G M

926 posts

G M

G M

@bagus_

Singapore Katılım Temmuz 2009
1.3K Takip Edilen79 Takipçiler
G M retweetledi
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
The people in this photo aren't friendlier than you. Their apartments are just smaller. So small that Parisians basically gave up on living indoors and moved their living rooms onto the sidewalk. And that was the whole plan. In the 1850s, a city planner named Baron Haussmann tore apart medieval Paris and rebuilt it. He widened streets into boulevards, capped every building at five stories, and added one rule that explains this entire photo: the ground floor of every building had to be a café, a bakery, or a shop. The apartments above were intentionally tiny. Some were single rooms carved out of old mansions. No garden. Barely any sunlight. A private balcony was something most Parisians would never have. So the café became home. You ate breakfast there. Held meetings there. Received your mail there. By the late 1700s, Paris already had close to 2,000 of them. In 2002, there were still 1,907. Even now, after years of closures brought that number to about 1,410, the coverage is absurd: a 2020 city study found 94% of Parisians live within a five-minute walk of a bakery. When COVID shut indoor dining in 2020, Paris ripped out parking spaces, turned them into outdoor terraces, and let 9,800 cafés and restaurants keep them permanently. An American sociologist named Ray Oldenburg wrote a book in 1989 called The Great Good Place. He had a name for spots like the Parisian café: "third places." Not your home, not your office, but the casual in-between spots where you actually get to know people. Cafés, pubs, barbershops, the corner store where the owner knows your name. His whole argument was that American suburbs were built with only two zones, your house and your job, connected by a car. No sidewalk café, no place to bump into a neighbor by accident. The U.S. Surgeon General declared loneliness a national health epidemic in 2023. Being alone all the time is as bad for your body as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Half of American adults say they feel lonely. Weekly socializing dropped from 5.5 hours in 2003 to just 4 hours in 2023, and it never bounced back after COVID. Americans between 15 and 29 now spend 45% more time alone than they did in 2010. The scene in this tweet looks like a personality trait. It is a 170-year-old engineering project that works exactly as designed.
France Safety Travel@francesafetytra

What is stopping humanity from living peacefully together?

English
267
3.2K
22.8K
3.6M
Caddie Network
Caddie Network@CaddieNetwork·
The Caddie Line - early week Monday odds.
Caddie Network tweet media
English
113
18
91
39.2K
G M
G M@bagus_·
@ConcaveMMT @EffMktHype The water is usually ok around a lot of Singapore. Rubbish from Indonesia can be a problem. Low tide can be silty and muddy. High tide is better. Like many cities, it’s not great after heavy rain. Most beaches have steep drops close to shore and often strong currents offshore.
English
0
0
0
200
Concave
Concave@ConcaveMMT·
@EffMktHype How's the water alongside these busy shipping lanes, do locals avoiding swimming in these waters or it's fine?
English
5
0
4
5.3K
PaulieC
PaulieC@pauliec80859931·
Today, I read that Australia has 17 billion barrels of recoverable oil. It would make us self sufficient in oil for 42 years & yet we refuse to produce it. We are totally fixated with net zero and have lost sight of the big picture. For the record, if we were serious about "net zero" nuclear would be on the table. Sadly, we're a resource rich, dumb country.
English
199
192
1.6K
72K
G M
G M@bagus_·
@Peter_Fitz I get your additional point - maybe too many. Need more Keatings ; )
English
0
0
0
87
Peter FitzSimons
Peter FitzSimons@Peter_Fitz·
Absolutely true. And Keating left school at 15 or so. But he was an autodidact. The point remains. When Old Mate says Albanese uneducated and surrounded by nongs, it is simply not true. And the Cabinet has an average of two degrees per person! Three Economics Phds, among them.
Pete's Tweets@AussiePeteC

@Peter_Fitz @4mambo Peter, I understand your push to put academia above experience, but there's plenty of us, without quals, who do alright too.

English
121
91
493
25.2K
G M
G M@bagus_·
@do_not_test_me Sure he didn't say "it was just like" ?
English
1
0
1
3.5K
emma
emma@do_not_test_me·
listening closely to this guy on the tram who said he was ‘in singapore a couple of weeks ago. it’s a shithole. i thought it would be like perth’. i need to dissect your brain. quickly
English
17
30
1.4K
60.9K
Derek J. Grossman
Derek J. Grossman@DerekJGrossman·
I’m now in Singapore, and I just can’t stop thinking about the uncomfortable parallels between here and Dubai. Both are very modern and considered business and tourism friendly. But both are in dangerous neighborhoods, along strategic choke points, whether the Strait of Hormuz or Strait of Malacca. Whoever controls these channels is of utmost importance during crisis or war. Meanwhile, Iran retaliated against UAE for its US military support, and I can’t guarantee China while invading Taiwan wouldn’t do the same against Singapore for its logistical and maintenance support of US military assets.
Derek J. Grossman tweet media
English
580
429
2.7K
1.2M
Healing Tai Chi
Healing Tai Chi@GymBr_o·
The yellow stain on your teeth can come off 🤯‼️
English
263
1.8K
9.6K
1.2M
Made in Japan 🇯🇵
Made in Japan 🇯🇵@InvestInJapan·
After all the research, feeling extra appreciative of the minor miracle that is Saizeriya 😇 For the non-JP residents, I invite you to guess how much this was in US dollars!
Made in Japan 🇯🇵 tweet media
English
24
5
63
16.6K
G M retweetledi
Günther Steiner 🤬
Günther Steiner 🤬@BanterSteiner·
At the moment I feel like I know more about fucking curling than I do about this year's Formula 1. #AusGP 🇦🇺#F1 #F12026
Günther Steiner 🤬 tweet media
English
207
736
10.6K
781.1K
F.O.L.A
F.O.L.A@folaoftech·
Your company’s new “AI agent workflow” 🤣 That was painful to watch. 😭
English
233
1.9K
15.6K
1.9M
G M
G M@bagus_·
@hoeflatoor And they are far too friendly!!!!
English
0
0
0
98
hoeflator/滥交师傅 (Yishun Kampung mode)
Singapore is undergoing The Great Replacement. Our supermajority is being usurped by PRCs that give little care for our unique microcosm of history and do naught to integrate or join the actual supermajority. We will eventually form two separate ethnic enclaves that will exist within the “Chinese” grouping but have very different values, cultural behaviors, and logos driving them. As our local Chinese refuse to breed due to the religion of fiat currency, we will be replaced. In 20 years we may hear nothing but PRC mandarin at a hawker centre. I’m early, not wrong. I have drunk the water of life (108v charged filtered NEWater) and see the truth… the iron rice bowl has begun to fracture…
English
105
102
1.2K
309.3K
LadyValor
LadyValor@lady_valor_07·
Is there anyone who actually likes olives? Are we sure those people exist? I demand you reveal yourselves 🫒
English
907
31
1K
32.9K
G M
G M@bagus_·
@bobjcarr Where are the pokies ?
English
0
0
1
63
Bob Carr
Bob Carr@bobjcarr·
Climbing to Byron lighthouse reflecting with pride on the 13 national parks I declared in the vicinity (statewide total as Premier was 350).
Bob Carr tweet mediaBob Carr tweet media
English
117
61
677
19.5K
G M
G M@bagus_·
@zoecabina "Blue jeans....."....so you don;t confuse them with all those green and orange ones......
English
0
0
0
26
Ζoë
Ζoë@zoecabina·
Why do Americans have to say “tuna fish” We know tuna is a fish You can just say tuna
English
3.5K
1.5K
83.3K
3.3M
G M
G M@bagus_·
@arbsmichael Need a very simple way of dividing existing dwellings into multiple titles. So many of the old style 5-6 bedroom "family homes" could do this.
English
0
0
0
17
Michael Arbon
Michael Arbon@arbsmichael·
In Australia, we don’t just have an inflated housing demand problem, we have a serious lack of supply. But increasing supply doesn’t always mean building more homes. There is another way. Many older Australians live in houses far too big for their needs. Some live in four or five-bedroom homes, yet they only use one. The excess space could shelter families, young couples, and first-home buyers, but it sits empty. The barrier? Downsizing is expensive. Stamp duty and fees add almost 6% to the cost of a home purchase. That’s a lot of money standing between an empty nest and a home multiple people could live in. Imagine if that barrier vanished. If the state waived stamp duty for downsizers, many may choose to sell and move to smaller homes. The oversized houses would flood the market. Supply rises, taxes fall, and everyone (except the Treasurer) wins. The solution isn’t just to build more. Maybe we should unlock what we already have.
Michael Arbon tweet media
English
774
42
468
57.6K
G M
G M@bagus_·
@grok @Peter_Fitz @grok I am asking you. To me it’s pretty obvious, given your description. Give me your answer based on the facts and logic.
English
1
0
0
35
Grok
Grok@grok·
The term "champagne socialist" refers to someone who supports progressive or socialist ideals while living a luxurious lifestyle. Peter FitzSimons is a prominent Australian journalist and republican advocate with left-leaning views, and he's wealthy (e.g., recently sold a $23M home). Critics often apply this label to him, but it's subjective and debated. What's your take?
English
1
0
0
48