thunderstrand

26 posts

thunderstrand

thunderstrand

@thunderstrand

keeping myself amused at any cost

Katılım Şubat 2020
446 Takip Edilen12 Takipçiler
Ding Dong
Ding Dong@DingDong_doodle·
@BanGaoRen Bit racist isn’t it, would you say the same if he was white?
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Ben Goren
Ben Goren@BanGaoRen·
Genuinely think the Green Party should write a formal complaint to Sky News about Trevor Philip's interview of Zack Polanski today. Not even the pretence of reporting and good faith questioning.
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Gerard Ragnauth
Gerard Ragnauth@geeronnimo·
@BanGaoRen Polanski SPECTACULARLY failed to get the point that Trevor Phillips was making. Instead, he tried to play with semantics over the notion of 'perceived' antisemitism. It was a poor performance.
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mob
mob@immacooljoe·
@ohcrapohno agreed. it is dumb to expect 100% of people will vote red, this argument is pretty stupid. Also pretty dumb to think > 50% would vote blue.
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thunderstrand
thunderstrand@thunderstrand·
@ohcrapohno Demented that this argument gets used by redcels. 51% of people will just!
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thunderstrand
thunderstrand@thunderstrand·
@thomasforth “Remaining within strict boundaries and drinking alcohol” describes my experience of being British quite well
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Tom Forth
Tom Forth@thomasforth·
"Enjoy Traditional British Hospitality" instantly followed by "Comply with the Loicence! Elf n Safety" is fantastic comedy. We've still got it.
Tom Forth tweet media
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Tony B
Tony B@Anthony23Bryant·
@angryaboutbikes Another gullible pipe dreamer. Why can’t small towns and large villages sustain these things at present? Shouldn’t be too difficult, yet it’s not happening.
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thunderstrand
thunderstrand@thunderstrand·
@DaftLimmy Pong I think. Dad must have got it at a jumble sale. Why do you ask?
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thunderstrand
thunderstrand@thunderstrand·
@WeirdMedieval U don’t know me, but I happened to get a button-up cardigan version of this exact pattern from Vinted for about £35 last autumn. So don’t give up eh
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thunderstrand
thunderstrand@thunderstrand·
@bluthwayne77 @FoldUpToys You know the subtext of that clip was the guy had been using the wire to jerk off and didn’t want the girl to find out right?
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bluthwayne
bluthwayne@bluthwayne77·
@FoldUpToys Spool of wire. It's not the thing, it's the life lived and memories associated with the thing.
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thunderstrand
thunderstrand@thunderstrand·
@seatsixtyone The idea that criticism of specific governments is synonymous with anti-semitism is a tactic to silence criticism of those governments. It’s very cynical. I think you’re right to clarify, but some of the responses to you were not in good faith.
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The Man in Seat 61
The Man in Seat 61@seatsixtyone·
I think I owe people an apology. The other day I vented my anger & frustration at an illegal & unnecessary war in a reply to someone, saying I no longer believed at face value anything I saw connected with the warring governments...
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linda goodman 🧡🌻🇪🇺
@A70578286811 @RachelMoiselle Maybe engage your brain and think about it. Do you think St John Ambulance comes out automatically for emergencies? It’s a charity set up by Jews, funded by Jews and they make it available for others in need.
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Rachel Moiselle
Rachel Moiselle@RachelMoiselle·
Hatzola was established in 1979 by members of the Orthodox Jewish community in North London. It is a volunteer, non-profit organisation providing rapid pre-hospital emergency medical care and ambulance response free of charge to the community, serving both Jewish and non-Jewish patients alike. In 2026 four of its ambulances are burned down in Golders Green. I can’t think of a more tragic illustration of the destructive nature of antisemitism, which harms both the Jewish community and wider society at large. Hatzola is of benefit to everyone: a shining example of the contribution Jewish communities endeavour make to their respective diaspora societies. The arsonists responsible for this heinous act do not share the same desire to contribute to Britain; their only intent is to destroy. Any society that adopts a passive attitude towards such antisemitic criminals is, in equal measure, betraying its loyal Jewish citizens and acting in a manner of profound self-harm.
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stummyRubs
stummyRubs@rubbystummy·
@thunderstrand @SBoushahri @AustinJtodd @grok @MohanadElbalal Hehe, I’m not a sheep like you people, I read my info from people I support who support the same thing as me and also twitter and google so Im much more informed than the bot who read every last one of those things and things from the other side and spat out a non biased analysis
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Ian O'Doherty
Ian O'Doherty@OdohertyI64991·
@north0fnorth That is so incredibly original. You must be some kind of genius. Nobody has ever said that to him. You really are original. Well done.
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JAMES 🟡
JAMES 🟡@MrGallaxia·
@henningsanden It’s still the future irrespective of what anyone says Ai wil change every element of game design
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Henning Sanden
Henning Sanden@henningsanden·
When art directing you need to design everything towards a quality bar. We accept that games don’t look real because the anim, textures, lighting all hit about the same bar. This looks incredibly off because the texture and asset bar is way above the animation and general movement. Photo realism with game level anim will always look incredibly off.
NVIDIA GeForce@NVIDIAGeForce

Announcing NVIDIA DLSS 5, an AI-powered breakthrough in visual fidelity for games, coming this fall. DLSS 5 infuses pixels with photorealistic lighting and materials, bridging the gap between rendering and reality. Learn More → nvidia.com/en-us/geforce/…

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Raiden
Raiden@raidenpb·
@lunarxtears i like spreading misinfo on internet too but they actually loved the remake
Raiden tweet media
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tk🌌
tk🌌@lunarxtears·
If you think fromsoftware is a villain for not letting bluepoint defile bloodborne you might have 0 braincells
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BladeoftheSun
BladeoftheSun@BladeoftheS·
Tesco makes nearly £4bn profit. Nearly 50% of its workforce are on Universal Credit, receiving about £600m a year. Why isn't Tesco paying?
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Dr. M.F. Khan
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories·
At first glance, the photograph looks almost like a trick of the eye — tiny shapes scattered across a pale slope, like ants resting on a mound of earth. But when you look closer, the illusion fades, and the truth comes into focus. These are not insects. They are men. They are British soldiers of the 137th (Staffordshire) Infantry Brigade, part of the 46th Division, captured in a quiet moment of exhaustion after the Battle of the St Quentin Canal on September 29, 1918, in Northern France. Victory had been won — but at a cost written across their bodies. When you zoom in, the details become almost unbearable to see. Their uniforms hang loosely, as if draped over frames too thin to hold them. Their faces are hollow, their limbs sharp with fatigue and hunger. These are the faces of men who have endured years of mud, shellfire, sleepless nights, and the constant nearness of death. They look less like conquerors and more like survivors — survivors who have given everything they had. And yet, in that moment, they are resting. Not marching. Not fighting. Not charging. Just sitting together on the scarred earth, breathing, alive. What makes the image even more haunting is what we know now: the war would end only weeks later, on November 11, 1918. Peace was already approaching, though they could not yet see it. Looking at them, one can’t help but wonder — how many of these skeletal young men lived long enough to hear the guns fall silent? How many returned home, shed their uniforms, and tried to rebuild lives interrupted by war? The photograph freezes them in that fragile space between battle and peace, between survival and uncertainty. It reminds us that victory is not always triumphant, and that history’s greatest moments are often carried on the shoulders of those who look the most worn. For a brief instant on a battlefield hillside, they were simply men — tired, fragile, human — resting together under a sky that, at last, would soon fall quiet. © History Pictures #drthehistories
Dr. M.F. Khan tweet media
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