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Many of the day-to-day memories of his life, of the days, the years, the decades leading up to that fateful lightning strike, are now faded and grey from lack of use. #fanart #fanfiction

thesilmarilchick.wordpress.com…






дзённік назірання за прыродай™
#photography


Yes! The biggest, gayest dance party ever. Look happy at all times. Dance to loud music, blow bubbles, serve beverages in NO ICE cups. Fascists have no answer to joy.

From: @markwyner
mas.to/@markwyner@mas.to/11527…

Questa voce è stata modificata (16 ore fa)

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Met some amazing people at the Neo-Luddite march in NYC today! Anger and resistance is growing, especially among young people whose lives and connective experiences have been stolen for mining by big tech.

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I'm proud of how this one came out. Seriously wanna spend a month just chilling at this floaty lighthouse. Seems peaceful.

#Illustration #FediArt #MastoArt #Lighthouse

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Au gré des marées

Dans le flux et reflux
Il faut bien s’élancer,
Un chemin d’épopée
Caché à notre vue.

Nous n’avons rien de plus
Que châteaux ensablés,
En Espagne rêvés :
L’enfance et sa vertu.

Mais la route défile,
À jamais sur le fil ;
Quelques éclats de rire.

Et puis l’heure est venue,
Il faut bien repartir
Dans le flux et reflux.

#sonnet
#poetry
#poésie
#photography
#photographie



Set within the rolling countryside near Banbury in Oxfordshire, Upton House is a grand 17th‑century country estate surrounded by beautifully maintained gardens and parkland. Managed by the National Trust, the property features striking Georgian architecture and offers sweeping garden views that attract both history enthusiasts and architecture lovers. Visitors can explore the elegant interiors, art collections, and seasonal displays while enjoying the peaceful atmosphere of the extensive grounds. A perfect destination for #NationalTrust day trips, it is celebrated for its blend of #HistoricHouse charm, #CountryEstate heritage, and #GardenViews.

Taken May 2019

#SilentSunday #ShotOniPhone #UKCountryPic #Photography #MastoGPT #NationalTrust #HistoricHouse #CountryEstate #GardenViews #ArchitectureLovers #UptonHouseandGardens #Banbury #England #UnitedKingdom

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News | Araghchi: Snapback will also fail / Ireland bans entry of Israeli officials parstoday.ir/en/news/world-i23…


Agenti filorussi e propaganda, la Moldavia alle elezioni nella paura, editorialedomani.it/politica/e…, , «L’Europa non può permettersi di perdere la Moldavia», ha dichiarato Zelensky. Il voto sarà un altro capitolo dello scontro tra Mosca e Bruxelles. Pochi giorni fa sono state arrestate 74 persone accusate di essere state reclutate dalla Russia per provocare disordini durante le elezioni


Altopascio, inaugurato il nuovo Centro di raccolta Rifiuti
Da inceneritore a presidio della sostenibilità: il nuovo Centro di Raccolta di Altopascio permette ai cittadini di conferire rifiuti correttamente, promuovendo riciclo, riuso e tutela dell’ambiente.

lanazione.it/lucca/cronaca/alt…





Heute geht es nach Königsbrück zu geführter Bustour und Wanderung in die Heide.
in reply to Sven

Das Bild zeigt eine ruhige Flusslandschaft bei Sonnenuntergang. Der Himmel ist in warmen Farben wie Orange und Gelb gefärbt, während die Wolken in verschiedenen Grautönen erscheinen. Der Fluss spiegelt den Himmel wider und ist ruhig, mit nur wenigen Wellen. Auf der rechten Seite des Flusses sind einige hohe Gebäude zu sehen, die Teil einer städtischen Umgebung sind. Links und rechts des Flusses sind grüne Ufer mit Bäumen und Gras. In der Ferne ist eine Brücke zu erkennen, die den Fluss überquert. Ein einzelner Personenschwimmer ist in der Mitte des Flusses zu sehen, was die Ruhe des Moments unterstreicht.

Bereitgestellt von @altbot, privat und lokal generiert mit Ovis2-8B

🌱 Energieverbrauch: 0.194 Wh





Mostly Monday Reads: A Rogue Supreme Court



“This is what some people voted for…” John Buss, @repeat1968

Good Day Sky Dancers!


I’m quite late. The intense heat and humidity have left New Orleans for the moment. I woke up at 9:30. It was 76°F. I immediately rolled over and went back to sleep. I’m just glad I didn’t get a glance at the headlines then. The chaos of what used to be our institutional protectors of the Constitution worsens. This Reuters headline is like a slap in the face of all democracy-loving people. It’s a good thing I subscribed to them last month because wow! This needs to be shared. “US Supreme Court backs Trump on aggressive immigration raids.” They’re inching closer to the Inquisition with each majority opinion. Andrew Cheung has the lede.

Donald Trump’s hardline approach toward immigration on Monday, letting federal agents proceed with raids in Southern California targeting people for deportation based on their race or language.

The court granted a Justice Department request to put on hold a federal judge’s order temporarily barring agents from stopping or detaining people without “reasonable suspicion” they are in the country illegally, by relying on race or ethnicity, or if they speak Spanish or English with an accent, among other factors.

The Supreme Court’s three liberal justices publicly dissented from the decision, directing pointed criticism at its conservative majority.
The administration “has all but declared that all Latinos, U.S. citizens or not, who work low-wage jobs are fair game to be seized at any time, taken away from work, and held until they provide proof of their legal status to the agents’ satisfaction,” Justice Sotomayor wrote in the dissenting opinion.

“Rather than stand idly by while our constitutional freedoms are lost, I dissent,” Sotomayor added.
Los Angeles-based U.S. District Judge Maame Frimpong found on July 11 that the Trump administration’s actions likely violated the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. The judge’s order applied to her court’s jurisdiction, covering much of Southern California.

The Supreme Court’s order was brief and issued without any explanation, a common way it handles emergency matters, but one that has generated confusion in lower courts and criticism from some of the justices themselves. The court has a 6-3 conservative majority.

Concurring with the decision on Monday, conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh said that “apparent ethnicity alone cannot furnish reasonable suspicion” but it can be a “‘relevant factor’ when considered along with other salient factors.”

Kavanaugh added: “If the officers learn that the individual they stopped is a U.S. citizen or otherwise lawfully in the United States, they promptly let the individual go.”

In a written filing, the Justice Department defended targeting people using a “reasonably broad profile” in a region where, according to the administration, about 10% of residents are in the country illegally

The administration’s request marked its latest trip to the Supreme Court seeking to proceed with policies that lower courts have impeded after casting doubt on their legality. The Supreme Court has backed Trump in most of these cases.


This part of the decision is rather stunning.

In other cases, the Supreme Court has allowed Trump to deport migrants to countries other than their own without offering a chance to show harms they may face and to revoke temporary legal status previously granted by the government on humanitarian grounds to hundreds of thousands of migrants.


So much for the Rule of Law and Due Process. This also violates international treaties and law. We are a nation led by a War Criminal.

The New York Times (article shared) also has an excellent analysis of the situation written by Adam Liptak.”Supreme Court Lifts Restrictions on L.A. Immigration Stops. A federal judge had ordered agents not to make indiscriminate stops relying on factors like a person’s ethnicity or that they speak Spanish.” This is white christian nationalism on full display.

The Supreme Court on Monday lifted a federal judge’s order prohibiting government agents from making indiscriminate immigration-related stops in the Los Angeles area that challengers called “blatant racial profiling.”

The court’s brief order was unsigned and gave no reasons. It is not the last word in the case, which is pending before a federal appeals court and may again reach the justices.

The court’s three liberal members dissented.

In the near term, it allows what critics say are roving patrols of masked agents routinely violating the Fourth Amendment and what supporters say is a vigorous but lawful effort to enforce the nation’s immigration laws.

The lower courts had placed significant restrictions on President Trump’s efforts to ramp up immigrant arrests to achieve his pledge of mass deportations. Aggressive enforcement operations in Los Angeles — including encounters captured on video that appeared to be roundups of random Hispanic people by armed agents — have become a flashpoint, setting off protests and clashes in the area.

Civil rights groups and several individuals filed suit, accusing the administration of unconstitutional sweeps in which thousands of people had been arrested. They described the encounters in the suit as “indiscriminate immigration operations” that had swept up thousands of day laborers, carwash workers, farmworkers, caregivers and others.

“Individuals with brown skin are approached or pulled aside by unidentified federal agents, suddenly and with a show of force,” the complaint said, “and made to answer questions about who they are and where they are from,” violating the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures.

One plaintiff, Jason Brian Gavidia, a U.S. citizen born in East Los Angeles, was stopped by a masked agent while he was working on his car outside a tow yard. The encounter was captured on video.

The agent asked whether Mr. Gavidia was American, and he said he was.

The agent then asked what hospital Mr. Gavidia had been born in, and he said he did not know. According to the lawsuit, the agent and a colleague proceeded to slam Mr. Gavidia against a metal gate, twist his arm and seize his phone.

“Fearing for his life, Gavidia offered to show the agents his ID,” the lawsuit said. “The agents took the ID, and about 20 minutes later, returned Gavidia’s phone and set him free. They never returned his ID.”


This is nothing but siding with grandiose racial profiling. The ACLU of Southern California has this to say on the subject. “U.S. Supreme Court Grants Stay in L.A. Raids Case. Decision lifts temporary order barring DHS from unlawful stop practices .”

Today, the Supreme Court granted the federal government’s request for a stay (or pause) of a temporary restraining order (TRO) prohibiting federal agencies–including the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)–from continuing their unlawful actions in Los Angeles and surrounding counties.

The court judgment reverses the judgement from two lower courts in Vasquez Perdomo v. Noem that bars immigration agents from stopping individuals without reasonable suspicion and from relying solely on four factors – alone or in combination – including apparent race or ethnicity; speaking Spanish or English with an accent; presence in a particular location like a bus stop, car wash, or agricultural site; or the type of work a person does.

Today’s unexplained order from the Supreme Court does not halt further proceedings in the case. On September 24, the federal district court will hear arguments on whether to issue a preliminary injunction based on additional evidence of the government’s unlawful tactics.

In response, the following statements were issued:

“When ICE grabbed me, they never showed a warrant or explained why. I was treated like I didn’t matter–locked up, cold, hungry, and without a lawyer. Now, the Supreme Court says that’s okay? That’s not justice. That’s racism with a badge,” said Pedro Vasquez Perdomo, named plaintiff in the case. “I joined this case because what happened to me is happening to others everyday just for being brown, speaking Spanish, or standing on a corner looking for work. The system failed us today, but I’m not staying silent. We’ll keep fighting because our lives are important.”

“This decision is a devastating setback for our plaintiffs and communities who, for months, have been subjected to immigration stops because of the color of their skin, occupation, or the language they speak,” said Mohammad Tajsar, senior staff attorney at the ACLU Foundation of Southern California. “In running to the Supreme Court to request this stay, the government made clear that its enforcement operation in Southern California is driven by race. We will continue fighting the administration’s racist deportation scheme to ensure every person living in Southern California—regardless of race or status—is safe.”

“Today’s decision gives license to the Trump administration to resume racially discriminatory raids across Los Angeles, detaining people without evidence or due process simply because of the color of their skin, the language they speak, or the work they do,” said Mark Rosenbaum, senior special counsel for strategic litigation at Public Counsel. Our community has come together to confront this injustice with courage and determination, uncovering the truth and showing the nation these raids were never about public safety but about targeting immigrants and sowing fear. This fight is not over. We will continue pressing our case in court until every person in our communities can live free from fear, with their rights and dignity fully protected.

“The Supreme Court’s decision deals a devastating blow to communities reeling from the government’s racially discriminatory raids. Through the stroke of a pen, through its emergency shadow docket, the court has written off decades of Fourth Amendment law. But we always knew this was going to be a long fight, and we are already preparing for what comes next,” said Annie Lai, director of the Immigrant and Racial Justice Solidarity Clinic at the UC Irvine School of Law. “Our clients have faced the government with incredible bravery and will continue to do so. We will be right there alongside them.”

“Today’s SCOTUS ruling puts farm workers — and every Californian who looks or sounds like they might be an immigrant — in greater danger,” said UFW President Teresa Romero. “This does not impact immigrants in a vacuum, it will affect all of us. We will continue to seek a preliminary injunction in this case, and we will keep fighting for farm workers and all immigrant communities across the USA.”

“The Supreme Court has ruled in favor of racial profiling. A dark shadow has been cast over this country’s Constitution and its future,” said Armando Gudino, executive director of the Los Angeles Worker Center Network (LAWCN). “This is a dangerous precedent for immigrant rights and civil liberties. The decision legitimizes the unconstitutional practice of targeting individuals based on their race, language, or neighborhood. It turns back the clock on decades of legal progress and reinforces a system where some communities are seen as suspect by default.”


I am ashamed of my country. As David Bowie puts it, “I’m afraid of Americans.” This decision jeopardizes the economy, the legal system, and our humanity. The Supreme Racists on the Court have gone mad with power, enabling Yam Tit’s Reign of Terror with abandon. Ari Berman, writing for Mother Jones, has this headline today. “Project 2026: Trump’s Plan to Rig the Next Election, From nationalizing voter suppression to flooding the streets with federal agents, the president and his allies are using all the tricks in the authoritarian playbook to tilt the midterms in their favor.”

On an April episode of the popular Politics War Room podcast, the veteran journalist Al Hunt posed an increasingly common question from listeners to Democratic strategist James Carville. “Is Trump looking to spark enough protest to justify declaring martial law in 2026, thus suspending the election?” Hunt asked.

“You’re so correct to be concerned about this,” Carville responded. “It’s getting worse by the day. It is not going to stop getting worse. And I would be—we ought to be—on high, high alert.”

Such chatter is widespread these days among Trump’s opponents—and with good reason. Trump is the most openly authoritarian president in US history and has already incited an insurrection in an attempt to remain in office.

The good news, according to experts, is that Trump doesn’t have the power to unilaterally cancel the midterms. The states, with oversight from Congress, run their elections. Voting will go forward whether Trump likes it or not.

But there are still many reasons to be concerned about the rapidly escalating threats to America’s election system. Given Trump’s extreme assertions of executive power, the autocratic nature of his second term, and the stacking of his administration with hardline loyalists, many of the outlandish schemes he considered to stay in power in 2020—such as using the military to seize voting machines in battleground states—don’t seem as far-fetched today. And his deployment of the National Guard and Marines in response to protests against ICE in Los Angeles, which was followed by a similar federal takeover of Washington, DC, has heightened fears about how far Trump will go to keep his party in control of Washington. “The California events really rattled a lot of people,” says Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project.

The scale of Trump’s interference in the midterms has become crystal clear in recent weeks. The president pressured Texas to pass a mid-decade redistricting plan last month that would add five more Republican seats in the US House. Shortly thereafter, he vowed to “get rid of MAIL-IN BALLOTS” and “Seriously Controversial VOTING MACHINES,” through an executive order. “If we do these TWO things,” he wrote on Truth Social, “we will pick up 100 more seats.”

But there are still many reasons to be concerned about the rapidly escalating threats to America’s election system. Given Trump’s extreme assertions of executive power, the autocratic nature of his second term, and the stacking of his administration with hardline loyalists, many of the outlandish schemes he considered to stay in power in 2020—such as using the military to seize voting machines in battleground states—don’t seem as far-fetched today. And his deployment of the National Guard and Marines in response to protests against ICE in Los Angeles, which was followed by a similar federal takeover of Washington, DC, has heightened fears about how far Trump will go to keep his party in control of Washington. “The California events really rattled a lot of people,” says Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project.

The scale of Trump’s interference in the midterms has become crystal clear in recent weeks. The president pressured Texas to pass a mid-decade redistricting plan last month that would add five more Republican seats in the US House. Shortly thereafter, he vowed to “get rid of MAIL-IN BALLOTS” and “Seriously Controversial VOTING MACHINES,” through an executive order. “If we do these TWO things,” he wrote on Truth Social, “we will pick up 100 more seats.”



What kind of President Declares war on an American City?

The article then lists 10 ways that Trump will interfere with the midterms and voting. Voter Suppression Tactics are at the top of the list, but the others are equally as devious. If you’re going to read just one thing today, please give the list a thorough read. It’s coming to a voting place near everyone.

ProPublica continues to be an enormously useful source of real journalism with real investigations. This is a must-read for those who will be or are dependent on Social Security. “The Untold Saga of What Happened When DOGE Stormed Social Security.” Eli Hager has the lede. I’m just going to use their “highlights” since the story is a narrative of everything that went on. It also has some interesting insight into Leland Dudek and his management of the process and gaffs.

Reporting Highlights



  • Missed Opportunity: Some Social Security officials said they welcomed DOGE — the agency needs a technological overhaul — only to see DOGE ignore them and prioritize quick (often empty) wins.



  • Internal Revolt: Leland Dudek, the agency’s then acting chief, helped DOGE at first, then tried to resist when he saw what it was doing, Dudek said in 15 hours of candid interviews.



  • DOGE Lives On: Multiple former DOGErs have taken permanent roles at the Social Security Administration, and Senate-confirmed Commissioner Frank Bisignano has embraced its approach.


Trump has started to move on to a “crime” agenda. As usual, it’s racist, full of lies and bias, and is designed to push buttons on the MAGA Cult. This is from AXIOS and is written by Marc Caputo. “Stabbing video fuels MAGA’s crime message.”

MAGA influencers are drawing repeated attention to violent attacks to elevate the issue of urban crime — and accuse mainstream media of under-covering shocking cases.
  • Shocking video of the fatal Aug. 22 knife attack on 23-year-old Iryna Zarutska on a light-rail car in Charlotte, North Carolina, dominated weekend conversation on Trump-friendly social media.

The big picture: The rising number of surveillance cameras in public spaces, including on Charlotte’s light rail, has become a big accelerant in these cases.

  • The video is easily shared or leaked, and can instantly pollinate across social media — a visual counterpoint to statistics showing crime decreases.

Driving the news: President Trump, asked about the Charlotte video by a reporter Sunday, said he wanted to find out more about the stabbing before commenting.

  • “I’ll know all about it by tomorrow morning,” Trump said.
  • A Trump adviser told Axios: “This is exactly what he’s talking about, and it’s going to be an issue he’s going to highlight. This is not just about North Carolina. Other campaigns will deal with this.”

Elon Musk repeatedly posted about the Charlotte case this weekend for his 225 million X followers.

  • Also commenting on X: White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, Trump confidant Charlie Kirk, Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy.
  • North Carolina Senate candidate Michael Whatley — a former chair of the national GOP — invoked the case to accuse his Democratic opponent, Gov. Roy Cooper, of being soft on crime.
  • Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles called it a “heartbreaking attack.”

Zarutska recently arrived in Charlotte from Ukraine to escape the war there, The Charlotte Observer reports.

  • The suspect, Decarlos Brown Jr., 34, was charged with first-degree murder. His criminal record includes charges of armed robbery, felony larceny, breaking and entering, and shoplifting, according to jail records cited by WBTV.
  • Mecklenburg County District Attorney Spencer Merriweather, in an interview with Axios Charlotte last week, didn’t comment directly on the case but acknowledged the limitations and complexities of holding defendants with mental health issues accountable.

What they’re saying: Whatley wrote on X that in June 2020, “Cooper signed a soft-on-crime executive order, and just three months later, Brown was released from prison.”

  • The executive order established a “racial profiling task force” and sought to reduce “systemic” racism. But it didn’t call for the early release of suspects.

Cooper’s campaign accused Whatley of “lying,” and said: “Roy Cooper prosecuted violent criminals and drug dealers, increased the penalties for violence against law enforcement, and kept thousands of criminals off the streets and behind bars.”

  • Whatley spokesperson Danielle Alvarez countered that Brown was released from prison early, just as Cooper was spending more time talking about “fighting racism” and less about keeping “career criminals” like Brown locked up.

Between the lines: Influential conservative social media accounts accused major national news outlets of not covering the racial dynamics of the Charlotte killing — a white victim and a Black suspect — with the same intensity as they did in the case of Daniel Penny.

  • Penny, who is white, choked to death a homeless Black man who was threatening passengers on a subway car in Manhattan in 2023. A jury acquitted Penny of criminally negligent homicide.


You may read more about this at the link. I will close with this article concerning Yam Tits and the decimation of Science and Universities. It’s a New York Times (shared) Guest Op-Ed written by Stephanie Greenblatt, a Harvard Humanities Professor. “We Are Watching a Scientific Superpower Destroy Itself.”

The Trump administration’s assault on America’s universities by cutting billions of dollars of federal support for scientific and medical research has called up from somewhere deep in my memory the phrase “duck and cover.” These were words drilled into American schoolchildren in the 1950s. We heard them on television, where they accompanied a cartoon about a wise turtle named Bert who withdrew into his shell at any sign of danger. In class, when our teachers gave the order, we were instructed to follow Bert’s example by diving under our desks and covering our necks. These actions were meant to protect us from the nuclear attack that could come, we were told, at any time. Though even in elementary school most of us intuited that there was something futile in these attempts to shield ourselves from destruction, we dutifully went through the motions. How else could we deal with the anxiety caused by the menace?

The anxiety greatly increased in October 1957, when Americans learned of the Soviet Union’s successful launch of the world’s first satellite, Sputnik 1. The vivid evidence of the technological superiority in rocketry of our Cold War enemy provoked a remarkably rapid response. In 1958, by a bipartisan vote, Congress passed and President Dwight Eisenhower signed the National Defense Education Act, one of the most consequential federal interventions in education in the nation’s history. Together with the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, it made America into the world’s undisputed leader in science and technology.

Nearly 70 years later, that leadership is in peril. According to the latest annual Nature Index, which tracks research institutions by their contributions to leading science journals, the single remaining U.S. institution among the top 10 is Harvard, in second place, far behind the Chinese Academy of Sciences.


Trump’s war on science and academia is one of the most-sighted of all his ego-stroking projects. The pride that people like me felt about our Space Program and medical achievements was beyond the moon. As a cancer survivor of a rare cancer that has now become more curable since I had the disease, I just can’t believe this administration has such a fixation on killing people. But there it is.

There’s another Countrywide “No Kings” demonstration on October 18th, if you care to take part.

What’s on your Reading, Blogging, and Action lists?

youtube.com/embed/LT3cERVRoQo?…

#andRacisim #crime #DOGESocialSecurityAttacks #IMAfraidOfAmericans #ICE #Trump #TrumpAtttacksOnScience #TrumpDesperation



Vlaams minister-president Matthias Diependaele geeft toe dat het gerucht klopt: de burgemeester van Zulte heeft hem in de gemeentelijke feestzaal van Zulte betrapt met een Excel-tabel.

vremdemirror.com/2025/09/28/ma…



Anděl, Bičík a Bláha také mají pod 10 m.s. (makroregiony světa) nějaký fyzický zeměpis. Nějaké fyzické dělení. A myslím, že jsou to kontinenty ( cs.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kontinen… ). Včetně ambivalentnosti Evropa - Asie - Afrika, když m.s.Ruský a m.s. Islámský leží v Eurasii a Afrasii.

Kontinenty je jistě vhodné zohlednit, ale dělení nemusí být jen podle nich. Ve starověku bylo přirozeným m.s. Středozemí. Myslím, že v dnešní globalizaci č.p. Pacifik má podobnou úlohu - spíše propojuje, než odděluje.

#tg881764418🧵

in reply to Chao-c'

@xChaos , děkuju. Jsem asi úplně nesrozumitelný. Ten obrázek je Anděl, Bičík a Bláha, s kterými nesouhlasím. Je to příklad něčeho, co nechci. Mých 9 č.p. se nijak podstatně nemění. Naposledy jsem si jen ujasňoval vedení hranice mezi č.p. Pacifik a č.p. Jižní Atlantik: f.cz/@tymoty/11527385540429347… . V téhle deltě upozorňuju na "přirozenost" v dnešním globálním světě č.p. Pacifik. Současná č.p. Pacifik je Středozemní moře starověku.

#tg881764418🧵


Hranice č.p. Pacifik a č.p. Jižní Atlantik je nejdelší hranicí mezi dvěma č.p. Začíná na pobřeží Tichého oceánu a Ameriky na hranici Spojených států a Mexika v Tijuaně 32,5343525° s.š. a 117,1242592° z.d. Dále k jihu sleduje pobřežní čáru (jinak: břežní čáru, nebo též linii) Tichý oceán - kontinet Amerika. Kontinentem je myšlena souvislá část pevniny bez ostrovů. Od pobřežní čáry se odděluje na špici Arauz 53,5366667° j.š. a 72,3566667° z.d. a dále pokračuje jako hranice vodní na severozápad Magalhãesovým průlivem. Ze středu jeho ústí do otevřeného Tichého oceánu 52,6138786° j.š. a 74,7221825° z.d. vede hranice jihozápadně ortodromou tečnou k rovnoběžce 60° j.š.. Dále směrem západním po rovnoběžce 60° j.š., která je hranicí Jižního ocáanu, kolem Antarktikdy. Od rovnoběžky se hranice odděluje tečnou ortordromu severozápaním směrem k Střelkovému mysu, kde konči.

Tijuana je trojmezím č.p Pacifik, č.p. Spojené státy a č.p. Jižní Atlantik.

Střelkový mys je trojmezím č.p. Pacifik, č.p. Jižní Atlantik a č.p. Středozem.

#tg881764418🧵


in reply to tymoty 🇪🇺

no ok, já už do toho nebudu rýpat. Ono je těžké říct, kdo něco prezentuje jako zajímavost a kuriozitu, a kdo to spíš propaguje jako "žádoucí stav".

Ten Pacifik je zajímavý tím, že vzdálenosti nebráněj přepravě nákladů, ale na cestování je to přeci jen dál, spíš jako Evropa vs. Jižní Amerika...

#tg881764418🧵

tymoty 🇪🇺 reshared this.




title: Lester Wallack
artist: Mathew Brady Studio, active 1844 - 1894
source: National Portrait Gallery
notes: The Frederick Hill Meserve Collection comprises more than five thousand […]
#Art #Design #Museum #Gallery #MastodonArt #MastoArt #Culture #Random
npg.si.edu/object/npg_NPG.81.M…


Nostalgia del videonoleggio

"Videoheaven" è un documentario che racconta la storia del videonoleggio e la sua fine. Oggi mancando i luoghi fisici per condividere la propria passione per il cinema e scoprire cose nuove, dei videonoleggio si sente la mancanza.

@spettacoli

lucysullacultura.com/nostalgia…

#Cinema

Questa voce è stata modificata (13 ore fa)
in reply to prealpinux

credo che il videonoleggio abbia iniziato a morire quando l'hanno automatizzato in stile 'sportello Bancomat'.


github.com/jucasoliveira/techw…
This is hilarious. They have vibe-coded a JS app to host a static list of people to "out" a group of people who have signed an open letter. Idiots

#dhh #joke #idiots #ruby #ror #tech

Questa voce è stata modificata (13 ore fa)




Noch einige der zuletzt hier besonders häufig geteilten #News:

Amazon will Android auf Fire TV Sticks mit Linux austauschen
heise.de/news/Amazon-will-Andr…

Saudische Investoren könnten Electronic Arts übernehmen
heise.de/news/Saudische-Invest…

Bund plant schärfere Regeln gegen illegale Drohnenflüge
heise.de/news/Bund-plant-schae…

Angreifer können auf Servern mit Supermicro-Boards Hintertüren verankern
heise.de/news/Angreifer-koenne…

#heise #Verpasstodon



#SabianQue

Un día como hoy 27 de septiembre del año 1983, Richard M. Stallman publicaba el anuncio inicial de Proyecto GNU.

Su idea era iniciar el desarrollo de un sistema operativo totalmente libre, anque el Proyecto GNU no iniciaría oficialmente hasta enero del siguiente año, el anuncio de RMS describe el plan inicial de desarrollo de GNU y sus componentes principales.

Para leer el anuncio completo ingresa a:

gnu.org/gnu/initial-announceme…

#ProyectoGNU



📰 Museo Regional de la Medicina Dr. Carlos Martínez Gaensly
🏷️ #ChileCultura #Cartelera #Panoramas #Cultura #Chile

🔗 chilecultura.gob.cl/events/274



Every time I get up my dog acts like he woke up late for work.


The Real Violent Extremists Are The Freaks Who Run The US Empire thealtworld.substack.com/p/the…




28 settembre 1925
#accaddeoggi

Nasce Seymour Roger Cray (Chippewa Falls - USA, 28 settembre 1925 - Colorado Springs - USA, 5 ottobre 1996).

Cray è stato un ingegnere elettronico. Ha lavorato all'architettura di diversi supercomputer. Durante il periodo di lavoro presso la Control Data Corporation, progettò una serie di supercomputer, i più veloci al mondo per decenni. In seguito fondò la Cray Research, che costruì molte di queste macchine.

@computer

#retrocomputing #retrocomputer

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in reply to Oloap

@Alberto Difatti …

Par🇮🇹le n°1363 X/6*

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Today, the Busan Philharmonic Orchestra plays Pagh-Paan #Ravel with Kim #Messiaen & #Sibelius in #Berlin worldconcerthall.com/en/schedu… #wch


Nothing like celebrating my 50th year in Portland, Oregon with an invading army.

You didn't have to go to all the trouble. A simple card would have been just fine.

#Portland



reuters.com/business/electroni…

Cool. cool. cool. EA going private with Saudi Arabian government funding?

Looking forward to "Journalist Murder 2026" and the Battlefield series becoming about repressing dissidents.

Next Jedi game we find out Empires aren't that bad after all?

#PCGames



Zähne gezogen: Wirtschaftsministerium schafft Lieferkettengesetz faktisch ab

Das Wirtschaftsressort hat das zuständige Bundesamt angewiesen, bei der Anwendung des Lieferkettengesetzes zurückhaltend und unternehmensfreundlich zu agieren.

heise.de/news/Zaehne-gezogen-W…

#CDU #EU #Handel #Wirtschaft #news



Pompini a Putin. La #Russia ha la golden share sia della maggioranza sia dell’opposizione italiana - Linkiesta.it linkiesta.it/2025/09/russia-it…

@attualita






#Epstein , Epstein, Epstein! Release the files! Release the files! Release the files! With only victim names redacted. Whistleblowers: Tell the world about anything missing! Releasing in tranches allows obfuscation of complete content! #Politics


430 nautical miles from Gaza — and closing every day. Despite repeated threats to intercept or attack humanitarian mission, Flotilla is sailing. Children in Gaza are being starved; that is a moral emergency that leaves no room for silence or delay. The voyage is lawful under international law, driven by people-powered solidarity from across the globe, and rooted in the unshakable will of those who refuse to be erased.

Flotilla sail knowing the risks — but also knowing the stakes. If a state tries to stop this flotilla, it will not only block boats: it will face the outrage of millions who demand dignity, aid, and accountability. History shows that when the courage of the oppressed meets global solidarity, movements grow stronger, not weaker.

Take action now: share this message, call your representatives to demand protection and safe passage for the global sumud flotilla.

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I think this is the angriest I've seen @hankgreen.bsky.social get. "Lawyers doing lawyer shit." www.youtube.com/watch?v=BdpS...

This Autism Stat Makes No Sens...