Yung Carl

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Yung Carl

Yung Carl

@DaPepsicle

Vermont, USA เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2012
232 กำลังติดตาม49 ผู้ติดตาม
Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@dogreadsnews @DeItaone lmao, is the strait open like the u.s. wants? iran is in charge. you might not like it but facts are facts
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Mr Market
Mr Market@dogreadsnews·
@DeItaone The concept of 'international law' always makes me laugh. Who polices international law? The US is in charge, get used to it. They may not like it but facts are facts.
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*Walter Bloomberg
*Walter Bloomberg@DeItaone·
🇪🇸 IRANIAN EMBASSY IN SPAIN SAYS SPAIN IS COMMITTED TO INTERNATIONAL LAW AND IRAN IS RECEPTIVE TO ANY REQUEST FROM MADRID REGARDING THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@Eric_Erins well, not much point when the police have literal military equipment and units (swat)- these were built at a time when many cops carried literal clubs
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Midwest Antiquarian
Midwest Antiquarian@Eric_Erins·
The former ubiquity of urban armories and their closings is under remarked upon I feel like. They are a kind of civil infrastructure built as a defense against potential uprisings spurred by fear after the Haymarket affair. Today they’re mostly community centers?
Whitey Northcutt@WhiteyNorthcutt

Bronx, New York The Kingsbrudge Armory — a Romanesque fortress style armory constructed in 1917. Reputedly known as the largest armory in the world.

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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@JacobAShell think you’re underestimating the degree to which some dem anti-war sentiment comes from the sense republican are being too ham fisted with the levers of american power in a way that weakens the empire- not just because they recognize the electoral value of being in opposition
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Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
"The primary reason you hear any opposition from dem-aligned intelligence is for short-term political gains" In hindsight this was the entire reason the Democratic Party seeded at least two different forms of "Iraq War dissent" during 2002-07 (the Kerry form + the Howard Dean / Obama form)...purely to retake power. And once back in power, to start new wars of their own in the MENA region! I fell for it at the time, and honestly I don't understand how anyone who grew up when I did didn't become *arctically* cold and cycnical when it comes to sizing up why the Dems would be supporting an "anti-war" wing at any given time.
Second City Bureaucrat@CityBureaucrat

Even among U.S. intelligence people who dislike Israel (or its current leadership), the consensus seems closer to the conclusion that this was the right time to attack Iran, because Israel had degraded its proxies, Assad was out in Syria, and because Russia is preoccupied with Ukraine. The primary reason you hear any opposition from dem-aligned intelligence is for short-term political gains so the Dems can regain control and focus on keeping the border open, or because they think the civilian leadership & Hegseth are incompetent, but in any case not because they actually oppose the conflict (you'll see this confirmed when the dems vote in favor of supplemental appropriations for the war). I remain opposed because I don't trust the foreign policy establishment's (including Israel's) disinterest in the well-being of American citizens.

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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
the vastness of nyc is often under realized by those who’ve never visited. many living in the city do not even conceptualize it fully- with many vague blank spaces of indeterminate size
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle

@atlanticesque @centristpeater i worked as a real estate leasing agent briefly when i lived in nyc- i had all my coworkers draw mental maps of nyc on a slow day. multiple people labeled harlem as “the bronx”. everything north of 110th street was effectively “here there be dragons”- a mystery zone to avoid

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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@atlanticesque @centristpeater i worked as a real estate leasing agent briefly when i lived in nyc- i had all my coworkers draw mental maps of nyc on a slow day. multiple people labeled harlem as “the bronx”. everything north of 110th street was effectively “here there be dragons”- a mystery zone to avoid
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𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯
𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯@atlanticesque·
@centristpeater I think there’s something going on in New York. Admittedly, it’s anecdotal, but the level of proud incuriosity specifically among *well-to-do, educated people* in New York seems unique to me. There’s parochial brokies everywhere, but there’s just a lot of friction here. It’s bad
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@IbnKulthum not really, the many tentacled octopus is a pretty old image in visual propaganda it’s been used for oil and empires and other things as well
Yung Carl tweet mediaYung Carl tweet mediaYung Carl tweet mediaYung Carl tweet media
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@JacobAShell last time i was there i had to sit at the food court when my train was delayed. there is a seated waiting area, but it’s gated for business class only like an airport. i’d say it’s a case of airport design imported to rail- except airports actually have seats at the gates….
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Yung Carl รีทวีตแล้ว
May Greenfield
May Greenfield@Smiley_Gate·
@Cernovich "Law abiding citizens" when they're forced to follow the law and actually drive the speed limit.
May Greenfield tweet media
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Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
I’ve said since the day I moved to Philly that it seems to me the city would really benefit from having a few of these “bicycle viaducts.” But NYC doesn’t have one, and Philadelphians never get into any idea that doesnt involve doing a lower-tier version of what NYC just did.
Dr. Kohan🏛🏛🏛@kohantoys

Qué groso esto de Córdoba, es la primera vez que lo veo, y lo siguen ampliando. La verdad, si lo hicieran en Amsterdam estaríamos todos fascinados. Bien por los cordobeses.

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Fist Steakface
Fist Steakface@FistSteakface·
@ettingermentum IMO if you're inclined this way, major in philosophy or history. You'll get most of the same content but you can then go to law school with your philosophy BA or go do everything a polisci major would do but with a more prestigious discipline in your resume's education field.
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Nuclear Henry George
Nuclear Henry George@Henry_George63·
@atlanticesque I am convinced every blue state should have a moderate GOP governor with a state legislature with a slim Dem majority. MA’s history is filled with great achievements when that happened. Romney, Charlie Baker.
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𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯
𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯@atlanticesque·
Republicans get *tons* of stuff wrong. Tons. But they tend to govern better because they get the basics right. Most smart policy people are Democrats, but because Democrats get so many fundamental aspects of governance wrong, they're fighting a wicked uphill battle.
Hunter📈🌈📊@StatisticUrban

Every single one of the 15 fastest-growing US major metropolitan areas is in the Sunbelt. All 15 are also in a state Trump won. Only 5 are in swing states. Dallas and Houston added an entire Wyoming's worth of people.

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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@JacobAShell many reasons, CEQA is like NEPA on steroids, hsr demands much more strict geometry than interstates, earthquake resilience (not a concern for interstates, embarcadero freeway), also u.s. has basically no institutional hsr knowledge… plus the mountain tunnels
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Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
Why werent the interstates as expensive to build? Didnt they also involve eminent domain, the state becoming "landlord" for tenants of seized rental properties, etc?
No Safe Words@Cyber_Trailer

Since my account is somewhat anonymous I’m going to disclose where some of the California high-speed rail money gets wasted. 99% of you don’t realize where giant chunks of the money is disappearing to. The California high-speed rail authority, literally owns thousands of parcels of land that are in various stages continued litigation, tenant improvements, eviction, and constant maintenance. For example, there are many homes and apartment complexes in the plant path that have been purchased years ahead of construction. Removing those tenants is a slow and expensive process. (let’s ignore the extra stress on housing that all of these destroyed properties are causing) In some cases, these are low rent apartments with a lengthy eviction process During that process, the state of California is the landlord and has to maintain the property codes the same as any other landlord. This means repairs, adding smoke detectors, fixing roofs, vegetation management, landscaping, paying off tenants to leave early, boarding up Windows, constant trash cleanups, towing vehicles etc. But the High Speed Rail Authority doesn’t just have to maintain these properties at normal cost. Every single bit of that work has to be done at California prevailing wage rates. The work can only be done through qualified contractors that have passed through a long series of idiotic mazes to qualify to perform the work. An average rate per hour (charge rate) for a worker to perform any service on these properties is approximately $200 an hour for labor only. The cost go up for specialized work, like electricians, plumbers, or machine operators. Properties that are literally worthless are being maintained at huge expense just so the next round of homeless transients can break into the property and cause more damage. For reasons I can’t explain, the process to finally demo and remove the structures takes years. I’m only mentioning the tip of the iceberg regarding my firsthand knowledge. Completely separate from those outlandish costs are the inflation caused by the construction. The prevailing word on the street is that nothing is getting done. The truth is that a lot is getting done and none of it efficiently. The amount of concrete being poured daily and monthly to build gigantic overpasses for both the rail and roadways is not understood. In these work areas, every concrete mixing company is fully scheduled out and cannot offer building materials for other basic services such as building a house often times for weeks when the average lead time for many of these services used to be one day. And that’s just the schedule, never mind the huge cost increases from straining the supply chain and Labor pool. The amount of concrete and steel that has gone into the structures so far is massive. Dozens and dozens of new water wells have been dug just for dust control. Thousands upon thousands of acres of highly productive tree fruits and nuts have been torn up and shredded. Utility scale solar fields have been uprooted and sometimes relocated at extravagant costs. Every type of business you can imagine has gone through either a closure, relocation, or a long-term tenant agreement with the rail authority. In some cases, it’s just a buyout where the business closes its doors forever. The owners get something all of the workers get nothing. Don’t get me started on how thick the layers of bureaucracy are for these minute tasks that occur on all of these properties. The inefficiency is far beyond your wildest dreams. In many cases, this is not related to fraud in any way it’s just absolute ignorance, red tape, and failed leadership. I can go much deeper into specific examples, but I think that gives some of you an idea of what’s actually happening in California. If a rail is ever usable, some portions of the structures will be decades old and already in disrepair.

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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@bar94boss @christankerfund strait is still closed and economic fallout is growing by the day. iran just hit the largest lng field in the world demonstrating that its threat to attack the energy infrastructure in the gulf is real and they have the capability to do it. no “off-ramp” in site
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Chris Shipping 🚢🚢
Chris Shipping 🚢🚢@christankerfund·
A number of countries issue a statement saying they are ready to help ensure safe passage through Hormuz. They obviously see this getting very close to spiraling completely out of control. But let’s see what actually comes from this ….
British Embassy Washington@UKinUSA

NEW: The UK alongside France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Japan expresses readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz 👇 gov.uk/government/new…

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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@atlanticesque church membership here is declining precipitously- this is just an example of yankee common sense adaptive reuse of an underutilized space
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𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯
𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯@atlanticesque·
Vermont is a state blessed by natural beauty, filled with intelligent and dutiful people, and with a rich civic and cultural heritage. It's also the only place I've seen three homeless men having sex on a church's front lawn in broad daylight.
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@Worksucks1234 @Empty_America many european countries allow you to live a normal life without driving though- so driving is often choice (outside of rural areas)- not so in the u.s.
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Reddit mod
Reddit mod@Worksucks1234·
@Empty_America 10USD/gallon is not that rare in Europe. Few people drive less.
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@Eric_Erins the lion does not ask for permission from the lamb
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Midwest Antiquarian
Midwest Antiquarian@Eric_Erins·
I should allowed to lay on the floor in my office
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@JohnWakefieId nah, putin style constitution passed. oligarchs in charge of economy- declared war on rumburg and got absolutely washed
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John Wakefield
John Wakefield@JohnWakefieId·
If you have ever played Suzerain, you've likely designed an Anton Rayne like this that does market reforms, fails to pass a new constitution, and gets kicked out in disgrace.
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@JacobAShell the interesting point to me was how invested the first side was in ascribing it as arising from elite architecture circles- and minimizing the role of the craftsmen, artisan or vernacular designer
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Yung Carl
Yung Carl@DaPepsicle·
@JacobAShell i’m reminded of two conflicting histories of the front porch in american architecture. one claims the porch is a western invention evolving from the portico. the other cites it as arising from vernacular craftsmen in new orleans bringing ideas from yoruba hut building
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Jacob Shell
Jacob Shell@JacobAShell·
Sometimes it does look cartoony and pastiche, and the difference is whether skilled artisans are used. That’s what the modern architects and their aligned institutions (Ivy League design schools etc) have always feared: power winding up back in the hands of those artisans.
Jack Montgomery@JackBMontgomery

When you just ignore the modern architects shrieking "It's Disneyland! It's PASTICHE!!" and make nice, traditional buildings instead of their charmless glass and concrete boxes:

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