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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/)BS
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2 yr. ago

  • If you're refering to the r-link system, just unplug the fuse and plug it back in, in the fuse compartment. The hardware reset will fix most issues and even unlock otherwise locked features.

  • Honest question: Do you think the military would obey his orders?

    I know the ICE (immigration and customs enforcement) had no problems in doing so, but the military seems to consist of a more varied bunch of people, more patriotic than racist kind of guys, or is that fiction?

  • I bet those 40 hours are more stressful than before.

    Efficiency has increased,so you're probably doing a whole lot of more tasks with the same time, but the bureaucracy still exists. It's just a different kind of bureaucracy.

    While we no longer need to stand in line to get a rubber stamp on a paper from some rude clerk just to pay a bill, we now need to download apps, keep the systems up to date, manage user accounts and input the data exactly how the app wants it. While the individual task might be somewhat easier than before, it is now expected that you do a whole lot more of these bureaucratic tasks yourself. All the tech bloat creeps up and makes every little task a little more difficult than before.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • IMF is part of UN.

    Egypt is trying to achieve a rapid transition to electric vehicles. They have started domestic vehicle production with a little help from China. Not just cars, but also smaller mopeds and such I think.

    So, by making people drive domestic vehicles fueled by domestic electricity, they hope to be less dependent on IMF loans and imported vehicles and fuel. They want to be the key hub for electrifying African vehicles, so they are also aiming for exports.

    It makes sense like that, but it'll obviously piss off a lot of people, both inside and outside of Egypt. I'm not at all sure they can actually see it through. It's a bold move when they have a poor economy to begin with. They are in the middle of a financial crisis, so something drastic needs to be done.

  • I acknowledge that it's a wild take, and I want to stir up shit.

    However, in Denmark m, we do not benefit from a domestic production at all, because it's mostly shipped out of the country for feeding livestock elsewhere.

    Most of the food available to me is from Ukraine or Spain. I do not have the option to eat donestically produced foods, yet 60+ of the land around me is used for farming.

    I absolutely apploud the few farmers who do have local distribution, but those only account for very few percentages of our land.

  • No, it's not a bad thing.

    Denmark being at 60% is horrible. It is land used by less than 0.1% of the population.

    They don't even contribute to the GDP. Tthe entire business model relies heavily on EU susidies and couldn't exist without it. Always moaning about the weather, pricing and competition, fixing the papers to always show a net loss, yet still driving massive luxury cars because apparently Mercedes is the only brand that can drive on the paved roads between the fields.

    However, politically, these thousand people who own or rent all the farm land have way too much power, because they have somehow managed to convince everyone living in the vicinity of this manure desert called agriculture that they somehow also benefit from the success of the business, even if they don't.

    Fuck farming. It's a dirty industry.