🔻¡Cuánto rojo!🔻
11.2K posts

🔻¡Cuánto rojo!🔻
@Panocooo
Energía a Calor y producimos

Palestinian children and women break down in tears as they watch Israeli occupation forces demolish their home in Khirbet al-Deirat, Masafer Yatta, in the occupied West Bank.

Aquí tenéis a Borja Iglesias vuestro ser de luz de la izquierda progre , abrazando a un fascista reconocido como Pepe Reina, hay nas antifascismo en negarle un saludo a un fascista que en pintarse las uñas y llevar bolso.

How do we begin to reconstruct our lives when we are starting from zero everyday?


Meta used AI to target workers with medical conditions for layoffs, according to a new lawsuit. Twenty-six former Meta employees are suing, accusing the company of using AI that disproportionately targeted people with disabilities or workers who took medical leave in selecting people for mass layoffs. reuters.com/world/meta-use…

BREAKING NEWS: Trump finally admits that he used nuclear weapons against Iran. This is an official admission. I don't want to hear another word from the collective of ret*rds claiming every single nuclear explosion is a depot explosion or a thremobarbaric bomb.

BREAKING: Israel is raining bombs on civilian areas in Gaza right now. Families have nowhere to run. Nowhere is safe. The genocide has not stopped.

Desde este ángulo es brutal. Esto de Sorloth le va a perseguir toda su carrera. ¿Qué puede pasar por tu cabeza para llevar a un lado a Haaland en un 2 contra 1 y no pasarle el balón?

Defensor de los Derechos Humanos.

Scientists are now seriously discussing spraying particles over the Pacific to squash a super El Niño. The idea is called marine cloud brightening. By spraying tiny sea salt particles into low-lying clouds over the Pacific, researchers hope to make the clouds more reflective, bounce more sunlight back into space, and cool the ocean enough to weaken a developing super El Niño. Computer simulations suggest it could reduce El Niño’s intensity by around 40%. But there’s a problem. Nobody knows what the long-term consequences would be. Other research suggests that brightening the wrong part of the Pacific could disrupt much of the natural El Niño–La Niña cycle, a climate system that influences rainfall, droughts, agriculture, and weather patterns across the globe. That’s why scientists are not proposing real-world deployment. The risks of unintended consequences are still too great. The fact that we’re seriously discussing engineering the planet’s weather is a reminder of how far we’ve pushed the climate system. [Source: Computer simulations suggest the approach could reduce a super El Niño’s intensity by around 40%.]















