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LittleMoveBig

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[untitled]

1 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

Ukraine bans Soviet symbols and criminalizes sympathy for communism (2015)

theguardian.com
2 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

India reportedly explores yuan in oil trade with Russia

globaltimes.cn
6 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·1 comments

CIA black site detainee served as training prop to teach torture techniques

theguardian.com
534 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·416 comments

Systematic Destabilization in American History: 9/11, JFK, Oklahoma City (2012)

apjjf.org
3 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

Hong Kong Omicron deaths expose limits of fraying zero-Covid policy

ft.com
2 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

War in Ukraine: Uni to uniform – Ukraine's new teenage army recruits

bbc.com
9 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·1 comments

Moderna finally cracks into gene editing with Metagenomi pact

fiercebiotech.com
2 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

Democrats move closer to cutting Iowa caucus's first-in-the-nation primary spot

washingtonpost.com
3 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·1 comments

The Harvard Boys Do Russia (1998)

thenation.com
3 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

Why CBDCs will be ID-based

ft.com
5 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·6 comments

Massachusetts Reports 'Significant Overcount' of Covid Deaths

nbcboston.com
7 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·4 comments

How CNN's Jeff Zucker and His Cronies Manipulated the News

rollingstone.com
174 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·115 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

Overextending and Unbalancing Russia (2019)

rand.org
3 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

Twitter is censoring reporting on Ukrainian Nazis on “abusive behavior” pretext

asawinstanley.substack.com
9 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·4 comments

Russia opens criminal investigation of Meta over death calls on Facebook

reuters.com
198 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·348 comments

US official: Russian invasion of Ukraine risks release of deadly pathogens

thebulletin.org
8 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·1 comments

Ukraine's Zelensky says he has 'cooled' on joining NATO

businessinsider.com
7 points·by LittleMoveBig·4 years ago·0 comments

comments

LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
If my math is correct, it's from 27,000 to 23,000?
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
> According to the AAP’s tracker, 871 children have died thus far in the pandemic

During the 2009 H1N1 influenza season, 1,090 children died. This was over a single season, not an aggregated count from the beginning of time, which seems to be a phenomenon unique to COVID. Until some point late last year, the CDC even had language on their website saying that young children were more likely to experience complications from influenza than from Covid-19.
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
"health labs" doing a lot of work in this headline. The WHO says they want to prevent "accidental or deliberate release of pathogens." If the pathogens can be intentionally released and cause harm, in what sense are they not bioweapons?
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
The article says the "deadly pathogens" in question are elements of peaceful scientific research, not bioweapons development, so it can't really be called "admitting it."
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
I would imagine the parent is referring to some of the more "Freedom Fries"-esque excesses of Russophobia, like canceling Tchaikovsky from symphony programs, discarding Russian vodka, banning Russian cat breeds from competitions, etc
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
> call for violence against Russians and Russian soldiers in the context of the Ukraine invasion

Kinda have to ask, would this include calls for violence against the ethnic Russian populations in eastern Ukraine?

edit: Reuters has added that including a location with the calls for death will be considered an "indicator of credibility" that is still prohibited.
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
That's all fine and I am broadly in support of the statement "people without major COVID risk factors should not take any special precautions or avoid travel to areas experiencing high case rates." My comment was simply addressed to the claim that the U.S. is currently doing much worse than New Zealand in some way that is relevant to travel advisories.
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
New Zealand is just at the beginning of its first major wave and deaths lag considerably, so it's a bit early to be drawing this comparison. I would agree they're likely to experience a lower death count than the U.S. but not by this magnitude.

Also, presumably the epidemiological factors which are causing Americans to die from COVID at higher rates are also likely to apply to Americans who are infected while traveling to New Zealand.
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
New Zealand is reporting the equivalent of 1.2 million daily U.S. cases, while the U.S. is at 30,000.
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
> The pandemic affected everybody almost equally by political jurisdiction

If by "the pandemic" you are referring to things like the closures of schools and businesses, then this is certainly not the case.
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
> The CDC and the American Academy of Pediatricians has both said very clearly that there is no evidence linking masks with developmental delays or language deficits.

In what way is this not simply a naked appeal to authority? Have the CDC or AAP conducted long-running randomized trials to determine what the effects of mass masking might be? From what you have linked, this seems like nothing more than that well-worn rhetorical jibe where they just proclaim "there is no evidence" of some thing they're not actually looking for in the first place.

> Instead, they made the issue so incredibly complicated and polarized that almost a million people died.

Is it your impression that more consistent messaging or public compliance would have prevented all of those deaths?
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
A lot of what people believe about what's happening at the plant is based on the statements of Ukrainian officials, who by some accounts are using it to call for NATO to impose a no-fly zone. A disaster at this plant would cause huge problems for DNR/LNR/Crimea, which Russia does not want. Amid the fog of war it's often a good idea to take a step back and wait for more evidence to present itself.
LittleMoveBig
·4 years ago·discuss
Did you ever meet Michael Aquino? Is his paper "From PsyOp to MindWar" widely read?