreshortened circuits is that they're now longer and so you can think things through better.
That's the theory. It may be nonsense.
Yes, I've read about that. Some local people take milnacipran in the absense of methyphenidate.
Milnacipran works a little.
But milnacipran also vanished after Feb 24. Bad luck for them.
Did they give it to soldiers or something? That would be weird. I wouldn't be giving it soldiers. I think the US military normally uses, or used, what is essentially Adderall for its "go-pills". It may use a different ratio of the various salts.
> ...a combination drug called mixed amphetamine salts containing four salts of amphetamine. The mixture is composed of equal parts racemic amphetamine and dextroamphetamine, which produces a (3:1) ratio between dextroamphetamine and levoamphetamine, the two enantiomers of amphetamine. Both enantiomers are stimulants, but differ enough to give Adderall an effects profile distinct from those of racemic amphetamine or dextroamphetamine...
Methyphenidate works pretty well, too, but that's not what our military settled on as far as I know.
01:34
@tchrist No, I meant Russian people who have ADHD
They used Milnacipran because they could not get ADHD drugs. But then it also vanished.
One guy on a forum asked "could I buy some Cocaine and use very small doses of it instead?" Or it was amphetamine that he mentioned.
Maybe there's already a black market for absent drugs. I should look it up.
01:53
@tchrist This is true. I hear that if methylphenidate calms you down, you probably have ADHD. Otherwise it speeds you up.
Oh. I should try it out sometime.
A 55 yo son of a neighbor, who wanted to enroll in the Special Operation still hasn't enrolled, and goes on drinking daily.
His wife doesn't know what to do.
@tchrist Adderall is basically methamphetamine salts. Much "speedier" than Ritalin.
Those capitalists, they invented mental health to rob the working class.
Just like they invented English grammar to rob the non-native speakers.
Yinz are welcome to join the anticapitalist antigrammar league.
02:00
Now you are affecting a Pittsburgh dialect?
Yes, I saw the word yinz used by Bita Moghaddam, a famous neuroscientist.
So I added it to my Anki.
Just remember that yinz is a plural pronoun, like y'all.
Yes, I know.
Or youse.
The New Yinzer was an online literary magazine published in Pittsburgh. The primary means of publication was online, supplemented with occasional printed material. It was published triannually. The New Yinzer focused on Pittsburgh as inspiration. It focuses on first-time contributors; the editors have an open door policy to provide assistance to prospective authors. Contributors were paid in t-shirts. It was funded by the Sprout Fund. == History and profile == The first issue was published online in January 2002. The early success of The New Yinzer was cited by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as part...
Esfand (Persian: اسفند, Persian pronunciation: [esˈfænd]) is the twelfth and final month of the Solar Hijri calendar, the official calendar of Iran and Afghanistan. Esfand has twenty-nine days normally, and thirty during leap years. It begins in February and ends in March of the Gregorian calendar. The Afghan Persian name is Hūt; in Pashto it is Kab. Esfand is the third and last month of the winter season (Zemestan), and is followed by Farvardin. == Events == 28 - 1292 - The first Stanley Cup Finals in hockey history concludes with the victory of the Toronto Hockey Club, champion team of ...
Hm. Why does she use "Esfand" while it's only November.
It must be in February-March.
> Esfand is the seeds and dried fruits of Garden Rue or Peganum harmala
Ah.
> The fruit has many tiny blackish-brown seeds that have magical and medicinal usages.
> 'When an afflicted person is believed to be a victim of nazar, or the glance of the evil eye, a particular kind of incense, which is made of seeds of the wild rue, mixed with myrtle and frankincense, is burned at sunset; and while the smoke is curling about the head of the victim the following incantation is repeated...'
Noun: اسفند • (esfand)
  1. wild rue
02:16
@Robusto No, no, no. Methamphetamine is super different from any of these. That's what meth heads do. It has a 20x punch on the serotonin dump for the same dosage. Adderall is a blend of amphetamine salts and dextroamphetamine salts. It never has any meth.
@tchrist OK. I just know that Adderall made me very speedy. Ritalin did not.
Yes.
Ritalin is methylphenidate. Adderall is amphetamine plus dextroamphetamine. It is "speedier" but nothing like methamphetamine. It is possible to "abuse" amphetamines, of course, whether you're a house wife or a truck driver. Don't do that.
I had them prescribed. I didn't abuse them.
Right.
I only ever had legal scripts.
Ritalin made it possible to get totally absorbed in my work. I could start in the morning and forget to eat lunch. I'd look at the clock at 2:00 p.m. and realized I had already been coding for six hours straight.
02:21
I don't think those can ever be euphoriants, but I also never took more than was prescribed.
@Robusto Story of my life.
The problem was, I'd also forget to hydrate.
Word of the morning: borgs
> A Nature paper describes Borgs, which are remarkably large, divergent archaeal extrachromosomal elements with metabolic genes linked to the methane cycle. Researchers chose the name Borgs to reflect their propensity to assimilate genes from organisms. nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05256-1
@CowperKettle It's evening here. I'll look at it tomorrow.
Okay ))
@Robusto Yes, yes, yes, yes. I forget to get up and drink for six or eight hours and get utterly out of it from simple dehydration.
02:24
I've read that ecstasy is associated with a risk of dehydration. Or was it overhydration.
@tchrist And you'd have to pee and sit there thinking, "Just let me get this working and I'll go to the bathroom."
Yes. And you don't notice the need to pee while sitting so much as when standing. Happens driving long distance, too.
And then you'd get it working but something would still be unsatisfactory so you'd still sit there holding it.
The thing about ritalin and adderall is that there isn't the horrible withdrawal effect you get from going cold-turkey on coffee. It's weird. I think that meth-heads become physically dependent though, and would suffer withdrawal. Not sure.
I dunno, when I quit coffee periodically I just get tired for a few days, then everything sorts out. But I like coffee.
02:28
Caffeine really works its way into your metabolism. Once you're physically dependent, whatever the level,you can't think right without it.
I've had screaming headaches from coffee cut-off.
My mileage varied.
That last for days. So super not fun.
I don't drink much these days, but I definitely have to have some or else I can't get going.
Ritalin was problematic in times of great business when I had to work past normal business hours.
Because I couldn't just keep taking it and stay up.
I know that adderall will keep you up if you take another dose than is your normal.
Ritalin I can't remember that ever happening with.
@CowperKettle Wow, that is pretty hilarious.
02:31
Or more accurately, make your sleep useless.
1991 or something?
You can still go to sleep. You just can't stay asleep, or get deep sleep. Kills the entire next day from exhaustion.
Putin's favourite time.
@tchrist Yes. You start to get psychotic from sleep deprivation.
Normally people got used to me being so productive during the regular workday that they didn't mind me going home when my brain said I was finished for the day.
@Cerberus Yes, probably good for agriculture!
> Tigran Keosayan, husband of the head of RT Margarita Simonyan, opined that the retreat from Kherson was merely a clever trap for NATO. He said that NATO—encouraged by Russia's apparent weakness—would come pouring across the borders into Ukraine, only to be decimated by Russia. twitter.com/JuliaDavisNews/status/1591529223763673091
@tchrist Same here. It comes from blood vessel widening.
02:37
@CowperKettle I mean the borders on that map.
@CowperKettle Obviously nutty notion. NATO wants very much not to come pouring across any borders into Ukraine whatsoever, let alone going all the way to Kherson.
@tchrist my pro-Putin friend thinks that Poland is preparing to annex Western Ukraine.
This propaganda really works.
I know.
@tchrist ^ This one is pretty funny. I love her little dramas.
@Robusto Yup. Those are all deeply ingrained in me.
It interferes with reading Portuguese, because they have different rules.
Spanish María and Mario must be written Maria and Mário in Portuguese because of this. But they're said the same. Drives you crazy.
It's because they don't have the strong-vs-weak vowel idea there.
So how you write diphthongs and hiatuses changes.
Río has two syllables, rio and rió both have just one.
02:45
Yeah. But who said all these languages were going to be simple?
They all go their own ways, like children.
Or adults.
Catalan and Portuguese use the same rules because they took them from Provençal back when that was the prestige language. Galician switched to the Spanish system from the Portuguese one, which makes writing it look far more different than it is.
@tchrist What is she talking about when she says "You, write me a comment with a carrot?" (Tú, escríbeme un comentario con una zahoria!)
Maybe it's some kind of joke and I'm just being a bit thick at the moment.
Lemme check.
About where is that?
@tchrist Around 8:15.
She has carrot emojis in her text below, but I still don't get it. Maybe it's a running gag and I just need to see more of her videos. Not a problem, they're a lot of fun.
03:03
Yeah, I don't know why she wants you to use a carrot. :)
> El hecho de ver las reglas al revés de como nos las enseñan en el colegio casi me peta la cabeza. Creo que yo también necesito zanahorias. 🥕🥕🥕
> 🥕Me gusta como explicas y me cae muy bien Dorotea, hace algunos "ayeres" que me explicaron esto en la primaria y lo recuerdo bien, pero tú forma de explicar me encanta...
Gracias 🥕
It's so she can keep her nice red hair orange. :)
> Intento ser cada día más pedante.
Me gustan las zanahorias 🥕.
I don't know if those two statements are related.
> ¿Por qué usa lentes Dorotea si come tantas zanahorias?

> Ja, ja, ja, ja, ja, ja, ja. Buenísima pregunta. La verdad es que las lentes de Dorotea no tienen cristales. Desde que empezó a comer tantas zanahorias ha desarrollado una visión que prácticamente puede atravesar paredes y tuvo que quitarles el cristal porque más que ayudar, molestaba.
hahaha
> ¡Buenísimo! Me ha flipado darme cuenta de que mi cuñada es una sobrediptongadora. Dice "toalla" haciendo un diptongo impuro con la "o" y la "a" y lo curioso es que si intento imitarlo la "o" se me desliza a "u" y termina siendo "tualla" ahí ya sí con un diptongo com déu mana. Es todo tan complicado y zanahoria 🥕 ¡Gracias!
That's not all that uncommon in rapid speech.
03:12
By the way, the whole idea of carrots improving eyesight dramatically is a myth predicated on fake propaganda of WWII. The British attributed their pilots' skill at downing German aircraft at night to eating lots of carrots, when in fact it was due to the radar they had developed, which they wanted to keep secret.
It is a stubbornly persistent myth.
Yes, let's eat spinach for iron instead!
Popeye did, and look what it did for him!
That was a decimal-point error, I believe.
It took a long time before somebody went back and checked.
> Hay catorce diptongos fonémicos. Además, en el discurso rápido, las secuencias de vocales en hiato se convierten en diptongos, a menos que sean la misma vocal, en ese caso se fusionan. E.g. poeta [ˈpo̯et̪a] y maestro [ˈma̯est̪ɾo].2​

Cuando /e/, /o/, y /a/ forman tales diptongos, pueden reducirse a [j], [w̝] y elisión completa, respectivamente. E.g. beatitud [bjat̪iˈt̪uð], poetisa [pw̝e̞ˈt̪isa], y ahorita [o̞ˈɾit̪a]. La frecuencia, pero no la presencia, de este fenómeno varía entre distintos dialectos; en algunos pasa raramente y en otros siempre.6​ Hay también triptongos como /wei/ y, en
> US networks called the key Senate race in Nevada for Democrat incumbent Catherine Cortez Masto, giving the party the 50 seats they need for an effective majority with one race still undecided
Holy shit.
03:17
Hallelujah!
> The beta carotene in carrots does not enhance night vision beyond normal levels for people receiving an adequate amount, only in those with a deficiency of vitamin A.[704] The belief that it does may have originated from World War II British disinformation meant to explain the Royal Air Force's improved success in night battles, which was actually due to radar and the use of red lights on instrument panels.
That takes a lot of stress out of the world.
Out of my world, anyway.
I was speaking from the ego point of view, yes.
I was hoping for it but didn't expect the final result for a couple of days.
Takes pressure off Warnock.
I'm sure Trump will torpedo that election anyway, just like before.
When will people learn their lesson that having run-off elections is insane if they aren't instant-runoffs?
Just use ranked choice, and this nonsense is done and gone.
03:33
> Now, the Senate, which oversees the confirmation of executive branch personnel and federal judges, will stay in his party’s corner.
Yes.
It also means that the Democrats decide what bills to vote on.
In the sense that the president of the chamber always decides that.
Same as in the other chamber.
But it's still minority rule due to the awful filibuster bug.
Right.
03:59
> In 1952, only 50 percent of voters said they saw a big difference between the Democratic and Republican Parties. By 1984, it was 62 percent. In 2004, it was 76 percent. By 2020, it was 90 percent.

The yawning differences between the parties have made swing voters not just an endangered species, but a bizarre one. How muddled must your beliefs about politics be to shift regularly between Republican and Democratic Parties that agree on so little?
04:16
Kuli-kuli is a West African snack primarily made from peanuts. First made by the Nupe People of West Africa it is a popular snack in Nigeria, Benin, northern Cameroon and Ghana. It is often eaten alone or with a mixture of garri also known as cassava flakes, sugar and water popularly called "garri soakings". It is also eaten with Hausa koko, fura, kamu; and is sometimes ground and put into salad. It is often ground as used as an ingredient for Suya and Kilishi.Kuli-kuli is a byproduct of processing raw peanuts into peanut oil. == Ghanaian Kuli-Kuli == Kuli kuli (a groundnut/peanut cake) in Ghana...
Interesting.
04:27
@CowperKettle Every time I hear cassava I think of konzo and cyanide poisoning. No thanks.
@CowperKettle I read that "Nude People of West Africa" and I was thinking that's a bit blunt
04:51
> On Nov. 12, a pro-war Russian ideologist Alexander Dugin openly criticized Putin — whom he referred to as the autocrat — for failing to uphold Russian ideology by surrendering Kherson.
Dugin.. practically unknown to the general Russian population.. a kind of proto-Fascist scholar.
I presume only the most bellicose of war-hawks are permitted to voice any dissent at all.
@CowperKettle That seems extreme.
05:06
Patricia Kaas (French: [kas]; born 5 December 1966) is a French singer and actress. Her music is a mix of pop, cabaret, jazz, and chanson. Since the appearance of her 1988 debut album Mademoiselle chante..., Kaas has sold over 17 million records worldwide. She had her greatest success in Germany, Switzerland, Belgium, Canada, Russia, Finland, Ukraine, and South Korea with her third album Je te dis vous. In 2002, Kaas made her film debut in And Now... Ladies and Gentlemen with Jeremy Irons. She represented France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 in Moscow and finished in eighth place. =...
As a kid, I put on her records when I was cleaning the apartment.
I had an actual LP disk of hers
@tchrist He is a crank.
I'm not sure that Putin even listens much to him.
And also this album
Foreign Affair is the seventh solo studio album by Tina Turner, released on September 13, 1989, through Capitol Records. It was Turner's third album release after her massively successful comeback five years earlier with Private Dancer and her third and last album with the label. Although the album was not a major success in Turner's native United States, it was a huge international hit, especially in Europe. The album reached number one on the UK Albums Chart, her first number one album there. Dan Hartman produced most of the tracks on the album, including the hit single "The Best", which has...
I also had an LP disk of it
05:25
@CowperKettle It's good to know that Russians don't really know him.
Scientists managed to produce long-lasting perovskite-based LEDs, could be used in future displays, PC monitors, etc. nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05304-w
I wonder whether perovskites are already long-lasting in solar panels.
@Cerberus Yes, on the local webforum he has not been mentioned once.
I see.
He is kind of Houston Stewart Chamberlain.
His writings might produce a Hitler in the future, but he is an unknown quantity himself
The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (Die Grundlagen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts, 1899) is a book by British-born German philosopher Houston Stewart Chamberlain. In the book, Chamberlain advances various racialist and especially völkisch antisemitic theories on how he saw the Aryan race as superior to others, and the Teutonic peoples as a positive force in European civilization and the Jews as a negative one. The book was his best-selling work. == Synopsis == Published in German, the book focuses on the controversial notion that Western civilization is deeply marked by the influence of the...
Him I do not know.
> In the book, Chamberlain advances various racialist and especially völkisch antisemitic theories on how he saw the Aryan race as superior to others, and the Teutonic peoples as a positive force in European civilization and the Jews as a negative one.
05:36
Hip.
Cognate words of the day: ankle, angle, ankylosis, from Greek ἀγκύλος, bent, crooked.
And probably England too.
England and ankylosis, both from Greek.
06:07
@CowperKettle I rather think some of those are not from Greek but related to it.
06:24
> A ‘gesture frontier’ exists in Italy which separates the gestures used commonly in Southern Italy from those used in Northern Italy.[3] This frontier is evident in the differing meaning of the 'chin flick' gesture. In Northern Italy, this gesture generally means 'get lost', whereas in Southern Italy it simply means 'no'.
07:03
Nice.
@CowperKettle Unfortunately unsuccessful.
@tchrist Sometimes? Reliably so, I'd say. And not just in the Subcontinent.
Well predicted.
Artificial intelligence's taking over everything was clearly five years off.
07:38
> What do you call a bunch of rabbits walking away from you?
A receding hare line.
Yevgeni Nuzhin was recruited by the Wagner Group out of a Russian prison and sent into Ukraine, where he was taken prisoner in a battle. He was exchanged back, and a video has just surfaced in which his head is placed against a stone and smashed with a sledge hammer. His presumed guilt was his heavy critique of Russia and Vladimir Putin on YouTube while he was in captivity in Ukraine.
This is beyond barbarity. The country has slid into darkness.
Novaya Gazeta has just published the video of his beheading.
Cruel.
Who did it?
One of Wagner's thugs
Who else?
Now we have our own ISIS.
07:53
One more reason to desert once in Ukraine, then.
08:20
Blocked these two, and my Twitter feed became better.
Good!
Now block Twitter.
08:34
> Nothing positive can happen if you're steeling electrons.
Moreover, you'll be charged.
08:54
Wordle 512 3/6

🟨⬜⬜🟩🟩
⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
09:05
#Worldle #296 2/6 (100%)
🟩🟨⬜⬜⬜↗️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
09:30
Daily Octordle #293
5️⃣🕚
6️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣🕛
9️⃣🔟
Score: 68
octordle.com
10:03
@CowperKettle +1
People around me tend to be pretty upset a lot of the time. If only they stop doomscrolling about the Ayatollahs.
10:23
> "Any man who carries a hyphen about with him carries a dagger that he is ready to plunge into the vitals of this Republic whenever he gets ready." (Woodrow Wilson)
#Worldle #296 2/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬜↗️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐⭐
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
10:55
Why do people hold lavish weddings, but not lavish divorces? With good meals, music, etc.
 
1 hour later…
11:57
> Wagner's head Prigozhin in a Q&A admits to the execution of the captured and exchanged convict and says he enjoyed the show.
12:31
@CowperKettle I think he will fail like Microsoft when they bought Nokia.
nods
> The CSF abnormalities included low tetrahydrobiopterin intermediates (n = 11), and borderline low-tetrahydrobiopterin intermediates (n = 20).
I wonder what it means: "borderline low". Is it just below the lower limit, or just above?
13:13
How does the site know that it was I who posted the link online?
Maybe each link is generated differently for every particular user?
Found it on Reddit. Is it a significant reason for support of Ukraine?
It was posted in February.
13:29
#Worldle #296 2/6 (100%)
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
First time I notice its flag.
🌎 Nov 13, 2022 🌍
🔥 9 | Avg. Guesses: 6.82
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#globle
Wordle 512 5/6

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14:06
Daily Quordle 293
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Daily Octordle #293
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octordle.com
14:20
@Cerberus Of all the possible ways of protesting, it is pretty childish but also probably harmless and ineffectual. By the fact of asking your question, do you think it'll have negative consequences for the protest movement that are -worse- than say demonstrations?
I wanted to post a video of women talking back at mullahs complaining about their dress.
@CowperKettle I've always wondered that too, how does SE know that you shared a link and connect you to the visit by others.
@CowperKettle I have heard that there have been -some- instances of such parties, but that I guess that is rare.
#Worldle #296 2/6 (100%)
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
🌎 Nov 13, 2022 🌍
🔥 74 | Avg. Guesses: 5.66
🟨🟨⬜🟥🟩 = 5

#globle
Wordle 512 4/6

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14:38
@CowperKettle what does the data say?
@CowperKettle when you click "share", the generated link has your userID on that site, and that's how the site tracks it. The link works without your userID attached as well
CC @Mitch
@Mitch I wouldn't say that. The government has always been trying to pretend that >90 percent of people are in total agreement with what they do or say, and that the protesters are a very small minority, which would allow calling them looters or spies. You can't call half the population looters.
Daily Quordle 293
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So any gesture that shows how much people have turned on them is welcome, no matter how childish
@CowperKettle well, no matter how modern the outlook, isn't divorce at best an admission of wasting several years of life in a relationship that didn't work, and at worst something small that escalated? I dunno why they need celebration
@Vikas What's a good enough reason to support Ukraine, even with a perfunctory, online gesture, is that they were invaded by a foreign country and Ukrainians are dying.
@M.A.R. I have no conception of how common any of these protest methods are. But I found the video hilarious.
@Mitch heh, neither do I. I just tend to hear the protesters decided to do this other creative thing. I don't think anyone is keeping tabs on which methods are common
@Vikas now to ask whether interventionism is warranted is another question, and pretty moot, because firstly, morality doesn't figure into such decisions, and two, the people in favor of their own brand of isolationism are very unlikely to use that money and equipment elsewhere. I rather prefer Ukraine get rockets than Saudi Arabia.
14:58
@jlliagre Try listening to this Catalan speaker, Raquel Lacuesta Contreras. There are no subtitles nor translations. I feel like she's easier to understand without trying so hard as I had to for the other Catalan video you posted here. I wonder why that might be, if it is indeed so.
@M.A.R. It will increase employment opportunities for workers usually engaged on weddings etc.
toast masters
In Russia, we call them tamada. A person who oversees a wedding and makes sure that everybody has fun.
A tamada (Georgian: თამადა) is a Georgian toastmaster at a Georgian supra (feast) or at a wedding, corresponding to the symposiarch at the Greek symposion or the thyle at the Anglo-Saxon sumbel. At all supras regardless of size, there is a tamada, or toastmaster, one person who introduces each toast. Georgians like to say that the tamada is dictator of the table, but it would be more appropriate to compare him to a leader or even a teacher. Tamada traditionally ought to be eloquent, intelligent, smart, sharp−witted and quick−thinking, with a good sense of humor since very often some of the guests...
Sure, anything for the economy
A word that came from Georgia.
Possibly she's a little easier to understand than her coäuthor, Xavier González, who appears towards the end. His elocution seems more typical of the Catalans, as though his articulation were farther back and down into his throat than hers was, and him not opening his mouth as wide as she did.
Why didn't the Frisians invade Britain like everybody else did?
@M.A.R. I can't find it but the video collage of young women, after a mullah walking by makes some comment about her hijab, tearing into the mullah, yelling at him telling him to go to hell or whatever. Not as funny as the turban-tipping, but still good to see.
15:08
Is turban tipping now expected there, and if so, how much?
From turban tipping is but a small step to mullah mocking
Turban-tipping is on the slippery slope to turbine-tripping. And then all the nuclear plants go boom!
I mean, I don't want to alarm anybody, but ...
> Iranians enriching Uranium.
Iranium is a 2011 documentary film by director Alex Traiman, Written and Distributed by Clarion Fund. The film discusses Iranian foreign policy and Iran – United States relations, including the Iran hostage crisis and the 1979 Iranian Revolution and takeover by Ayatollah Khomeini.The film premiered at select AMC theaters and community centers throughout the United States on February 8. The film has been criticized for misrepresenting and falsifying information in order to create a sense of urgency in the viewing public. == Selected contributors == Notable contributors in the film include: Shelley...
@tchrist They were more chill than their rivals, obviously.
15:22
Turban-tipping is better than Turban-hunting which is what they did in Texas after 911, and you know the rest.
West Frisian is closest to Old English of the 5th-8th centuries.
> This similarity was reinforced in the late Middle Ages by the Ingvaeonic sound shift, which affected Frisian and English, but the other West Germanic varieties hardly at all.
@CowperKettle Still at a remove, however.
@tchrist I understand almost every word they both say. I was slightly exposed to Catalan as a teenager so it's not brand new to me though. A word she repeated a couple of times I had to look up is mateix. It doesn't look to have any cognate in French, Italian or Spanish. Funny how eight (vuit) is close to the French huit while the provençal uech is closer to the Castilian ocho.
15:39
@jlliagre Catalan mateix is just FR même ES mismo PT mesmo IT medesimo, isn't it? The Catalans still used met + ipse but didn't use the superlative particle like the others did.
@M.A.R. Yeah care for humanity and risk of nuclear threat or risk of invasion to nearby countries are main factors from what I've learned.
> A recent study found that seniors who received at least one flu vaccine were 40% less likely than their non-vaccinated peers to develop Alzheimers in the 4-year follow-up period.
Is this true if someone got covid some of his organs would become weak forever?
Especially heart.
There's the so-called long COVID, which has a lot of features
My friend said she started forgetting everything after her covid.
She started using stick-it notes at work.
@M.A.R. I'll look at it. I should have done that
16:12
@tchrist Ah right, it's the lack of -issimus that made it unfamiliar to my ears.
@jlliagre Yeah, your ear risks thinking of matiz but that doesn't work between the article and the noun. Around 1:48 she says something along the lines of Crec que per primer lloc són i en un mateix discurs, sense la resta de la novel·la, sense la resta d'invenses trens i res estar fugar i el que era el personatge així. I’m sure I've got it wrong towards the end there after res.
I think my brain is just word-salading that into morphemes I might convince myself I know. I don't know that it isn't 100% mondegreen.
Those restas are surely res (rien) plus some verb.
Or res da "nothing of the"
16:43
@tchrist Here is what I hear: Crec que per primera vegada, "so nían?" en un mateix discurs sense res de novela, sense res d'invents estranys i "resastrafugari?" lo que era el personatge en si.
Ah, I think I got the second one: res estrafolari (rien de farfelu).
17:43
@CowperKettle Is it because the pre-Alzheimers forgot to get their shots?
@Mitch Your suggestion may be correct.
18:00
@CowperKettle Yes, I thought it was an effective satire. And witty in parts.
I will watch Don't Look Up. Should be a good movie.
18:17
@Vikas How/where will you watch it?
@FaheemMitha Amazon Prime whenever it comes.
@Vikas It won't necessarily be available there.
Isn't a Netflix production?
@FaheemMitha Oh yeah it is on Netflix. I usually buy Netflix for a month when I have to watch several things. Paying every month is too expensive.
They have a cheaper plan but quality sucks.
Sorry, I should have written "Isn't it a Netflix production?"
Yes just checked.
Prime is cheapest (so far).
I have to watch all seasons of Better Call Saul. When I would feel like I can watch all in a month, I'll watch couple of movies too lol
18:23
@Vikas Yes, both Amazon Prime and Hotstar are much cheaper than Netflix.
@Vikas Isn't Netflix like Rs. 600 a month?
Yeah I use Hotstar and Prime only. But use them rarely for media.
I use Hotstar only because I watch cricket.
@FaheemMitha Something around that. It's even cheaper but low quality.
@Vikas Yes, I have Hotstar and Prime too.
Last year I bought it for a month to watch some movies and whole month passed and I was too lazy to watch anything. Money wasted.
Netflix Standard is Rs. 499 a month. That's probably good enough.
I watched all Star Wars movies on Hotstar only. Last year.
@FaheemMitha Yeah. But I think it's 480p.
Good for phone.
19:07
@Vikas well, it's pretty selfish in my case. People are dying because of a madman and his cronies, just like old times. Part of their power comes from people that buy into their BS. So one should do everything to lower the chances of other madmen getting any ideas, so I won't ever have to face a similar situation in the future.
@tchrist I kinda doubt an Israeli media guru would be impartial
@Vikas it's a very complex bunch of processes. No one can answer that question reliably yet.
Yes, viruses in general have been known to alter the general physiology of the body with long-term consequences, the most significant example being an increase in the incidence of cervical cancer due to HPV.
There is evidence that Sars-Cov-2, the Covid virus, can alter the physiology of lung and brain cells, at least. How prevalent or destructive such changes are would require years of study still.
@Vikas Is that bad?
> Unlike the Rs 199 plan, which allows you to stream content on only one device at a time, the Rs 499 plan allows you to stream content on two devices (screens) simultaneously at 1080p Full HD resolution. The annual cost for the plan is Rs 5,988.
Assuming that is correct, no discount for paying for a year at a time.
Assuming paying for a year at a time is even an option.
 
2 hours later…
21:55
@Cerberus They tried to control confounders, but of course there will be doubts
Right.
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