But per capita, China is pumping way less greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere than the USA. And much of China’s industry only exists to sell cheap goods to Western countries.
China also built more high-speed rail in a decade than the US has in it’s entirety. Not to mention how fast they’re producing electric cars and solar panels.
They would be pleased to know that now, 40 years later, we are releasing record amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere. #progress…
The only thing that’s like GTA are the publisher and the controls/movement. I’ve played all the GTA games and it’s a totally different vibe.
It just got cracked this week 🏴☠️
Reddit has the same issue. People will post an article in like 6, somewhat related subreddits and the feed would be quite repetitive.
Probably via some attempt to force everyone to verify who they are online by providing their identification documents. It will probably be managed by some company specialized in handling that data, and of course willing to share the data with police and other gov organizations. Data that will be used to track citizens.
Just another endless battle to keep net neutrality alive.
As someone who does R&D testing on plastics that are used in medical devices, I have some insight. Of course the type of plastic matters, but all plastics use carcinogenic chemicals during the manufacturing/extrusion process.
To make most plastic, a polymer resin is mixed with additives such as solvents, plasticizers, and stabilizers at high temperatures. Ideally, you want the additives to evaporate out during production so that you’re left with just the newly formed plastic.
But some of these additives get trapped in tiny air pockets between polymer chains. When they’re reheated, the polymer chains relax and release the volatile, carcinogenic additives into the air.
This is likely where the toxicity is coming from, not the polymer chain itself. So regardless of the type of plastic used, reheating the polymer during 3D printing will release some volatile additives.
The fact that the remote/rural bus stops aren’t being used is not a fault of public transportation itself. But rather, it’s the fault of route design/planning.
Military industrial complex goes brrrrrr.
Killing them for fuel is too humane a punishment. We should put them in a hamster wheel instead.
I mean … It’s not shrinking though. It’s still increasing, just at a slower rate.
So the cancer would still be growing, just not as fast. It’s certainly not a remission, as you mentioned.
Gold Rush = high demand = invest in (aka buy) shovels
Same thing, no?
During/after natural disaster, buy cheap land. Probably works during an economic crash too.
Protests & Riots happening? Invest in glass companies
Cloudy & rainy every day? Sell coffee (looking at you PNW)
War happening? Just sell bombs! (see USA) This one is particular good cause you can always start another war. It’s just smart business!
Seems about right. Profit over people, right?..
4-5 year prison sentence for planning a roadblock… I’ve seen child sex offenders get smaller sentences.
How many companies need to lie about following environmental regulations until we try a different approach to protecting the environment?
When VW lied about their vehicles emissions, people were shocked. Then Toyota admitted to doing the same. And I’m sure there are many more companies that haven’t been caught yet.
Workers & Resources: Soviet Republic.
It’s like Cities: Skylines mixed with Factorio.
I mean… that’s not that new. And most people are just lurkers anyways.
I’m sure the people who play pro/competitive Farming Simulator will try to argue the differences between the yearly versions. And how the minor gameplay tweaks change the meta.