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https://twitter.com/Partisangirl/status/1570773448674406401 Lots of idiotic 9/11 comparisons in the comments, but Jesus H at least it ain't another chemical warehouse.
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 13:00 |
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# ? Jun 7, 2024 22:16 |
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“35 tons of fuel” in an office building for a telecom company lmao What are these? Huawei routers that run on fuel oil? These people are even dumber than they look e: this was clearly some of that ridiculously flammable made-in-China building cladding that burns like the fires of hell itself (wasn’t there a similar fire in Dubai or some place a while back?) but doesn’t seem to easily roast the building itself unless it’s a poorly constructed British apartment building. I can’t find them offhand but there’s some shots after the fire was put out and literally just that one face of the building was charred, the other three sides of the exterior weren’t even scorched. Porfiriato fucked around with this message at 13:18 on Sep 17, 2022 |
# ? Sep 17, 2022 13:12 |
Don't backup generators run on diesel?
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 13:17 |
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ili posted:Don't backup generators run on diesel? yes but they are in litres, not tonnes
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 13:19 |
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ili posted:Don't backup generators run on diesel? 35000 litres worth, give or take.
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 13:40 |
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Zakrello posted:yes but they are in litres, not tonnes Is this an "American learning about the metric system" post?
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:13 |
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That does not sound like an unreasonable amount of fuel to me.Zakrello posted:yes but they are in litres, not tonnes Volume of fuel changes with temperature, so weight is actually the most accurate way to measure it.
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:13 |
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Xakura posted:That does not sound like an unreasonable amount of fuel to me. Looks like it's changing a lot atm.
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:15 |
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Criss-cross posted:Is this an "American learning about the metric system" post? 1 litre diesel = 0.83 kg diesel. 1 litre of water was originally equal to 1 kilogram, but that hasn't been true for 223 years. (Though it is close enough for most purposes).
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:29 |
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WarpedNaba posted:https://twitter.com/Partisangirl/status/1570773448674406401 Of course it has a blue check now lol. Just sell the site to Elon already so it can die.
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:36 |
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Xakura posted:1 litre diesel = 0.83 kg diesel. It's close enough as an approximation for this purpose as well, which is a Twitter post about a burning building using a nice round number.
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:37 |
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I believe there was aluminum cladding on a building in Australia that went boom. also peter zeihan talks about china https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKQQdjtcr2c
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:37 |
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Shumagorath posted:That account posts some very wacky poo poo and iirc was hugely pro-Assad / Russia when I still had twitter. she was the point person on the syrian propaganda effort to argue that the ghouta sarin attacks were actually done by rebels who, she alleged, had somehow managed to manufacture sarin and the shells to disperse it and then used it on thousands of themselves
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 14:55 |
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What's her SA account name?
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 15:08 |
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CSPAM mod I also liked her implication that 9/11 was an inside job or fake or whatever ?? because this building hadn't collapsed
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 15:11 |
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Strategic Tea posted:What's her SA account name? ironically her extremely public feud with brown moses did drive a bunch of people to this site
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 15:20 |
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Yeah she sucks lol
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 15:20 |
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Shumagorath posted:That account posts some very wacky poo poo and iirc was hugely pro-Assad / Russia when I still had twitter. Syrian Girl is completely insane and you shouldn't take anything she posts seriously. That building fire was real but who knows about the fuel thing.
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 16:10 |
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help help, my brain has broken so much i have started enjoying putting baijiu into cocktails
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 16:48 |
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WarpedNaba posted:https://twitter.com/Partisangirl/status/1570773448674406401 She’s also an Assad rear end goblin. Edit: should read all the thread first lol
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 17:54 |
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Marshal Prolapse posted:She’s also an Assad rear end goblin. we stan for our assadess goddess
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# ? Sep 17, 2022 20:58 |
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Jeoh posted:help help, my brain has broken so much i have started enjoying putting baijiu into cocktails Filth
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 03:13 |
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GoutPatrol posted:we stan for our assadess goddess No, we don't.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 03:53 |
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Maotai is actually good but just costs about 10x what it should since it’s the currency of corruption like some sort of modern day stones of Yap.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 07:44 |
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Ups_rail posted:also peter zeihan talks about china Maybe it's just me, but it's not really a good look that this guy is way out on a beautiful hike and he's just plotting how to never shut the gently caress about China for five seconds.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 07:57 |
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PITY BONER posted:Maybe it's just me, but it's not really a good look that this guy is way out on a beautiful hike and he's just plotting how to never shut the gently caress about China for five seconds. I see you've met about half of my coworkers.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 09:21 |
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Ups_rail posted:also peter zeihan talks about china PITY BONER posted:Water is wet? A few pages ago in this thread Zeihan's very obvious weaknesses were discussed. I thought that discussion concluded with the broader agreement that (as Zeihan very obviously demonstrates in this video) Zeihan is very literally phoning it in. Given that understanding, I'm unclear why in the word war threeeead, ups_rail is raising Zeihan's "End of Globalization" stuff. I just wanna try and re-nudge the suggestion that Zeihan's rhetoric, while enticing, doesn't hold up to even the most basic scrutiny. A cursory reflection on some (I feel obvious) problems with Zeihan's MO/positions ought suffice to help rid some of Zaihan's Zeihan's recent MO looks like a click-bait/cult type model. It's marginally better dressed but the MO is fundamentally the same. Assertions of vague but indisputable facts resting on (currently) unfalsifiable assumptions. Two obvious ones: The End of China because of *reasons*, and the end of Globalization because of *reasons*. Zeihan cherry picks one dynamic amongst several to be his version that is guaranteed to succeed. He does this to isolate and escalate his moving target of a conclusion. In doing, so he abandons any pretension of nuance and potential for a range of outcomes. Typically he falls back on the old "the numbers don't lie" bullshit. Case in point of an obvious nuance he dismisses in favor of a static outcome he prefers to guarantee. China absolutely could quite simply in a single document adjust their immigration policy to correct their demographics! Big problem, simple solution. Zehian either a) has a massive blind spot and he is outrageously loving dumb, or b) he is willfully being intellectually dishonest and is therefore deliberately polluting discourse in doing so. Sidebar: in his click bait/cult approach he has missed the mark a few times. Specifically in this case he picked a fixed fact. By specifying that not only the CCP but the very notion of China will collapse, and in a particular bout of confidence he dropped the ball of "be vague to keep the audience hungry" and he actually specified "this decade". Good quality click-bait/cults use vagueness in order to stoke the fire of interest that is required to sustain itself. My guess is that given the popularity of this specific rhetoric, he wanted to go big to stand out. Unfortunately a bunch of channels went all-in and named a specific number of days. Case in point #2 - The end of globalization If Zeihan is right and globalization has already ended because of the vomit he is yapping on about like it is the end of time, how come all the global supply chains are shifting? All of the flagship & poster children of globalized supply chains are in the process of adjusting to address their now very visible weaknesses. It seems entirely unusual to think that even a single one of the several trillion dollar supply chains would not adjust. Both India and Vietnam are without question able to assist in making several supply chains very more more robust and resilient. In regards to globalization. the singular point that surprises me most about Zeihan's position is that he suggests the US military is basically defeated and will return to base post-haste and live off the land. I think he is conflating his retirement plans with geo-political strategy. Its an easy mistake to make.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 15:13 |
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china liquor rankings: 1. good huangjiu 2. snake wine (quote-unquote) that comes in that little green bottle 3. maotai X. baijiu
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 15:15 |
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poo poo's hosed in the Good China again it seems https://twitter.com/ChaudharyParvez/status/1571400090891452418?t=Pvc_u_lPkPwQhCY5nNKISg&s=19 I think this is at least a second time since I've been there like 4 years ago
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 16:05 |
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url posted:Case in point #2 - The end of globalization I don't know the specifics of the argument he's making but in economic terms, we do appear to be coming to the end of what is known as "the third wave" of globalization. This is the idea that there were two distinct periods in which global trade increased sharply, one from roughly 1870-WWI, the second from the end of WWII-1971, and the third from the mid-80s/early 90s until arguably 2020. The argument is not that we're seeing less trade than before but that the period of year-on-year increases has stopped. This is a problem for China inasmuch as their political legitimacy relies on economic growth and their economic growth has come from increasing trade; they haven't managed to turn domestic consumption into the same kind of growth engine, they can't compete in the types of high-end manufactures that are likely to see continued growth in a static trade regime, and they don't have the human capital to compete in FDI to produce growth (and where that human capital did exist in hong kong, their antidemocratic crackdown has wrecked it.) For obvious reasons, supply chains deemphasizing China will also not benefit China, unless they can move up the value chain, which they've shown no ability to do.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 16:16 |
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hypnophant posted:I don't know the specifics of the argument he's making but in economic terms, we do appear to be coming to the end of what is known as "the third wave" of globalization. This is the idea that there were two distinct periods in which global trade increased sharply, one from roughly 1870-WWI, the second from the end of WWII-1971, and the third from the mid-80s/early 90s until arguably 2020. The argument is not that we're seeing less trade than before but that the period of year-on-year increases has stopped. This is a problem for China inasmuch as their political legitimacy relies on economic growth and their economic growth has come from increasing trade; they haven't managed to turn domestic consumption into the same kind of growth engine, they can't compete in the types of high-end manufactures that are likely to see continued growth in a static trade regime, and they don't have the human capital to compete in FDI to produce growth (and where that human capital did exist in hong kong, their antidemocratic crackdown has wrecked it.) I'm with you, and I do appreciate that China will have to adjust in a significant fashion. My (likely naive) hope is they do it with one eye on their less salubrious history. They do have a lot on their plate right now and obviously that is significantly less important than providing the emperor with his new outfit. I am quite sure they are acutely aware of their legitimacy and credibility issue. My worry is that a decision to abandon the need for legitimacy is always on the table. cf: HK. My concern in the post above was to lazily draw attention to Zeihan's MO. I have no ill will to the guy, its just his recent stuff is hard to stomach because its very poor fare. You've explained more and with greater clarity in your single post than Zeihan has in months. Given the timescale involved in shifting supply chains, I think the primary concern for China, as you've rightly suggested, is in solving their very significant domestic confidence issue. That said, and to re-iterate, even if trade balkanizes to a degree more than we are accustomed to, I don't think we are in a position to see an outright end to the global shipping trade as Zeihan and sky-is-falling types are predicting. I'd like to drill into how bad the FDI flight actually is. I am seeing bizarre conflicting reports that it is down 30% and Blackrock are upset on one hand and Starbucks committing to undertake a massive expansion on the other.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 17:02 |
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starbucks specifically is doing massive expansion cuz luckin ate poo poo in us equity markets and the sec stomped on it. big opportunity specific to coffee
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 17:12 |
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bob dobbs is dead posted:starbucks specifically is doing massive expansion cuz luckin ate poo poo in us equity markets and the sec stomped on it. big opportunity specific to coffee just to lighten the tone in the "fun China thread", I have been taking no small degree of smug-satisfaction in reading how a large swathe of firms are going to have to desist, The particularly savory moresl in that is that even after de-listing they are still going to have to produce the books and face penalties retroactively. Obviously they won't wear any penalties, but its is potentially a huge blow to FDI for an extended period of time.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 17:20 |
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nah, prolly their bigger problem is they got into real estate like every other idiot fucker
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 17:36 |
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url posted:I'm with you, and I do appreciate that China will have to adjust in a significant fashion. My (likely naive) hope is they do it with one eye on their less salubrious history. Sure. Not to defend Zeihan overmuch but in the context of who his clientele is, and what they pay him for - political/geopolitical risk analysis - I think his advice (if you haven't already got your capital out, start preparing to write it off) is probably quite good. He isn't necessarily trying to predict macroeconomic trends. China's FDI liabilities continue to be fascinating to me. Doubly so because their FDI assets - BRI basically - seem to be such questionable investments. They're in a very strange position in terms of current account flows and investment flows, and I have to wonder what is the desired effect of their international credit and debt policies. It seems like there must be some economic rationale there in addition to the political rationale, but it's really hard to see what it is, from the West.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 17:52 |
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hypnophant posted:Sure. Not to defend Zeihan overmuch but in the context of who his clientele is, and what they pay him for - political/geopolitical risk analysis - I think his advice (if you haven't already got your capital out, start preparing to write it off) is probably quite good. Entirely fair point, hypnophant posted:He isn't necessarily trying to predict macroeconomic trends. I don't think we need to do a multi-page derail on it though. hypnophant posted:China's FDI liabilities continue to be fascinating to me. Doubly so because their FDI assets - BRI basically - seem to be such questionable investments. They're in a very strange position in terms of current account flows and investment flows, and I have to wonder what is the desired effect of their international credit and debt policies. It seems like there must be some economic rationale there in addition to the political rationale, but it's really hard to see what it is, from the West. Fascinating is the best descriptor for their FDI I can think of. I'll admit to be wholly gobsmacked and in awe at the ambitiousness of it when OBOR was announced (terrible branding aside). The scope and breath of the strategic concept remains impressive. In a similar fashion to the HSR projects, I'm not sure the economic rationale was ever really sane beyond basic Keynesian being taken to an extreme never before seen. The only calculus I can see is that the inevitable debt-traps must have been factored to ensure a veneer of deniability but ensure some version of a win-win. There's a boat load of problems in that calculus, but I can't see that there is an alternative. I'm happy to learn if there was though. E: also this is on topic url fucked around with this message at 18:22 on Sep 18, 2022 |
# ? Sep 18, 2022 18:19 |
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url posted:In a similar fashion to the HSR projects, I'm not sure the economic rationale was ever really sane beyond basic Keynesian being taken to an extreme never before seen. Yeah this is the really really consequential question. Do their investments in e.g. Sri Lanka "work" as this type of investment? I think if you envision a central or central-peer role for China in the region and the future world order they might, and if you think China will at most play second fiddle to the dollar system they simply don't. I just don't think China has the juice to make the kind of borderline investments they've been making pay off, either by making it somehow profitable or by coercing repayment, in part because the potential cost of coercion is so high. I honestly think events this year have removed a great deal of uncertainty around this question. We're seeing the poverty of the RMB-Rouble as an alternative ecosystem to the eurodollar and I don't know what countries would willingly commit themselves to that environment.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 19:05 |
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url posted:Zeihan's recent MO looks like a click-bait/cult type model. bob dobbs is dead posted:starbucks specifically is doing massive expansion cuz luckin ate poo poo in us equity markets and the sec stomped on it. big opportunity specific to coffee Mozi posted:china liquor rankings: 1. Those juice + seltzer + alcohol cans at 8% and up. 10 RMB a piece and didn't taste like rear end. 2. Snow. 3. Snow. 4. Snow. 5. LMAO Snow.
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 21:39 |
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https://twitter.com/tpyxanews/status/1571604245543292928?s=46&t=A_eyzE9-vH_gS2n2R0__ZQ
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 22:02 |
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# ? Jun 7, 2024 22:16 |
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Marshal Prolapse posted:https://twitter.com/tpyxanews/status/1571604245543292928?s=46&t=A_eyzE9-vH_gS2n2R0__ZQ lol ok
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# ? Sep 18, 2022 22:27 |