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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)KE
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2 yr. ago

  • Eventually the interest in the debt will grow too large to service. The government will have to print more and more money leading to hyperinflation. The entire global economy will be impacted as faith in the dollar collapses. The global economy slows and eventually switches to trading in the Yuan. The US loses a ton of it's soft power globally.

  • I own the push mower version.

    That was true of the first gen batteries. They lasted a year and then stopped holding a charge.

    There are second gen batteries that seem to be holding up better, I'll be going into my third year with them soon so we'll see.

  • They are more efficient than pure ICE vehicles though in most situations.

    At low speed and city driving the regenerative breaking can make a 30mpg motor into a 50-60 mpg motor.

    I drove one for awhile and the efficiency is noticable.

  • You want to get things like this passed, you get a big enough group to just walk around down town in the rich area open carrying and mean mugging everyone.

    Make the upper class uncomfortable. You'll get that passes in no time.

  • They where none stop shelling Donbass

    Yes, it so happens a civil war was being fought there.

    But the majority of the fighting ended with the second Minsk accords. After 2017 on average only about a dozen people died a year from combat actions. So there couldn't have been much shelling going on in 2022.

    How does a dozen or two deaths a year warrant an escalation to a hundred thousand deaths a year?

    took away the rights of the Russian speaking population many times

    Which rights, when did this happen? I'm honestly curious abuot this.

    flagrantly violated both minsk accords.

    Both sides did that. A lot.

    But what does that have to do with Russia's 2022 invasion? Putin himself said that Russia would not get involved in the enforcement of the Minsk accords because it was an internal Ukrainian matter.

    Also you are convenently forgetting that Russia has REPEATEDLY offered peace treaties,

    Because Russia wants to not only keep the land they've invaded but also dictate the way Ukraine conducts it's diplomatic relations with other nations. Ukraine is fighting for it's sovereignty here. Russia is trying to take that away.

  • Oppressed how?

    Across all sides (Civilian, Military, Ukranian and Russian), an estimated 150-200K people have died and half a million wounded since the start of the invasion in 2022.

    What kind of oppression could possibly been having taken place that necessitates such an escalation?

  • I am convinced the goal was to provoke a strong response from Israel. The reason is they knew the strong response from Israel would be disproportional and would damage relations between Israel and the rest of the ME.

    Israel was approaching normalized relations with most of the major Arab nations around it, most importantly SA. Normalized relations with Israel would likely mean significantly less political and economical support coming to Hamas. Without outside resources Hamas is neutered.

    So, seeing the real possibility of a large reduction in their economic and political power in the horizon they took desperate action to stop it, knowing full well the outcome.

  • I did that for my employees this year.

    Pissed off I've client who wanted us to work on their project this week because it's when they are least busy.

    When I demanded 20k to pay out my guys to make them miss their week off they backed down.

  • It was all part of an effort to economically hurt Russia in response to the war.

    Best case scenario was Russia deciding the hit to their economy was not worth the war and back pedaling. No one realistically thought this was going to happen though.

    The next best case scenario was for the changes in quality of life for the average Russian would create enough internal pressure that the war would be called off.

    This hasn't happened yet but internal support for the war has been dropping over the last year and some of that is attributed to the dismal state of the Russian economy, which is a direct result of things like Lush pulling out.

    https://www.euronews.com/2023/12/02/russians-support-of-ukraine-war-collapses-finds-poll

    And even if neither of these come up fruition, the more Russias economy is damaged the harder it is to fund their war effort. This gives Ukraine a bit more breathing room in their war effort.

    While the effect of a single company like Lush is unnoticed, it's the collective effect of everything from these pullouts, to trade sanctions and other soft power diplomatic plays which total up to a noticable effect.

  • Just because things don't turn out how you hoped doesn't mean you didn't make the right decision at the time with the information that was available.

    Too often we judge past actions only through the lens of hindsight. It's useful for learning what went wrong but it's not useful for judging if something was the right decision or not.