Skip Navigation
InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)PA
Pons_Aelius @kbin.social
Posts 23
Comments 3K
China urges largest nuclear states to negotiate a 'no-first-use' treaty
  • The French will never agree.

    Their stance has always been, if France is threatened we will use every weapon in our arsenal.

    They do not have end the world stocks of nukes like the US or Russia so their attitude is, "Fuck with us and we will end you."

  • Talking to Boys the Way We Talk to Girls (Published 2017)
  • Your link does not point to the article.

    Sorry

    This URL has been already captured 6 times today, which is a daily limit we have set for that host. Please try again tomorrow. Please email us at "[email protected]" if you would like to discuss this more.
    Return to Save Page Now

  • The Taliban hold another public execution as thousands watch at a stadium in northern Afghanistan
  • a whole lotta worse than regular executions

    Only to the people justifying state murder. To the person involved, they are still dead either way,

    To me the Saudi.Taliban methods are more honest, though just as mortally reprehensible as the USA's. The Saudi's are proud that they murder their citizens and are not afraid to show it.

  • Why does our civilization send signals and our location into space?
  • The big thing people over look when considering the we are broadcasting thousands od watts into space, they might hear use is SNR

    Signal to noise ratio. (the more random stuff on a frequency the harder it is to read the signal)

    Yes, humans are pumping out a huge amount of radio (etc) signals into space. it is not coherent or directed.

    Thousands of antennae all over the world pumping different signals but from far away, they are all noise interfering with each other.

    IIRC: Even if there was a radio telescope only a few light years away, all they would see pointing directly at earth would be static.

  • The Taliban hold another public execution as thousands watch at a stadium in northern Afghanistan
  • Centrists: It’s the same thing!1!!

    Response from a country that does not ahve the death penalty.

    Well, they are...

    It is not how the state does it that is the problem but that the state does it.

    There is no way to humanely kill someone who does not want to die.

  • FX Miniseries ‘Shōgun’ Is the Most Transportive TV Epic Since ‘Game of Thrones’: TV Review
  • The author, James Clavell wrote 6 novels set in Asia that span 400-ish years. Shogun - 1600 to the last set in the 1990s.

    Shogun is one of the best but they are all worth a read.

    My rating of the Series.

    Shogun & Noble House tied for first. (both were made into mini-series in the 80s)

    Tai-Pan

    Gai-Jin

    King Rat (his first novel, based on personal experence in WW2)

    Whirlwind

  • www.wired.com Inside the Operation to Bring Down Trump’s Truth Social

    The North Atlantic Fella Organization is trying to shut down Trump’s flailing social media platform before the 2024 election—by shitposting.

    Inside the Operation to Bring Down Trump’s Truth Social
    9
    www.wired.com Inside the Operation to Bring Down Trump’s Truth Social

    The North Atlantic Fella Organization is trying to shut down Trump’s flailing social media platform before the 2024 election—by shitposting.

    Inside the Operation to Bring Down Trump’s Truth Social
    4
    bigthink.com Harvard astronomer's "alien spherules" are industrial pollutants

    Finding alien technology on the seafloor would be truly incredible. This extraordinary claim, however, is debunked by the actual evidence.

    Harvard astronomer's "alien spherules" are industrial pollutants
    19
    bigthink.com Harvard astronomer's "alien spherules" are industrial pollutants

    Finding alien technology on the seafloor would be truly incredible. This extraordinary claim, however, is debunked by the actual evidence.

    Harvard astronomer's "alien spherules" are industrial pollutants
    2

    10 years ago, Batkid was battling bad guys and cancer — now he's 15 and healthy

    On Nov. 15, 2013, Miles Scott, a 5-year-old with leukemia, won hearts around the world when he became a superhero for a day with help from the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

    2

    Heartwarming story about Gothenburg's public library goes viral

    What do you do if the library is officially closed but you manage to sneak in anyway? Borrow books, of course.

    0

    Heartwarming story about Gothenburg's public library goes viral

    What do you do if the library is officially closed but you manage to sneak in anyway? Borrow books, of course.

    2
    WholeSomeMemes @lemmy.ml Pons_Aelius @kbin.social

    Heartwarming story about Gothenburg's public library goes viral

    What do you do if the library is officially closed but you manage to sneak in anyway? Borrow books, of course.

    0
    arstechnica.com I spy with my Cold War satellite eye... nearly 400 Roman forts in the Middle East

    Anthropologists suggest forts were built to secure key trade routes through the region.

    I spy with my Cold War satellite eye... nearly 400 Roman forts in the Middle East
    5
    arstechnica.com I spy with my Cold War satellite eye... nearly 400 Roman forts in the Middle East

    Anthropologists suggest forts were built to secure key trade routes through the region.

    I spy with my Cold War satellite eye... nearly 400 Roman forts in the Middle East
    0
    news.artnet.com Archaeologists in Turkey Have Unearthed Human and Animal Sculptures That Are the Earliest Examples of Prehistoric Art | Artnet News

    Human and animal sculptures that could date to 9,600 B.C.E were found in Turkey at sites some believe have ties to biblical accounts.

    Archaeologists in Turkey Have Unearthed Human and Animal Sculptures That Are the Earliest Examples of Prehistoric Art | Artnet News

    Human and animal sculptures that could date to 9,600 B.C.E were found in Turkey at sites some believe have ties to biblical accounts.

    The more we look, the further back human civilisation goes.

    6
    news.artnet.com Archaeologists in Turkey Have Unearthed Human and Animal Sculptures That Are the Earliest Examples of Prehistoric Art | Artnet News

    Human and animal sculptures that could date to 9,600 B.C.E were found in Turkey at sites some believe have ties to biblical accounts.

    Archaeologists in Turkey Have Unearthed Human and Animal Sculptures That Are the Earliest Examples of Prehistoric Art | Artnet News

    Human and animal sculptures that could date to 9,600 B.C.E were found in Turkey at sites some believe have ties to biblical accounts.

    The more we look, the further back human civilisation goes.

    0
    news.artnet.com A Norwegian Family Went Searching for a Lost Earring in Their Backyard. They Found Viking Artifacts Instead | Artnet News

    The two brooches are the first definitive evidence of Viking presence on the island of Jomfruland in southern Norway.

    A Norwegian Family Went Searching for a Lost Earring in Their Backyard. They Found Viking Artifacts Instead | Artnet News
    2
    news.artnet.com A Norwegian Family Went Searching for a Lost Earring in Their Backyard. They Found Viking Artifacts Instead | Artnet News

    The two brooches are the first definitive evidence of Viking presence on the island of Jomfruland in southern Norway.

    A Norwegian Family Went Searching for a Lost Earring in Their Backyard. They Found Viking Artifacts Instead | Artnet News
    0
    news.artnet.com Archaeologists in France Have Discovered a 2nd-Century Roman Sarcophagus, Still Fastened Close With Lead Staples | Artnet News

    Archeologists in Reims, northeastern France, have found an unopened Roman sarcophagus with the remains of a woman and her funerary goods.

    Archaeologists in France Have Discovered a 2nd-Century Roman Sarcophagus, Still Fastened Close With Lead Staples | Artnet News
    0
    news.artnet.com Archaeologists in France Have Discovered a 2nd-Century Roman Sarcophagus, Still Fastened Close With Lead Staples | Artnet News

    Archeologists in Reims, northeastern France, have found an unopened Roman sarcophagus with the remains of a woman and her funerary goods.

    Archaeologists in France Have Discovered a 2nd-Century Roman Sarcophagus, Still Fastened Close With Lead Staples | Artnet News
    3
    arstechnica.com Unity makes major changes to controversial install-fee program

    No fees for Personal tier or old/current projects, new 2.5% revenue cap, and more.

    Unity makes major changes to controversial install-fee program
    4

    Anyone want to mod m/science to get rid of the spam?

    @ernest is the only mod and they have way too much on their plate to have to deal with it.

    13