

Sure you do. You go there for the Indian food and the Thai food and we have a Burmese place we go to each time we’re in London.
And sure, might get some bangers and a pie while we’re there.
Just this guy, you know?
Sure you do. You go there for the Indian food and the Thai food and we have a Burmese place we go to each time we’re in London.
And sure, might get some bangers and a pie while we’re there.
And will make a 3.5 million dollar profit from that transaction.
I’m just going to leave you this link: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ethnic_armed_organisations_in_Myanmar
Check the Active list and the founding years. This was not a disarmed population. What the Tatmadaw did or did not allow was not much of a concern outside the central plains.
But these messages are being deleted, so whatever.
The fuck are you on about? Civil wars happen regardless of the population being armed or not. See Myanmar.
Off topic, but Myanmar has had local militias for decades and they were in varying states of rebellion until the democratic reforms in the 2010-2020 period. Yes, the civil war has spread further now, but this was in no way a disarmed country.
look at all the tech stuff he’s passing right now
He doesn’t pass shit. Except, well, literally. But then at both ends. Congress passes laws.
Icelandic here. Still no summer.
Just kidding, it was Tuesday last week.
Unflavoured, unsweetened, full fat yoghurt is the only yoghurt. You’re thinking of sweet, vanilla low-fat yoghurt.
Plan9 all the way!
Just acknowledging the correct singular and spelling of spaghetti.
But they could publish another hash.
Per Gemini, but note the bolded text in the last paragraph:
The Star Trek: The Next Generation episode you’re describing is “The Arsenal of Freedom” (Season 1, Episode 21).
In this episode, the Enterprise investigates a planet called Minos, where an advanced, fully automated weapon system is being demonstrated. This system, run by a sentient computer, is designed to constantly adapt and improve its combat capabilities. When Picard and his away team are trapped on the planet, they encounter the holographic salesman of this system, who insists on demonstrating its “effectiveness.”
The computer system, in its relentless pursuit of demonstrating its weaponry, keeps offering reasons why its automated destruction and even the elimination of populations (effectively genocide in the context of its function) is a logical and efficient outcome in its “sales pitch.” Picard, of course, is horrified by this logic.
The “Picard orders tea” detail isn’t quite right for this specific episode. While Picard often orders tea, the issue in “The Arsenal of Freedom” is the computer’s relentless and amoral justification of its destructive capabilities, not a glitch triggered by a tea order. However, the core concept of a computer system calmly explaining the benefits of what amounts to genocide is definitely present.
The NaXi Party for that Chinese dictator angle.
It kind of sounds like it might have been written to protect a mother wanting to have a child and then got misapplied.
My brain auto completed that as being up for auction.
No it did not. But it may have wronged it.
Having data is great. You can see what is… or was recently. But you need to feed this data into computer models to forecast the future, or a probability distribution about the future. And that’s what NOAA has and the navy doesn’t.
That’s returning a “406 Not Acceptable” response. I’ve never even seen one except in http docs.
Some believe that their journey ultimately takes them to a place much, much lower.
Not Italian but can confirm the relief moving from Rome to a smaller Northern city,