Tim Cools

93.9K posts

Tim Cools

Tim Cools

@TimCools1

He/Him who likes ravens (and communism)

Belgium Sumali Şubat 2013
418 Sinusundan313 Mga Tagasunod
Tim Cools
Tim Cools@TimCools1·
@swagoloog Not me, I have decorum (I scroll back through your media tab)
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Kuba 🇵🇱🇵🇸
Kuba 🇵🇱🇵🇸@anietotylkoja·
Basically, Bulgarian Lidl stores subsidise German Lidl so that prices stay low and Germans don’t elect Hitler (again)
Jason - macro / offshore / investing@MacroJason

Why are groceries in the Balkans sometimes more expensive than in Western Europe? Because in the entire Balkans - there is not a single free floating currency. ALL Balkan currencies are either pegged to the EUR or tightly managed against the EUR. 💶 🇪🇺 Locals think in terms of EUR and not their local currency when it comes to anything more expensive than grocery shopping. It's not like this in Central Europe. Hungarians, Poles and Czechs mainly think in terms of their local currencies. The cost of pegging your currency with the EUR is give up on monetary freedom 👇 1. Your currency becomes artificially strong, which hurts your local producer's export competitiveness whilst encouraging foreign imports. Balkan wages are lower but tradeable goods prices converge to Western levels because the exchange rate is not allowed to depreciate. With this chocolate bar example, on Polish or Czech supermarket shelves, there are much more domestically produced chocolate options than in the Balkans. 2. Can't cut rates to stimulate during recession (or you will face a carry trade attack) 3. Government can't inflate away debt as easily It's very difficult for the Balkans to reverse course now. Romania is the most redeemable case in the region, as the currency is managed rather than pegged. The central bank can still allow the RON to gradually depreciate as they have done over the years, whilst compensating investors with higher yields. It's good that in Poland, Hungary and Czechia - public support for Euro adoption is increasingly low!

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Eat Six Billion Neighbors
Local man loves war, never enlists.
Eat Six Billion Neighbors tweet media
planefag@planefag

As someone who's been writing military science-fiction for years, and have many friends in or formerly in the military (some of which are authors themselves,) I have something to say about this: If all Yoshiyuki Tomino has to say with his art is that "war is bad," then he should stop making art, as he's only going to waste our time. Any fool with two brain cells to rub together knows that war is ugly, brutal and costly. That doesn't mean war is pointless and should never be fought no matter the circumstances. In fact, such a statement is worse than pointless, as lethal conflict is a common constant of human civilization - and, for that matter, a constant among the vast majority of life existing on Earth, even between bacteria. If all your story does is shout "this is bad!" it's a childish lament that leaves a tremendous amount of this constant of human existence unexamined. Who fights wars - the elites, like the ancient Greek Hoplites, or the knights of the middle ages, or the common men who volunteer, like in many modern nations? What do they fight for - for the ideals of their beloved nation, for honor and glory, or to save the women and children in the city that stands at their backs? What defines a good soldier? What defines a good leader? These questions are just as essential for us as they were for our forefathers, because the world is a tumultuous place full of evil people and great dangers and the time is coming, sooner than many may think, where wars between great powers will shake the foundations of the world and the lives of millions will hang in the balance. To explore questions like this, of such import to our souls, is one of the core reasons people tell stories to begin with. And our tools and machines have always been essential to the conduct of war and the defense of all we hold dear. Men have told stories of talking swords or "tsukumogami" for as long as swords have existed; long before we could even conceptualize a thinking machine might be made with science; we dreamt of them existing through magic or spirit. Tools are what first brought us out of the trees to stride the earth as its masters; in the tools we shape and wield with our own hands we make manifest our intent, our will, our spirit. In the modern age, the vastness of our creations sometimes makes it easy to forget, but the human element is still the entire point. I quote from page 71 of "Shattered Sword" by Johnathan Parshall and Anthony Tully: "The study of naval warfare (more than any other form of combat) holds the potential to completely subordinate the human element to the weapons themselves. Naval combat is conducted almost exclusively by means of machines – machines that are in many cases so huge and grand that they often seem to take on a life and personality of their own that transcend the tiny figures that inhabit them. Yet, in the final analysis, it is men who live in the ship, command and fight the ship, and often die in the ship. Their story, no matter how seemingly eclipsed by the great vessels they serve in, is still the fundamental story to be related.” Its only natural we should be entranced with the great machines of war that we build, as they're the final product of the genius and labors of an entire society; fashioned into an incredible tool that is nothing if not wielded by the hand of a skilled warrior devoted to his craft and his mission. I know of not a single mecha story that runs afoul of Parshall and Tully's warning as quoted above; everyone seems to understand the assignment. The ones that don't are the likes of Tomino, or his fellow anti-war traveler Miyazaki. I can't understand a man who thinks fighter planes are beautiful but has little more to say about war than "it's bad;" he refuses to see that the beautiful form of a fighter plane follows its function, and that there's a savage, primal beauty in that function, like the fury that animates a thunderstorm. Or the fury and purpose that animate its pilot, for that matter. Tomino seems to think that "nothing of substance is getting across." I disagree. I think the substance came across very well, and many in younger generations just think that substance is woefully lacking. There's a cutscene in the Knights of the Old Republic, between Carth Onasi and Canderous, where Carth expounds on the difference between "soldiers" and "warriors," defining warriors as those who fight for plunder and the glory of conquest, and soldiers as those who fight to protect their nation and peoples - usually from warriors. He made a great point, but Canderous wasn't entirely wrong. As any fighter pilot can tell you, you need more than noble motivations to sacrifice and serve to be truly excellent - to overcome your enemy in an aerial duel, you need that urge to "lean in" to the fight; that competitive drive - a part of you needs to love the fight. Many soldiers over the ages have spoken of this; as Robert E. Lee said "it's well that war is so terrible, or we should grow too fond of it." It's that primal urge drawn straight from our deepest instincts; that thirst to compete and win, that gives soldiers the fire and fury to do their utmost in combat, to win the challenge, to defeat those who would plunder their temples, raze their cities and enslave their women and children. That is the truth of war, every bit as much as the death and boredom and bloodshed and terror. And if you can only tell one half of that truth, because the other half doesn't align with your political or personal views, then I don't give a god damn what you have to say about it, or about the works of storytellers who do.

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The Kavernacle
The Kavernacle@TheKavernacle·
so not even hiding they are doing Nazi propaganda now
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Hughes-on-the-Wold
Hughes-on-the-Wold@NotThatHughes·
My business is only viable if I underpay my workers
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Peter McCormack 🏴‍☠️🇬🇧🇮🇪@PeterMcCormack

A minimum wage of £15 would end my coffee shop, it would have to close, as would many other businesses. I’ll explain for the economically illiterate. Staff costs are currently half our costs, a £15 minimum wage is actually more than £15 an hour for the company, because you have to add: - 12.07% holiday - Sick pay - Maternity pay if and when required - National insurance - Pension contributions These costs would mean the shop loses money because remember, energy costs are up, rates are up, regulations are up. Now you can pass these costs onto the consumer - that would mean charging a lot more for coffee, people won’t pay it. The likes of Starbucks and Costa can, because they have economies of scale. The independent doesn’t. Now the little socialist will say well this is your fault, if you can’t run a business that can afford to pay its staff properly, but the little socialist has never run a business and does not understand the dynamics. Now I could pay some staff off and fill those hours myself or reduce us to one staff member during certain periods - but this proves the point that a minimum wage costs jobs. There was a time when these jobs were done by kids, perhaps on the weekend, paid a lower wage, no holiday and no silly employment rights. Perhaps they were even paid cash. The dynamic worked and small businesses like this could operate. It was also a great first job. Sadly now it isn’t worth employing entitlement youngsters at this level of pay. So alas, I don’t need the stress, the business would close, a number of jobs would be lost. Economics is about understanding these dynamics, no vibes. The cost of living is not solved through passing on inflation to the business, it is solved by ending high inflation and creating prosperity. This is what socialists don’t understand, they can’t create prosperity, they can only destroy it.

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Tim Cools
Tim Cools@TimCools1·
@MHurabiell Are you way ahead of schedule or is it time to completely throw the next election already?
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Marie Hurabiell for Congress
What is going on in Gaza is heartbreaking and must be addressed but it is not a genocide.
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Tim Cools
Tim Cools@TimCools1·
@MorganKreg @818Gatsby @NotThatHughes Have fun watching the lava swallow the world from your first floor balcony while shouting "Good thing we're safe up here, am I right?" to the penthouse 60 floors up, I'm sure it'll all go great for you.
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Morgan Kreg
Morgan Kreg@MorganKreg·
@TimCools1 @818Gatsby @NotThatHughes Seriously. You communists are all the same. In an age when it takes ZERO effort to find like minded people, none of you are out creating successful co-ops to rule the market. You are montorous retarded children crying for toys you cannot have.
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Tim Cools
Tim Cools@TimCools1·
@MorganKreg @818Gatsby @NotThatHughes You're really fucking desperate to reduce entire human beings in low-paying jobs to just one task as though they can't or don't want to do anything else, while praising their exploiters to the high heavens. Talk to someone about that and get to the heart of it. Not to me though.
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Morgan Kreg
Morgan Kreg@MorganKreg·
@TimCools1 @818Gatsby @NotThatHughes Yes. Yes they do. They get prices for commodities that do not decrease the value of their product to the consumer. They market that product. They sell that product at scale. They insure the business stays profitable to provide jobs. Instead of pushing a button every 2 min.
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