Vietnam was bad, but current war isnt
Iraq war was bad but current war isnt
Vietnam was bad, but current war isnt
Iraq war was bad but current war isnt
1st one was from the era when USA was hiding tiananmen protests under the rug in the hope china would become liberal.
but how many chips flavours do they have?
What happens when you destroy the country and start a civil war, so they cant prevent damage or limit it.
Also, no money for them, more billion to ukraine
Data was from the 1960s and mostly 1970s iirc. I had it downloaded some 5-6 years ago.
“Ukrainian democracy” for you folks
no need to use those arguments, qwest admits chinese lead: https://www.aspi.org.au/report/critical-technology-tracker
they were, in ancient egypt. They were supposed to be dangerous days, because religion wanted to keep control of the people on the days they werent tied to the regular schedule, by scaring them.
dont forget mexico bombing the US communities within its border, aiming to force them to abandon their culture (burgers and english language, idk?), after conducting a coup because they didnt like the pro-US democratically elected leader.
If mexicans/canadians did half of what ukraine has done, they wouldnt exist anymore
hitler at kursk:
Premier is the second top rank within the SPA, currently held by Kim Jae Ryong [not related].
In 2020 the premier changed to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim_Tok-hun
https://www.almanac.com/how-did-months-get-their-names
March (Martius) was named for Mars, the god of war, because this was the month when active military campaigns resumed. May (Maius) and June (Junius) were also named for goddesses: Maia and Juno. April (Aprilis) is thought to stem from the Latin aperio, meaning “to open”—a reference to the opening buds of springtime. The rest of the months were numbered; their original names in Latin meant the fifth (Quintilis), sixth (Sextilis), seventh (September), eighth (October), ninth (November), and tenth (December) month.
Eventually, January (Januarius) and February (Februarius) were added to the end of the year, giving all 12 months proper names. January was named after Janus, the Roman god of beginnings and transitions. February’s name is believed to stem from Februa, an ancient festival dedicated to ritual springtime cleaning and washing.
Julian Calendar Updates When Julius Caesar became Pontifex Maximus, he reformed the Roman calendar so that the 12 months were based on Earth’s revolutions around the Sun. It was a solar calendar, as we have today. January and February were moved to the front of the year, and leap years were introduced to keep the calendar year lined up with the solar year.
The winter months (January and February) remained a time of reflection, peace, new beginnings, and purification. After Caesar’s death, the month Quintilis was renamed July in honor of Julius Caesar in 44 BC, and later, Sextilis was renamed August in honor of Roman Emperor Augustus in 8 BC.
Of course, all the renaming and reorganizing meant that some of the months’ names no longer agreed with their position in the calendar (September to December, for example). Later emperors tried to name various months after themselves, but those changes did not outlive them!
TLDR: we want easy divisions for time, and nature isnt decimal.
Exactly why there are 12 months and 24h a day, for easy divisions.
Feet are handier than meters and gallons are better than liters.
Wrong, youre just used to them. I roughly know what a liter of something weights, usually around a kg. A gallon tho? wtf i would know? I can easily compare meters of length to my arms or height, but i need more complex divisions for feet
Well, the time for eath rotation isnt a constant, it will slowly decelerate and days will be longer.
Using multiples of 10 for time was considered, but was a shitty option compared to the current deal. Months should all be 30 days and then have a free week at the end of the year tho, egyptian style.
Country with 30 years of existance lectures millenial cultures on how to see the world