Damarrama

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Damarrama

Damarrama

@dandheedge

evolving victim of skill issue

Katılım Temmuz 2009
415 Takip Edilen500 Takipçiler
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Damarrama
Damarrama@dandheedge·
2026 movie log
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---@parlefeu·
Laut Bercerita dibikinin sekuelnya dong, Mbak Leila. Ceritanya, di masa depan, teman-teman Laut sudah pada jadi wakil menteri untuk rezim yang dulu menculik mereka. Kerjanya nggak ada yang becus, tapi somehow masih dianggap progresip.
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Damarrama
Damarrama@dandheedge·
sean baker dan bocil broken home cinematic universe boxd.it/BLDW
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Damarrama
Damarrama@dandheedge·
2026 movie log
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Damarrama retweetledi
Damarrama retweetledi
Samuel Sinyangwe
Samuel Sinyangwe@samswey·
Right now you’re largely experiencing the economy from a time when the Strait of Hormuz was open, because it takes many weeks for oil tankers to traverse the seas. You still experience the Strait as open, even though it’s been closed for weeks. But once that reality hits…
The Best@Thebestfigen

Paradox: If you see a baby located 90 light-years from Earth, right now it would be a 90-year-old, but you see it in your present, as a baby. While the light takes time to reach you, the baby grows and ages. When you look at the universe, you are always looking at the past.

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Damarrama
Damarrama@dandheedge·
solusi dari loneliness epidemic ternyata nongkrong
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.

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