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AT 🌻
@KeepingitAap
could sum1 tell me who pushed my lancia down a ditch that night
Tartu, Eesti Katılım Mayıs 2017
203 Takip Edilen201 Takipçiler
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"Meil on sitt, AGA meie *liitlastel* (keda ta mõtleb?) on seis veel sitem — nii et rõõmustagem, seltsimehed!"
Molly Ploofkins@Mollyploofkins
Vance says Americans should find comfort in the fact that our allies are "suffering more than we are" from high gas prices
Eesti

Soetud globaalturg ühtsete hindadega töötab ainult siis kui elutähtsad ressurssid pole nii haruldased, et riikidel pole mõtet nende ekspordile piiranguid panna
Ramez Naam@ramez
@RurbanHermit In interlinked global markets, it's generally about cost, not physical access.
Eesti
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The fertilizer crisis brewing because of Hormuz is going to be felt predominantly by people in some of the poorest nations on earth. Americans will only barely notice. Why?
1. The US, China, Europe, and other rich regions apply so much fertilizer per acre today that crop yields already show diminishing returns from fertilizer. You can cut back fertilizer application by double digit percentages and see quite small yield impacts.
2. Only maybe 10% of what Americans spend on food pays for what's coming off the farm. Farm commodity price surges get highly diluted before they reach American pocket books.
3. Poorer nations food budgets are much closer to actual farm commodity prices. Percentage changes in crops affect poor nation residents much more directly.
4. Poor nation farmers can afford much less fertilizer already, and are at the usage levels of steep gains, where any fertilizer reduction directly impacts crop yields. They're the ones most likely to cut back. Those poor nations are the ones to see crop yields decline and food spending soar.
Rich country residents might see some prices tick up. Poor countries may see hunger and food insecurity directly rise.
DOD and the US intelligence community have long warned that risks to food, water, and climate are threat multipliers. They increase the risk of state failure of Least Developed Countries. That in turn creates the conditions for civil war and breeding grounds for extremism and terrorism, along with migration.
These things are very hard to predict. We might get lucky. Second order effects may be muted. Or we may see unexpected and unpleasant ripple effects from the developing world.
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@Alejandro_XBT Too optimistic. With the organ transplants and blood transfusions, these Lich can hold out for another twenty years.

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Life pro tip. Not enough people talk about this. The secret to having a "fulfilling" life is doing new things. Radically doing new things. Consistently. Every day. New activities, people, goals, even something as simple as trying new foods. Life feels longer when you're a kid because every day is packed with almost infinite amount of new learning. As you get older, you've already acclimated to your environment, the new inputs stop, so your perception of time speeds up drastically. You fall into routine, which is a time accelerant. If you want to feel like you have a long infinite lifespan, like you did as a child, you MUST be having new experiences, which slows time down.
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