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"The more you sweat in peace, the less you bleed in war." - Otamin


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Strelok 03/11/2023 (Sat) 15:52:42 No.48689
Welcome to the /k/anteen! This thread is a catch-all for general discussion that doesn't really belong anywhere else or might be off-topic. Previous iteration: >>43407 Roman numerals are not that hard, but I still managed to add just one I, and that messed up the numbering, so I might as well make it even more confusing.
>>55326 *has sent out
>>55464 >Though imo indian culture is pretty collectivist, immoral and backwards, yet all of these things are fixable. I'd say its more the case that india isn't very pro intellectual now, but has a ton of intellectual potential in the future ironically. India keeps flip flopping between neetsoc pandering and lolbert cyberpunk projects like planned private-infrastructure cities getting bashed out in the span of six months, so it's really hard to tell where they're heading. It helps that the government can't actually function (there's huge nonpayment of tax in india which they've heretofore been unable to collect on) and there's actually a culture of disobedience to the point where raisin hitler gave up on trying to unify them and let the pakis split off. Poorfags (real ones, which they have in abundance in india) are subhumans so it's reasonable to expect that if the country does continue to peacefully industrialize the quality of human being living there will go up as well. India is already an (ironic) intellectual leader in e.g. pharmaceuticals simply because they do participate in the grey market and a mainstay target of medical tourism because although they don't have the intellectual quality of e.g. 2010s Singapore, the sheer size of the (largely unregulated) nation gives rise to a lot of walled garden tourist traps with actually competent staff. Also if the apocryphal stories about working in indian branches and basically not paying taxes or rent and scumming food from the charity section of shops are/were true then india has a pretty substantial middle class of foreign workers who could be training english speaking pajeets.
>tank destroyer >cruiser tank >land battleship Where is my tank aircraft carrier?
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>>55529 Maybe you will live to see something like this in real life: https://ttcombat.com/collections/dropzone-commander/products/ferrum-drone-base
>>55530 Its a shame what TTC did to this game. Legit hostile takeover of Hawk.
>>55531 Who did what exactly? I vaguely recall that the game disappeared for a while, only to reappear under new management, but I don't know the details.
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What camo is this?
So where'd the quinty quints go? >>55555
All of my tertiary email accts and lastpass are forcing 2fa as of today. Nothing important is on any of it, but it's fucking annoying and I'm not inclined to link my phone number to semi-burner accts. I wonder if it's extra scrutiny because I'm using palememe and blocking any scripts that won't completely break the sites
>>55617 Use outlook/hotmail gray hat anon I try using temp mail sometimes but I don't even use burners I just really really hate 2FA
>>55617 All the good free (i.e. anon) disposable mail sites got holocausted one way (turned into JS abortions or dead or gone semi-'legit' with 2FA etc.) or another (categorically blacklisted by every shitbird and their mother). I blame cloudflare >cdnjs bought by cloudflare in 2019 >bootstrapCDN rolled into jsdelivr in early 2021 Wew. I've been trying my best to live under a rock but man it sure is fucking gay out there. >>55618 Use a real commercial email address or host your own (lots of the things you'd want burners for won't accept even paid for emails and phone numbers that aren't big-three though)
Why wont jews just use global warming to counter heat death of the universe?
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>>55625 Kek. No one, not even the kikes, outsmarts the laws of physics my nerdy friend. Most things are purely within God's purview btw, we're all simply the recipients of His grace and abundance. :^) poll: What will be the last straw for humanity?
>>55628 >Budweiser tries ESG >tree is hollow >public sees it >NO U branch comes off >Russel Brand does the raipe >tree is hollow >public sees it >NO U branch comes off Cautious optimissus in nothing is gonna truly kill us all for a while
Any suggestions for military blogs with a focus on future speculation and theory?
Has anom watched Ken Paxton's (guy who filed Texas v. Pennsylvania) interview with Tucker? Hope this makes Texans aware of the shit going down.
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Couldn't we just add 1% sulfur dioxide solution to high-altitude plane fuel and reverse global warming completely via the aerosol effect in about two years?
>>55638 >>55641 The US died a long long time ago, its about time for its rotting corpse to get put down, but not as a sacrifice by the (((cult))) in order to destroy the white race and its heritage even further. There once was a time when this country was the polar opposite of what it became, when it was a beacon of hope to show nations could exist without powerful states, that multitudes of peoples and cultures could still call home to a larger national identity and ideals, that freedom and values weren't mutually exclusive, that a country could be run by a middle class focused on achieving rather than an upperclass focused on obtaining, that even a ragtag bunch of college students leading hick farmers could win against (in that time) the most powerful empire in all of history and after gaining power sticking to their values rather than ending up like any other revolution. America, TRUE America, has been completely forgotten by the world, its history buried and re-written, its achievements replaced by atrocities, its legacy corrupted by the same evil it was born to fight, the snake become the eagle that hunts it. I struggled to believe it when I found out J.Stark who made the FGC-9 was actually some Kurdish Kraut, that all this time the most based 3d gun print designer and most based individual I knew of, who literally died for the ideals of personal freedom of speech and self-protection, was so far and away from the stereotypical wasp american. The truth is the founding fathers never invented their ideas, they merely discovered it and those ideas can get buried, corrupted, (((subverted))), yet never killed. They will always be here for any human of any origin with the right wit and will to prescribe for, to fight for, to die for. I've spent too long fucking around without actually fighting back for my country, too long acting like the battle is already lost without even trying, too long pretending like those who fight the good fight are the exception rather than just those doing what is necessary, too long getting embarrassed by comparison to those so american with so little roots like roof koreans. America might have been (((corrupted))) and it might be in the middle of having its masters self-destruct it, and it might be deserving for our own lack of balls to do anything about it as it ravaged the world for so long. But the ideas behind it matters, the innocent people living here matter, the old America matters. And even if its a pointless fight and we are truly are doomed, I will fight for what is left of America, because it matters to me.
>>55745 My understanding is the globe is still cooling after the 1910s peak and we're going to go into a soft iceage anyway, so heating is actually desirable if you want to maintain current temperatures. Nobody has a consistent standard of temperature measurement over anywhere the size of a large nation this side of the 50s so I think strictly speaking we don't know, but historical data suggested that we were cooling (and empirically, the dustbowl years did end).
>>55764 More or less agreed. IIRC any kind of global warming is solely a net benefit to humanity until about 2050-70 and doesn't start having to balance the good with the bad until about the 100s at our current geoengineering rates. That can probably get extended out 200 years if hydrocarbon power plants get swapped with nuclear ones. Was just curious about the proposal of dumping sulfur aerosol into the upper atmosphere in a controlled manner to reverse the effects as a stop-gap if necessary. I read that ship pollution was actually cooling the ocean and all of these anti-pollution campaigns for cargo ships have lead to ocean heating over the last few decades.
>>55753 Based. Godspeed, Strelok.
>>55745 >>55764 >so heating is actually desirable if you want to maintain current temperatures. Speak for yourself. Not to over generalize from a small sample size here but the last few summers seemed awfully hot here in the Cascadia region. Nothing special by TX or FL or even CA standards, and summer heatwaves aren't exactly uncommon here but AC never did feel like a necessity around here before. Then again we were wearing jackets here last June, so maybe the average over the year isn't different but something definitely feels off. Not defending the alarmist climate change bullshit, but I'm not going to ignore my own gut either >the dustbowl years did end That was primarily due to retarded farming practices for the area, if the hadn't fucked up the grasslands soil as much those storms wouldn't haven been picking up all that dust in the first place. >>55766 >dumping sulfur aerosol into the upper atmosphere in a controlled manner to reverse the effects as a stop-gap if necessary I'm no climate rocket surgerist, no comment on the theory behind it, but this totally sounds like a setup for bad unintended consequences. In any case it's going to be a stupid-expensive boondoggle.
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>>55773 This is just an excuse for more surveillance of the useless eaters, the criminal class is too essential in this phase of the self-destruction to actually do anything about other than abject support and immunity. This is small news after they legalized explosive bots a while back, even if remote controlled they still pave the way to armed robot enforcers for (((our democracy)))
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>>55764 >>55766 >>55771 If you really want to fix global warming then it's as simple as a) embrace nuclear and b) build a couple of Pleistocene Parks >>>/comfy/7281
>>55776 >after they legalized explosive bots a while back Was the Houston proto-BLM groid the first incident? IIRC, it was a pizza delivery gone high order.
>>55771 >Cascadia weather Strelok, at least for the Colorado river states, they go through 250 year cycles of extreme drought and wetness. Last "wet" cycle peaked in the 1920s/30s during the analysis for the Hoover Dam. I think the western portion of the cascades gets something similar. Eastern portion between Cascades and rockies is another beast entirely. That's subalpine like Tibetan plateau but semiarid and minus the extreme altitude. As for climate... They look in 50 year intervals not 1 year intervals so it's gonna be a while before they see the data change.
>>55787 That was an interesting read, thanks Strelok, it's such a counter-intuitive idea that grazing animals should shape the grasslands this way. Also I don't know why but northern steppe grasslands just feel comfy and calming, how does such a cold and barren place just feel.. so right?
>>55794 >Strelok, at least for the Colorado river states, they go through 250 year cycles of extreme drought and wetness. Last "wet" cycle peaked in the 1920s/30s during the analysis for the Hoover Dam. Source? Just looking to learn more.
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>>55838 >it's such a counter-intuitive idea that grazing animals should shape the grasslands this way Elephants continue to to the same thing in Africa. If it weren't for them all the savannas would have turned into acacia forest. >Also I don't know why but northern steppe grasslands just feel comfy and calming, how does such a cold and barren place just feel.. so right? Come home white man. >>55794 >>55839 There's even longer cycles in the desert southwest. There's large areas that are desert now but under a slightly different parts of the climate oscillation turn into large shallow lakes. That's the reason why there's little populations of rare pupfish allover the place there in in tiny little nooks.
So they just unilaterally destroyed Trump's business in NY without trial and the stupid judge claims his Mar-a-Lago property (Trump values at $350 million estimates say it's worth $1.5 billion) is only worth $18 million.
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>>55908 Extremely based democrats, destroying their political opposition by now allow them to make money or own business. >So they just unilaterally destroyed Trump's business in NY without trial From what I understand, blumpf may have been slightly deciteful about the size of his properties. However, just about everyone selling restate in New York does this. If they had gone after everyone I'd actually kind of respect them but it's exclusively applying to trump. Once again, based democrats for going after their political opposition and taking away their wealth. >and the stupid judge claims his Mar-a-Lago property (Trump values at $350 million estimates say it's worth $1.5 billion) is only worth $18 million. I've never personally been to Mar-a-Lago. From what you know on this subject, do you believe trump?
>>55909 >From what you know on this subject, do you believe trump? I believe he wasn't doing anything everyone else wasn't already doing. More importantly for me is the "no trial" part. Mar-a-Lago is low-end 17 acres of beachfront property in an area where the surrounding residential homes go for ~$50 million for half an acre of land, and an empty lot nearby is valued at about $250 million for 2 acres of property.
>>55853 More of an alpine subarctic forest guy myself. Could it be turkroach genes from the Altai?
>>55909 >another seething nazi incel faggot doing "DR3 IS REEL THAT IS WHY IT IS BAZED" kill yourself
>>55839 >Sause Ugh. I should've saved the source, it was from a Interior department briefing in adoption of a drought rule while I was writing a buisness proposal. They seemed to have quietly removed it from the post (I will go through my autisim files): https://www.doi.gov/pressreleases/interior-department-announces-next-steps-protect-stability-and-sustainability-colorado Here's the closest ones I can find though. I may have mixed up the 200 number with something else, but the cycle is at minium 100 years to my recollection- the Pacific Decadal Oscillation was only part of it and it needs at least 2 for a full cycle of dry OR wet (not both). Do keep in mind that a lot of this is speculative since we've been monitoring the Colorado for only ~100 years. Here's a few sources. Some of them go full in on climate change retardation (we wuz polluters n sheet) but ignore that. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2007. Colorado River Basin Water Management: Evaluating and Adjusting to Hydroclimatic Variability. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/11857. Chapter 96 >For example, after a period of less variability for several decades in the mid-20th century, there has been a tendency toward greater variability in the latter decades of the 20th century. The past 30 years of data include the highest and lowest annual precipitation in the 100-year record, and there has been a tendency toward multiyear episodes of both wet and dry conditions. Some years in the early and mid-1980s were at least as wet as the period that preceded the signing of the Colorado River Compact. Prior to the early 21st century drought, the driest comparable 5-year consecutive interval was the 1950s drought. The only other comparable 5-year dry period was at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century. Despite these variations, there is no significant trend in interannual variability of precipitation over the past 110 years. See this PDF. Source: Find the "Decadal and multi-decadal oscillations" section. Also this: https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2004/3062/ >In the mid-1990s, scientists identified another ocean temperature pattern, this one occurring in the extratropical Pacific Ocean north of 20ÂșN (Mantua and Hare, 2002), which was named the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). The PDO varies or oscillates on a decadal scale of 30-50 years for the total cycle [...] >The length of observational records of climate and hydro-logic conditions in the Colorado River basin is generally less than 100 years. Researchers, however, generally prefer to assess episodes like drought, which have a multiyear character, using time frames of centuries rather than decades. One way to do so is to extend the observational records of climate using proxy records; that is, to use variables that are indicative of climate, such as annual bands in coral, lake sediment deposits, and tree-ring widths, for which much longer records exist. Analyses of tree rings have been used extensively to reconstruct the history of drought in the United States for the past 800 years. Tree-ring reconstructions of precipitation in northern Utah (Gray and others, in press) indicate that, since 1226 A.D., nine droughts have occurred lasting 15-20 years and four droughts have occurred lasting more than 20 years. Moreover, tree-ring records indicate that some past droughts in the Colorado River basin persisted for several decades (Meko and others, 1995). Such findings from the tree-ring record, coupled with new findings about the connection between the AMO and drought frequency (McCabe and others, 2004), suggest that the current drought could continue for several more years. Alternatively, the three droughts that affected the basin during the 20th century (Fig. 3) each lasted from 4 to 11 years, indicating that the current dry conditions could shift to wetter conditions at any time.
>>55920 He's being facetious. It's a joke. In any case he's not completely wrong from an accelerationist standpoint. If the globalist Democrats want to threaten to destroy the lives of their political opponents and NeoCons are hellbent o supporting them, then the freedom faction will become outright brutal in getting rid of their enemies when the pendulum swings instead of milquetoast.
>>55920 >types like a woman >french flag Imagine my surprise.
Turns out the guy who blunt-force-trauma murdered that woke female tech CEO was a nigger with previous torture & rape charges that was released early.
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>>55920 (^: >>55911 That's a rather interesting point that's being made. I wonder if they'll actually go through with it without giving him a trial. There's actually this guy who formerly lived in New York Called Louis Rossman. He has a business where he repairs computers, laptops, and phones. During his time in New York he attempted to buy a place for his business. He had a device with him that allows him to easily measure the length and width of the room. Every single time he did this, the place turned out to be smaller than what was listed. This was quite harmful because many times, these places were asking for $10,000 a month for his business. Keep in mind, he has over 50 videos showing this off. >>55951 I'm definitely not an accelerationist in that kind of way but I think it would be rather interesting to actually see if they lock trump up. Would trump being locked up cause a civil war? Are the neocons worse than the democrats? >>55954 Heh.
>>55969 >I wonder if they'll actually go through with it without giving him a trial. If I'm reading the news correctly the judge already has. There's going to be a hearing for something unrelated but he's effectively ordered the judicial dissolution of Trump's assets. Trump will obviously appeal but it's a civil trial so things work a little differently. And yeah, Rossman came to mind when I saw the ruling. >Would trump being locked up cause a civil war? I don't think it would necessarily cause a civil war, but it would result in young men seeing the federal government as illegitimate. That's the kind of thing that takes several generations or genocide to mend. It doesn't guarantee a civil war, but it certainly fast tracks you towards one. >Are the neocons worse than the democrats? Four years ago I would have said something like "Democrats are racing off a cliff with the doors unlocked, and Neocons are driving towards the same cliff at the speed limit and with child safety locks turned on." These days I don't know. I think the Neocons are currently worse because they suffer from spoiled brat syndrome where they will inevitably try and tear the whole thing down because making sure nobody gets the proverbial pie because they took a fat shit in it is better in their mind than letting people who disagree with them get slices of it. Neocons worry me because they are actively fighting a civil war against the Freedom Faction and are tying up resources on their frivolous bullshit. The Democrats are genetic dead-ends who are losing the school choice battle while simultaneously sterilizing their young. Math dictates the future will be conservative in the next 10-30 years. So while they shriek increasingly loudly and beat their fists against the concrete pillars of society, they've destroyed their own tools necessary to destroy the pillars in the name of "progress" and their hands are bloody/broken from the chaos they have sown; they will slowly die off or go out in a blaze.
>>55974 >Neocons worry me because they are actively fighting a civil war against the Freedom Faction and are tying up resources on their frivolous bullshit. The Democrats are genetic dead-ends who are losing the school choice battle while simultaneously sterilizing their young. Math dictates the future will be conservative in the next 10-30 years. So while they shriek increasingly loudly and beat their fists against the concrete pillars of society, they've destroyed their own tools necessary to destroy the pillars in the name of "progress" and their hands are bloody/broken from the chaos they have sown; they will slowly die off or go out in a blaze. Yeah I kind of have the same feelings. I don't really fear the Democrats because they are so reality averse and incompetent because of that reason that they can't really succeed in taking over. Worst case scenario with them is that you have some degree of the French Revolution + Reign of Terror and then subsequent Thermidorian reaction that that brings the mess to an end. Neocons on the other hand are just competent enough to install hell on earth and make it work if they aren't countered. Else that or they destroy everything in revenge for not being allowed to get their way. I fear corrupted conservativism far more than loony leftism.
Feinstein has logged out of Earth.
How good is Jagged Alliance 3? I missed that they even made another game.
>>55773 These machines work in Japan and would work in Canada and even Europe. They would not work anywhere in America. When a Canadian team wanted to add an American length to its civilian globetrotting hitchhiking bot's tour, it was killed almost immediately on the East Coast after having survived multiple tours through multiple cultures before this. Philadelphians had striped and decapitated it. >>56047 It's not good. The writing is bad, many of the new characters are California stereotypes, and mercenaries have special abilities.
>>55969 >Would trump being locked up cause a civil war? Civil Wars are terminal symptoms of existing issues. There are not enough laws seen as bad by the public for this event to cause a second civil war. The argument that vaccine mandates qualify for this is easily dismissible because they weren't nationwide and have been easily removed or ignored. American's definitely won't cause a civil war because of taxes. There is no one in the federal government who insinuates the possibility of secession for reasons other than fear of sedition charges. Transsexuals in education and other social issues may be combated at the state-level or in the Supreme Court. A theoretical civil war would need to be preceded by many high-profile imprisonments for crimes the public sees as unjust (think Trump and his cabinet, not just Trump), intense economic downturn (something between 1929 and 2008, not 2020), multiple overturns by Congress and the President of Supreme Court rulings and states for mostly social issues (not just codified abortion, but codified gay marriage, presidential powers, court expansion, no-ID voting laws, and immigration), violent civil unrest by parties who find these actions intolerable, failure in military conflicts, and direct provocative action by leadership (something Biden is incapable of but Harris would do for ego reasons). This isn't a blackpill, it's a historical pattern. The first civil war didn't happen just because Lincoln was elected. It was the actions of the government since the War of 1812 (or the immediate aftermath of the Revolutionary War) and into the beginning of Lincoln's presidency. Trump's imprisonment is a far flung spark for a civil war because he or his team would have to go completely against their characters and call for one . They won't unless the RNC stops him from participating from prison, but the RNC dreads the phrase "third party" right now. We're more likely to see "the Dissolution of the Republican Party" than "the Second American Civil War". The more realistic scenario for contribution to the chances of civil war is Trump running from prison and losing. Even then, it would be something like the Tariff of Abominations than Lincoln's administration.
>>56073 Different strelok but the only other civil war capable issue may be immigration. Thats really a long ways off until the border states get fed up assuming they will and go "why the fuck am I paying into the union which is failing to do one of the few outline roles in the consitution"(common defense). That also assumes the border states actually vote in people hellbent on forcing the issue, something I find unlikely. Or the US looses a war with China over Taiwan. I don't think the US gov can survive a blow like that if China by a miracle sinks half the USN carrier force.

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