therealnewd
1.7K posts

therealnewd
@therealnewerd
20 | 🇧🇾😼🎧 https://t.co/P5xlib4vv7: https://t.co/ZZIdK848xh sc: https://t.co/evpufThEuP & https://t.co/Z2lDRg0Bfz
Katılım Aralık 2023
348 Takip Edilen89 Takipçiler

@Canonfire_ why is this on my tl anyways yall ai bros need to go die or smth
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The Dor Brothers, one of the most popular brands in AI media, is getting de-platformed by Youtube. This should be an enormous wake up call for anyone making AI content.
We need spaces that allow us to thrive creatively and financially. Our mission is to build one. Stay tuned.
The Dor Brothers@thedorbrothers
Btw, this still isn’t on YouTube because YouTube is trying to kill our channel. Our videos keep getting struck constantly while way more graphic videos stay up on the platform every day.
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@cartisburner__ youve yet to hear worse bars bro i can name at least 10 worse bars on agc alone
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@windskylark every visual novel is free if you know where to look
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@KeyMusicDaily The one with Mio and Kud and Haruka and Komari and Rin and Kurugaya
Eesti

@marcosagusstinn i dont give a fuck bout sweden get this shout out of my tl
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In 2025, 99% of Sweden’s electricity came from low-carbon sources — the highest share in the EU.
Its power system is built on a model Europe should have copied decades ago:
→ Hydro: ~40% of electricity
→ Nuclear: ~27%
→ Wind: ~23%
→ Fossil fuels: only ~1.2%
Sweden combined domestic hydro, nuclear baseload, rapid wind expansion, bioenergy, district heating and electrification.
In 2024, Sweden already had the highest renewable energy share in the EU: 62.8% of gross final energy consumption, compared with only 25.2% for the EU average.
And in 2025, Sweden doubled down: parliament passed legislation to finance a new generation of nuclear reactors, targeting around 5,000 MW of new capacity, with roughly half expected online by 2035.
This is what Europe should have done over the last two decades.
(Sweden had a structural advantage: abundant rivers, large hydro resources, low population density and decades of investment in domestic clean power). But the lesson is not only geography.
With common debt, larger national investment and coordinated European energy projects, Europe could have moved much closer to real energy sovereignty through renewables, hydro, nuclear, grids, storage and electrification.
Instead, much of Europe remained too dependent on external fossil fuels.

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