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A place to talk about whatever you want

  • Collection of Pinned Threads

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  • Life in Loudoun

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    89th8
    That sucks man. My best friend (who I stay with on my work trips) has the exact same setup. Townhouse community, 2 spots per house, crowded street parking. There's really no good solution. Although I think you are near Algonkian or the countryside trail? Those are really nice nature/path hikes I bet with Finley in all of your spare time. We have some nice trails here but absolutely nothing compared to what we had in Virginia where I'd take my kid on a walk nearly every day.
  • About to cancel Netflix.

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    89th8
    Netflix used to be where you can find any movie. Now it's hard to know which platform any given movie is on. I still have a normal cable box and DVR... I think I'm old and not cool like most neighbors these days that have cut the cord. We have too many streaming services... need to cut back.
  • Today should be fun

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    89th8
    Can't have that temp drop without some crazy weather to transition it! Reminds me a bit of the April 28, 2011 super out break... had a ton of "fun" in the area that day, lots of tornado warnings (and an F-0 and F-1 I think in Maryland). Good luck, what a forecast, very rare... even shutting down schools early, etc.
  • Mildly interesting

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    jon-nycJ
    @taiwan_girl said: 555 We used to think. Maybe he is on school holiday right now. What will happen when he comes back and the project is over? What I said was actually true. I imagined that I had developed the simulation (though I didn’t know to use that word yet) and that I like everyone else was playing a role in it. As part of this daydream I was still a kid in ‘real life’ and that after the simulation ended I would win some prize or accolades for having developed it. You’re welcome.
  • The great Russian internet disconnect

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    RenaudaR
    It does raise eyebrows and I have read and heard all sorts of speculation ranging from a brewing coup to a Stalinesque blood purge and national lockdown along the lines of NKPR. Whatever it is about it was sudden and apparently very methodical. Usually an indication of nothing good for the Russian people. Hopefully I’ll learn more during the course of the few days.
  • The Iran war memes thead

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    jon-nycJ
    [image: 1773609964196-img_6167.png]
  • Funny Pics

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    MikM
    [image: 1773608010113-2f6eaaf3-7a71-4b47-ad51-d6c7b2f05c5c-image.jpeg]
  • The Iran War (was Nuclear Program) thread

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    RenaudaR
    @taiwan_girl said: I am not sure why I still shake my head at some of these things. Because you have principles.
  • A virus with a 88% fatality rate

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    LuFins DadL
    You like a little junk in the trunk?
  • The Never-ending Grift

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.reuters.com/business/trump-crypto-venture-offers-guaranteed-direct-access-5-million-2026-03-13/ Investors in World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture co-founded by President Trump and his sons, have secured what the company described on its website as “guaranteed direct access” to certain members of its team for those who lock up $5 million worth of their tokens for a six-month period in exchange for voting rights. Among those listed on World Liberty documents as the firm's "Supporting Team" are the sons of the U.S. president, Eric Trump, Donald Trump ‌Jr. and Barron Trump. The company said Trump and other family members won't be part of the direct access arrangement. and “Among the privileges for Super Nodes is preferential access to the World Liberty Financial business development team and executives – not to specific founders – to discuss partnership opportunities,” said its spokesman, David Wachsman. The World Liberty proposal first issued in February said the "Super Nodes" would gain “guaranteed direct ⁠access to the WLFI team” for “partnership discussions.” and A section of the World Liberty website entitled “Meet our team” previously listed, among others, Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr. and Barron Trump. Following Reuters' questions about the proposal, the website page was altered with the "Meet our team" section removed entirely. and Under the terms of World Liberty’s business, 75% of all new token sales go to the family of President Trump, meaning that those who have ⁠purchased $5 million of the tokens effectively sent $3.75 million to the Trumps. Under a previous version of the terms, the Witkoffs were entitled to 12.5% of all new token sales, meaning they would effectively be sent $625,000, though the most recent version says only that they receive an unspecified portion of a 25% stake. Meet the Team page that was scrubbed [image: ?u=https%3A%2F%2Fstorage.bsc.news%2F9%2FWorld_Liberty_Financial_Team_3355a497bc.webp&f=1&nofb=1&ipt=594dffe3cadca61d66e8ec52da8321a8367639f8f515c3cfc8901b7665680e5f]
  • Marco's shoes

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    AxtremusA
    @Andrea-B said: I need a facepalm emoji. :face_palm:
  • Beyond the antivaxx stuff MAHA is either banal or fake

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    AxtremusA
    That's a pretty elaborate production; shows how committed they are to the joke idea cause.
  • Glad the free speech folks are in charge

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    jon-nycJ
    [image: 1773573748577-img_1047.jpeg]
  • Mamdani so far

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    MikM
    Yes there is. 3 million spots in NYC.
  • Well, it is March 14th…

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    RenaudaR
    @bachophile [image: 1773527774583-b3a0d265-8110-45a0-a9d2-0904b00db763-649532491_1451388649691257_1431889060323588231_n.jpg]
  • Like old cookbooks?

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    MikM
    I didn't know people ate flamingo. I suppose you eat what you have.
  • And you thought you just had a bad cold!!!!

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    MikM
    Ew
  • South Africa

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://thefern.org/2026/03/how-white-south-africans-are-reshaping-the-mississippi-delta/ Mississippi residents who are not involved in agriculture are often shocked by their first encounters with men like Ramsden in the Delta, a place where Black sharecroppers once supplied the workforce on the region’s sprawling farms, and where the percentage of Black residents remains one of the highest in the country. Debates arise on Facebook: a few years ago, one user wondered whether the workers were there on “a gap year for the sons of South African plantation owners.” It only adds to the confusion that men like Ramsden do not fit the stereotype of an H-2A worker. The vast majority of U.S. agricultural visas go to Mexican citizens, and a great deal of the work is what is sometimes called “stoop labor,” ripping out weeds, handpicking fruit, hauling crates of produce. Kitted out in boots and a safari shirt, Ramsden looked more like a tourist than a farmhand. Sometimes, Ramsden and his peers in Mississippi might hop down in the mud to lay irrigation pipe. But their work typically involves operating machinery. The region’s farms mostly grow commodity row crops such soybeans, corn and cotton, which require modern tractors running complex software; laborers monitor G.P.S.-guided equipment that automates planting depth and seed spacing. Jason Holcomb, an emeritus professor of geography and global studies at Morehead State University, told me that South African H-2A workers in the U.S. first found jobs on the Great Plains in the nineteen-nineties, working on custom harvesting crews that travelled from farm to farm, to cut crops. Historically, this work had been a rite of passage for high schoolers and college students in the region. But in the nineteen-nineties, as regulations tightened, local interest waned. Now South Africans represent the fastest-growing source of H-2A farm labor in the U.S.: from 2011 to 2024, the number of visa holders has increased by more than four hundred per cent and the number of South Africans in the program has increased fourteenfold. Ramsden told me that on a flight from Atlanta to South Africa, in November or December, at the end of the working season, you might find that two hundred and fifty of the three hundred passengers are farm workers headed home. “If this program went away tomorrow, farming would cease,” Walter King, one of the co-owners of Nelson-King Farms, said. For the South Africans, part of the draw is money. Ramsden estimated that workers in Mississippi could make at least four times the wages they earned back home. But it’s not just the pay that sends them abroad—there’s also a feeling that they are escaping anti-white sentiment. Many of these men in the Delta are the descendants of colonists who, beginning in the eighteen-thirties, embarked on the “Great Trek,” a migration from the coast of South Africa into the region’s interior to establish farms, and, later, whole republics that were independent from the British Crown. They called themselves Afrikaners to indicate their commitment to what they saw as their homeland, unlike the Brits still tied to London.
  • Canadian Tariff situation gets its own thread

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    taiwan_girlT
    Canada’s multiple-province ban on American products caused a $357 million deficit for the U.S. wine industry. The prohibition, which started after President Trump enacted his controversial, far-reaching tariffs, prompted the value of U.S. wine exports to Canada to plummet from $460 million in 2024 to $103 million in 2025, according to a new report from Wine Institute. The shift marks a 78 percent drop in U.S. wine exports to Canada, according to the report, which summarized data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The ban also accounts for 81 percent of all losses for global U.S. wine exports last year. The report calls last year’s figures the “most catastrophic” trade disruption in a single year for U.S. wine exports in history. https://vinepair.com/booze-news/canada-wine-ban-drops-us-exports-357-million/