noahyoo 유노아

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noahyoo 유노아

noahyoo 유노아

@noahyoo

@wearecafune

Katılım Mayıs 2012
1.9K Takip Edilen6.2K Takipçiler
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Benjamin Dictor
Benjamin Dictor@BenjaminDictor·
Any party that would follow Neera Tanden, after her approach successfully delivered two Trump Administrations, just wants continued fascism at this point.
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noahyoo 유노아
noahyoo 유노아@noahyoo·
thinking about this today with the way so many people have been prattling on about bands that are perfectly fine-to-good
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noahyoo 유노아
noahyoo 유노아@noahyoo·
we are entering the 'negative fandom' dimension. good luck everyone esp. the true critics who are pure of heart (not too many left)
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noahyoo 유노아 retweetledi
Otaking 🇵🇸
Otaking 🇵🇸@TheOtaking·
Baroque - Sting Entertainment - Saturn - 1998
Otaking 🇵🇸 tweet media
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noahyoo 유노아
noahyoo 유노아@noahyoo·
“Music production is a roguelike.” Or whatever analogy leap you gotta make to get there. Idc. This post is right. Please output and not just input.
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noahyoo 유노아
noahyoo 유노아@noahyoo·
Everyone should simply chill out and appreciate the fact that their 7-Elevens have hot water readily available to make ramen, as opposed to American 7-Elevens which have crusty taquitos that have been spinning around for 6 hours best case scenario
yam@sighyam

Japanese and Thais have been fighting on Twitter all day. Here’s the tea lol: A Thai man at a 7-11 attempted to buy a box of instant ramen. He opens it, pours hot water, and then goes to pay. Why? Because in Thailand this is common, as Thais live in a high interpersonal trust society and people can be trusted to pay for things at shops. For added clarity, this practice is mostly done with noodles to save time and not much else. However, in Japan, people are expected to pay for noodles before opening them. A Japanese 7-11 cashier corrects him. No problem. The man pays. Great learning experience. The video is shared online in case other Thais don’t know. A Japanese nationalist account reposts the video: many Japanese netizens harshly criticise the Thai man, with many being racist and xenophobic, even attacking the man for not knowing how to insert cash into the machine, calling him backward, a country bumpkin, and stupid, etc. Thais reacted by criticising the Japanese for their uptightness, saying how when Japanese tourists make mistakes, the Thai mindset and approach are to act calm and reasonable. Thais are confused why it’s so hard to adopt an “it’s okay” mindset, especially when no harm was caused. In Thailand, this is a quintessential mindset that Thais live by. The Japanese side responds and basically says it doesn’t matter… you’re in Japan, and the Thai man is practically stealing. Thais respond by saying, okay, understood but who attempts to steal and then goes to pay? Thais then pull out receipts of all the times Japanese tourists have behaved badly in Thailand, pointing out that bad behaviour stemming from moral bankruptcy like discrimination, sexual assault, and theft is more common from Japanese tourists than from Thais, with many cases making headlines over the past few years alone. Comments about Thailand being backward because the Thai man put the cash note in the wrong way were also met with confusion from the Thai side. In Thailand, QR payments and e-wallets are the default payment methods, and most Thais now adopt this new-gen banking tech. Japan is still a cash heavy society and relies on older infrastructure habits. It’s worth writing that not every Japanese comments are attacking the Thai man. Many are being reasonable and those who have travelled to Thailand have been pushing back against other Japanese netizens comments.

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Yasha Levine
Yasha Levine@yashalevine·
log off. read a book. go for a walk. make love. call your mom. plant some tomatoes. your addiction to information will not change anything.
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noah kulwin
noah kulwin@nkulw·
Would love to know who at the NYT is behind this new, moronic twitter pr clapback strategy
NYTimes Communications@NYTimesPR

@NathanJRobinson The Times has reported on political turmoil and economic crises in Cuba for seven decades. This is one of hundreds of stories from Cuba published this month. If you'd like to read more about U.S. policy, the denial of fuel, and hardships, we’ve covered it in detail:

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REASON
REASON@_Reasonofficial·
There’s a lot of artists right now that aren’t seeing the financial motivation to stay in music. So they’re turning to other things to supplement the income and pouring time into that. Something gotta change with the way streaming works and is paid
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@DukeStJournal
@DukeStJournal@DukeStJournal·
to elaborate: one story is because ATC audio suggests one controller was directing both vehicles due to understaffing, the next is due to serious maintenance lapses, and the last is because regular security isn’t being paid quite a choice for the wealthiest nation on the planet
Joe Weisenthal@TheStalwart

The state of American civil aviation

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noahyoo 유노아
noahyoo 유노아@noahyoo·
Worst possible thing imaginable has happened (girlfriend got really into Max Verstappen)
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Jeet Heer
Jeet Heer@HeerJeet·
“Don't forget the real business of war is buying and selling. The murdering and violence are self-policing, and can be entrusted to non-professionals. The mass nature of wartime death is useful in many ways. It serves as spectacle, as diversion from the real movements of the War. It provides raw material to be recorded into History, so that children may be taught History as sequences of violence, battle after battle, and be more prepared for the adult world. Best of all, mass death's a stimolous to just ordinary folks, little fellows, to try 'n' grab a piece of that Pie while they're still here to gobble it up. The true war is a celebration of markets.” -- Thomas Pynchon, Gravity's Rainbow.
Javier Blas@JavierBlas

Well, I did not anticipate this: *BESSENT: US MAY UNSANCTION IRANIAN OIL THAT’S ON WATER

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