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General Discussion

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A place to talk about whatever you want

  • Collection of Pinned Threads

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  • Funny Pics

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    MikM
    [image: 1773514572434-d0393516-5b21-40ca-8668-8589a583a123-image.jpeg]
  • Like old cookbooks?

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    MikM
    I didn't know people ate flamingo. I suppose you eat what you have.
  • Mamdani so far

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    MikM
    One wonders how many times voters will fall for promises of free stuff.
  • 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/
  • Why Concerts Cost So Much

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://apnews.com/article/livenation-antitrust-ticketmaster-states-95d16c3d8a36adaeff57f400a63227f3 More than 30 states will resume their antitrust trial against Live Nation and Ticketmaster on Monday after negotiations this week failed to result in many states joining a tentative settlement reached by the Justice Department. Lawyers told the judge Friday at a hearing in New York that seven states — Arkansas, Iowa, Mississippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina and South Dakota, all of which have Republican attorneys general — were joining the Justice Department in settling with the live music giant. The other 32 states, along with the District of Columbia, plan to continue trying to convince a jury that Live Nation Entertainment and its ticketing subsidiary, Ticketmaster, are squelching competition and driving up prices for fans. They say this was done through threats, retaliation and other tactics to control virtually every aspect of the industry, from concert promotion to ticketing.
  • Well, it is March 14th…

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.wired.com/story/you-can-approximate-pi-by-dropping-needles-on-the-floor/ This is probably for @horace or @kalus Pi is an infinitely long decimal number that never repeats. How do we know? Well, humans have calculated it to 314 trillion decimal places and didn’t reach the end. At that point, I’m inclined to accept it. I mean, NASA uses only the first 15 decimal places for navigating spacecraft, and that’s more than enough for earthly applications. The coolest thing, for me, is that there are many ways to approximate that value, which I’ve written about in the past. For instance, you can do it by oscillating a mass on a spring. But maybe the craziest method of all was proven in 1777 by George Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon. Decades earlier, Buffon had posed this as a probability question in geometry: Imagine you have a floor with parallel lines separated by a distance d. Onto this floor, you drop a bunch of needles with length L. What is the probability that a needle will cross one of the parallel lines? and But you don’t have to do any calculus. Instead, just drop a bunch of needles, count the number of crossings, and divide by the total number of needles. This ratio should be close to the probability of crossing (2/π). We can use this to find the value of pi. Some fools have actually dropped needles on their floor, but I'm just going to do a random-number simulation with Python. Here's what it looks like with 100 needles: In this simulation, 66 of the 100 needles crossed a line (you can count ’em). Using this number, we get a value of pi at 3.0303—which is not 3.14—but it's not terrible for just 100 needles. With 30,000 needles, you might be accurate to six decimal places.
  • Beyond the antivaxx stuff MAHA is either banal or fake

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.wusf.org/2026-03-14/in-south-carolina-measles-shows-how-far-apart-neighbors-can-be-on-vaccines "How did we get here?" she asks. "How did we get to a place where we don't trust our doctors to do the very best thing for our children? How did we get to a place where vaccinations have become political?" The answer is a mix of widespread misinformation, lingering resentment over COVID mandates, and politicians at the local and national level who are sowing mistrust of vaccines.
  • The great Russian internet disconnect

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  • Data centers and AI gobbling electricity

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    taiwan_girlT
    Basically, the article talks about how there is and maybe more reliance on fossil fuels to power the data centers. (Obviously more detail and some interesting side stories also.) https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/2026/04/ai-data-centers-energy-demands/686064/
  • Question for Taiwan girl

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    89th8
    https://militarnyi.com/en/news/china-mobilizes-thousands-of-fishing-boats-to-practice-naval-blockade/ [image: 1773506695091-1340c61f-9ad3-44df-bc66-b1c93841134a-image.jpeg] https://militarnyi.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Formatsiya-kytajskyj-rybolovetskyh-suden-zafiksovana-25-grudnya.-Infografika-The-New-York-Times-1.jpg
  • Don't forget about Artemis

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/nasa-says-its-a-go-for-fresh-artemis-ii-moon-launch-attempt-but-admits-risks/ “If you look at the data over time, over the lifespan of just building new rockets, right, the data would show you that one out of two is successful. You're only successful 50 percent of the time,” Honeycutt said. “I think we’re in a much better position than that.” I know I have mentioned this before, but I was once able to attend a talk by Buzz Aldrin (US astronaut on the first mission to the moon.). He mentioned that prior to going, they figured there was a 90% chance they would make it to the moon, but about a 60% chance that they would come back.
  • ChatGPT

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    taiwan_girlT
    Unfortunate, that every picture, video, etc. we have to now question if it is real or not.
  • Are Stell Pipes Alive?

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    jon-nycJ
    If it’s been more than four hours they need to seek medical attention.
  • The Dark or Inappropriate Humor Thread

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    bachophileB
    https://x.com/fastbreakhoops5/status/2032571905178550445?s=61
  • The Iran War (was Nuclear Program) thread

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    bachophileB
    From @shanaka86 on X Long but interesting BREAKING: President Trump just released the footage. The most secretive bomber in the American arsenal hitting the most valuable military real estate in Iran. And he wants the world to watch. The video published on Truth Social shows B-2 Spirit stealth bombers conducting precision strikes on Kharg Island’s military infrastructure. Runway cratering charges tear the airbase apart in sequential detonations. Multiple explosions bloom across IRGC missile launch sites, coastal defence batteries, radar installations, and garrison facilities. The footage is steady, clinical, and unmistakable. The bombs are 2,000-pound JDAMs, GPS-guided GBU-31 and GBU-32 variants, the same munitions that cratered Iraqi airfields in 2003 and Afghan command centres for two decades. They are dropped by an aircraft that Iran’s air defence network cannot detect, track, or engage. The oil terminals are visible in every frame. They are untouched. That is the message. Not the destruction. The restraint. Ninety percent of Iran’s crude exports flow through those terminals. The loading jetties stand. The storage tanks are full. The infrastructure that funds the IRGC, that pays for the Shaheds, that finances the Mosaic Doctrine’s 31 autonomous commands, that underwrites every mine on the seabed of Hormuz, is intact and one presidential decision from joining the rubble surrounding it. The B-2 Spirit was designed to penetrate Soviet air defence networks during nuclear war. It carries 40,000 pounds of ordnance inside a flying wing with a radar cross-section smaller than a bird. Twenty aircraft exist. Each costs $2.1 billion. The United States sent its most expensive, most classified, most capable strategic asset to crater a runway on a 20-square-kilometre island in the Persian Gulf because the message required the messenger. A B-52 could have dropped the same JDAMs. An F-15E could have cratered the same runway. The B-2 was chosen because its presence means Iran had no warning, no interception opportunity, and no defence. The bombs arrived before the sound. The runway cratering is tactically decisive. A cratered runway cannot launch aircraft, receive resupply, or evacuate personnel. The IRGC garrison of 250 to 500 personnel is now isolated on an island whose military defences have been destroyed, whose airstrip is inoperable, and whose only remaining value is the oil infrastructure the United States deliberately chose not to destroy. The garrison cannot be reinforced by air. It cannot project force by sea because the IRGC Navy is at the bottom of the Gulf. It exists on an island that America controls from the sky while Iran controls from the ground, and the ground shrinks every hour the runway stays cratered. The footage itself is a weapon. Trump did not release it for documentation. He released it for deterrence. Every IRGC commander watching the video sees an aircraft they cannot detect delivering ordnance they cannot stop onto an island they cannot defend. Every Iranian decision-maker watching the terminals standing untouched beside the rubble understands the conditional: the restraint is voluntary. The next strike does not need to be restrained. The strategy emerging from the strike, the Marines deployment, and the Kharg footage is sequential strangulation. Destroy the military capacity to defend the island. Crater the runway to isolate the garrison. Deploy the Tripoli ARG with 2,500 Marines and F-35Bs for air superiority and potential amphibious seizure. Hold the oil terminals as leverage for a war-ending negotiation in which Iran’s 90% export revenue becomes the ransom for every American objective: open the Strait, surrender the uranium, dismantle the enrichment programme. Iran’s crown jewel is no longer Iran’s. It is a hostage sitting on a cratered runway surrounded by rubble, guarded by a garrison that cannot be reinforced, watched by an aircraft it cannot see, and one decision away from ceasing to exist.
  • The Venezuelan Oil Thread

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    AxtremusA
    https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/13/us/politics/trump-seized-oil-tankers-cost.html The Oil Tankers Trump Seized Are Costing the U.S. Millions of Dollars ... the cost of maintaining just one aging ship has already reached $47 million [in three months]. And the oil cannot be sold yet pending litigation.
  • Marco's shoes

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://nodebb.the-new-coffee-room.club/topic/64/funny-pics/8357?_=1773454740123