hnu123
No user record in our sample, but hnu123 has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but hnu123 has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
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The entire propaganda apparatus and the entire political class has been drumming up war with china for nearly a decade. So yes. There is a geniune concern. But it's not an immediate fear of war but a looming sense that…
> Like Ukraine started a war with Russia by economic alignment with the western powers The ukraine war started when the US and Russia agreed to partition ukraine. Like the germans and soviets did to poland in ww2.…
> Japan was never colonized in the usual sense of the word. It was in every sense of the word. > I guess the first event you're referring to is Perry's gunboat diplomacy that brought an end to the Tokugawa isolationism…
> I, for one, prefer Lynch's Dune to Villeneuve's. I was very hyped for the latter and left the theater disappointed. I prefer neither. Lynch's is odd and silly while villeneuve's is just eye candy. Dune should be read.…
> I assume this is what it was like in the World War I & II era watching tanks being developed. A better analogy would be the airplane as it had dual civilian-military uses like the drone. Whereas a tank is solely a…
> Sanctions started to be imposed in 1938. And? You realize that 1938 is before 1941? > But Japan invaded Manchuria in 1933 and by 1937 invaded China and had already perpetrated the Nanking Massacre. The US ( and much…
> Ah, you are the kind of person who consider the US the aggressor of the Pacific War. You mean the country that colonized japan ( twice ), philippines, korea, china, vietnam, not to mention stole hawaii and a bunch of…
> It's bad practice to simply dismiss arguments as "propaganda" without engaging with them. Sure. If you are new to the discussion. But I'm not. I've come across all the rationalizations and of course the propaganda all…
> The Japanese government started the war and was free to stop it at any time. No. The US started the war with economic sanctions. This is a historical fact. > They could have issued an unconditional surrender and the…
> For what it's worth, by 1945 (Hiroshima) the Japanese army had grown from 1,700,000 (1941) to 6,000,000 (1945). Yes. A bunch of elderly and young boys 'armed' with broomsticks. That you have to resort this level of…
> You are encouraged to read deeper about the end of WWII. I have. Beyond the propaganda and all the nonsense. But you don't need to read deeper to understand evil is evil. Nothing justifies acts of genocide like nuking…
What did Hiroshima have to do with ending a war? By the time of hiroshima, the japanese army, navy, military was nonexistent and had been for nearly a year. It was just a military test of a barbaric weapon on innocent…
> Linux is great for gaming... if you dual boot Windows for when it's not Preach. Say it loud so the folks in the back can hear. Eventually dual boot gets annoying as well. So most people just get two boxes linked via a…
> How can people be so blood-thirsty that it's ok to sacrifice over 600 men for nothing more than a "spectacle"? Is sacrificing 100,000 innocent civilians in hiroshima for spectacle any better? > It's really difficult…
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> Sometimes I wonder how people can actually enjoy songs that are so utterly linked to their times. Because it sounds good and the more times change, the more they stay the same. Also, almost every song, every work of…
> This is visible in the very healthy deep tech industry in Europe. How can it be deep if new ventures find it difficult to secure funding? If you can't continually grow new companies, you can't develop much depth. >…
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There's an abundance of freshwater in the east coast, northwest and midwest. Why not shift some of the exess water from the great lakes, east coast and northwest to southwest? Can't we pipeline the water to giant…
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> I'll start by saying that if you're going to roast a paper that an econ nobel winner "By 2005 or so, it will become clear that the Internet's impact on the economy has been no greater than the fax machine's." -- Paul…