USA - США - SAD
- Posts : 41640
Join date : 2012-02-12
Location : wife privilege
- Post n°377
Re: USA - США - SAD
Кратак преприч ћеркиног преприча... несташица горива на југоистоку. Јер по закону, чак и етички хакери, они што ти нађу рупу у систему и уредно ти јаве и кажу где је био зајеб па ти де зачепи или запосли човека, су прекршили закон и има да најебу. Тако да ко шта нађе није луд да буде поштени проналазач, него се негде дува и... то чује ко треба.
Тако су сервери који управљају магистралним цревоводима од Тексаса па по крају постали жртве ренсомвера, дакле вируса који тражи паре па ће да те пусти да радиш кад платиш. Ови наравно имају бекап, крену да враћају одатле... кренули су у суботу и још нису постигли. Пумпе празне, редови, нафтовод стоји, хаос, чорба се допрема камионима па колико постигну.
Тако су сервери који управљају магистралним цревоводима од Тексаса па по крају постали жртве ренсомвера, дакле вируса који тражи паре па ће да те пусти да радиш кад платиш. Ови наравно имају бекап, крену да враћају одатле... кренули су у суботу и још нису постигли. Пумпе празне, редови, нафтовод стоји, хаос, чорба се допрема камионима па колико постигну.
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cousin for roasting the rakija
И кажем себи у сну, еј бре коњу па ти ни немаш озвучење, имаш оне две кутијице око монитора, видећеш кад се пробудиш...
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Join date : 2019-11-03
Age : 41
Location : Bordeaux, FR
- Post n°378
Re: USA - США - SAD
Jewish Americans in 2020
Jews continue to have high levels of educational attainment. Nearly six-in-ten are college graduates, including 28% who have earned a postgraduate degree. By way of comparison, about three-in-ten U.S. adults overall are college graduates, including 11% who have earned a postgraduate degree.
One-in-four American Jews say they have family incomes of $200,000 or more (23%). By comparison, just 4% of U.S. adults report household incomes at that level. At the other end of the spectrum, one-in-ten U.S. Jews report annual household incomes of less than $30,000, versus 26% of Americans overall.
- Posts : 82754
Join date : 2012-06-10
- Post n°379
Re: USA - США - SAD
http://bostonreview.net/politics/sierra-pettengill-roxanne-dunbar-ortiz-how-modern-nra-was-born-borderHow the Modern NRA Was Born at the Border
Watch our release of documentary short The Rifleman, which examines how NRA head Harlon Carter fused gun rights, immigration enforcement, and white supremacy. Then read an interview with filmmaker Sierra Pettengill and historian Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz.
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"Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."
Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
- Posts : 3620
Join date : 2018-07-03
- Post n°380
Re: USA - США - SAD
Mysterious episodes that caused brain injuries in spies, diplomats, soldiers and other U.S. personnel overseas starting five years ago now number more than 130 people, far more than previously known, according to current and former officials.
The number of cases within the C.I.A., the State Department, the Defense Department and elsewhere spurred broad concern in the Biden administration. The initial publicly confirmed cases were concentrated in China and Cuba and numbered about 60, not including a group of injured C.I.A. officers whose total is not public.
The new total adds cases from Europe and elsewhere in Asia and reflects efforts by the administration to more thoroughly review other incidents amid concern over a spate of them in recent months.
Since December, at least three C.I.A. officers have reported serious health effects from episodes overseas. One occurred within the past two weeks, and all have required the officers to undergo outpatient treatment at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center or other facilities.
And in one case in 2019 that has not previously been reported, a military officer serving overseas pulled his vehicle into an intersection, then was overcome by nausea and headaches, according to four current and former officials briefed on the events. His 2-year-old son, sitting in the back seat, began crying. After the officer pulled away from the intersection, his nausea stopped, and the child stopped crying.
Both received medical attention from the government, though it is not clear whether they suffered long-term debilitating effects. Officials suspect the officer may have been targeted. The episode upset officials in both the Trump and Biden administrations, prompting them to investigate further.
The Biden administration has not determined who or what is responsible for the episodes or whether they constitute attacks. Though some Pentagon officials believe Russia’s military intelligence agency, the G.R.U., is most likely behind the case of the 2-year-old , and evidence has emerged that points to Russia in other cases, the intelligence agencies have not concluded any cause or whether a foreign power is involved.
“As of now, we have no definitive information about the cause of these incidents, and it is premature and irresponsible to speculate,” said Amanda J. Schoch, the spokeswoman for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
Moscow has repeatedly denied any involvement.
While no military personnel have been injured in combat zones, several were hurt in Europe and Asia, according to former officials.
Some suffered long-term brain injuries including debilitating headaches. The episodes, according to the National Security Council, involve personnel experiencing “sensory phenomena,” such as sound, pressure or heat, along with or followed by physical symptoms, such as sudden-onset vertigo, nausea, and head or neck pain.
This article is based on interviews with 20 current and former officials across multiple government agencies who have worked on the issue or have been briefed on the episodes, many of which remain classified.
The Biden administration is trying to strike a careful balance between showing officials that they are taking the issue seriously and trying to keep panic from spreading, either inside the government or among the public. The National Security Council has begun an intelligence review, aimed at discovering whether additional unreported incidents fit the pattern, a spokeswoman said.
“We are bringing the U.S. government’s resources to bear to get to the bottom of this,” said Emily J. Horne, a spokeswoman for the council.
The C.I.A. has formed a new targeting cell to try to gather information about the episodes, how they occurred and who is responsible. The cell aims to operate with a similar rigor and intensity to the group expanded by the agency sometime after the Sept. 11 attacks to hunt Osama bin Laden. The White House has also worked to standardize reporting of incidents and improve medical treatment for victims.
In a report released in December, the National Academy of Sciences said a microwave weapon probably caused the injuries. Some officials believe a microwave or directed-energy device is the most likely cause.
The severity of the brain injuries has ranged widely. But some victims have chronic, potentially irreversible symptoms and pain, suggesting potentially permanent brain injury. Physicians at Walter Reed have warned government officials that some victims are at risk for suicide.
The United States has investigated episodes both in the country and overseas, but the vast majority have been overseas, according to the National Security Council, and some reported domestically are likely to be aftershocks caused by earlier incidents overseas, according to current and former officials.
But at least two episodes involving White House staff members, one in 2020 that affected a National Security Council official near the Ellipse south of the White House and another in 2019 involving a woman walking her dog in Northern Virginia, have no known connection to an earlier overseas event. While many officials expressed skepticism that Russia or another power would conduct an attack in the United States, agencies are investigating.
Congress has demanded more from the C.I.A. In a closed-door meeting of the Senate Intelligence Committee last month, senators accused the C.I.A. of doing too little to investigate the mysterious episodes and until recently showing skepticism about them, according to people briefed on the meeting.
During the Trump administration, some in the agency said was little intelligence showing a foreign power was responsible and argued that it made little sense analytically for Russia or another foreign intelligence service to make unprovoked attacks on Americans. Others doubted the cause of the brain injuries.
The new C.I.A. director, William J. Burns, has tried to move aggressively to improve the agency’s response, current and former officials said. Mr. Burns has met with victims, visited doctors who have treated injured agency officers and briefed lawmakers.
He has also assigned his deputy, David Cohen, to oversee the investigation and the health care response. Mr. Cohen will meet monthly with victims and will lead regular briefings for Congress. The agency has also doubled the number of medical personnel conducting treatment and managing cases of injured officers.
In addition, the chief medical officer, who had been criticized by some former officers as too skeptical of the incidents and dismissive of some symptoms, announced his retirement. He was replaced with another doctor seen inside the C.I.A. as more focused on patient care.
The C.I.A. has also cut the average wait time for injured officers at Walter Reed. It was up to eight weeks at the end of last year and is now less than two.
Displayed in Walter Reed is a painting by a C.I.A. officer injured in one of the overseas episodes. The painting is a black canvas, with a red splatter. C.I.A. personnel being treated at Walter Reed have called it “The Gunshot.”
“It signified his feeling that we all wished we had been shot, a visible injury, so that our colleagues would more readily believe us,” said Marc Polymeropoulos, a former C.I.A. officer who was hurt in Moscow in 2017.
The mystery first drew attention when diplomats and C.I.A. officers working in Havana in 2016 were sickened and reported feeling vertigo, nausea and headaches. Similar episodes began occurring the next year in Guangzhou, China. And last October, The New York Times reported that as early as 2017, another cohort of C.I.A. officers traveling in a variety of countries, including Russia, had said they were the likely victims of attacks and reported similar symptoms.
Lawmakers and the Trump administration’s National Security Council grew increasingly frustrated last year with State Department’s and the C.I.A.’s handling of the incidents.
Robert C. O’Brien, President Donald J. Trump’s last national security adviser, and Matthew Pottinger, his deputy, had already begun working in early 2020 to redouble efforts by their aides to understand the mysterious episodes and to get the Pentagon more involved.
But their staff members ran into frustration getting the C.I.A., the State Department and other agencies to share details about injured personnel, in part because of federal protections on health data. White House officials thought the investigation, in which the C.I.A. had been the lead agency, had run into a dead end.
The frustration culminated in a tense conversation Mr. Pottinger had with Vaughn Bishop, then the deputy C.I.A. director, and other officials in November. Mr. Pottinger urged the intelligence community to do more to cooperate with the Pentagon and other agencies. The next month, the National Security Council convened a deputy-level meeting across agencies to again push for further action and a broader investigation.
Mr. Pottinger declined to comment.
The Biden administration has tried to further improve coordination, including directing agencies to each name a coordinator to work on both identifying the cause of the episodes and improving health care for the injured personnel. Even some Democrats who have been briefed on the incidents called on the administration to be more aggressive.
“I don’t believe that we as a government, in general, have acted quickly enough,” said Representative Ruben Gallego, an Arizona Democrat and former Marine who heads the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special Operations. “We really need to fully understand where this is coming from, what the targeting methods are and what we can do to stop them.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/12/us/politics/biden-cia-brain-injury.html?partner=slack&smid=sl-share
- Posts : 41640
Join date : 2012-02-12
Location : wife privilege
- Post n°382
Re: USA - США - SAD
Polymeropoulos
Son of a plastic gun!
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cousin for roasting the rakija
И кажем себи у сну, еј бре коњу па ти ни немаш озвучење, имаш оне две кутијице око монитора, видећеш кад се пробудиш...
- Posts : 52540
Join date : 2017-11-16
- Post n°384
Re: USA - США - SAD
Solus_Rex wrote:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/12/us/politics/biden-cia-brain-injury.html?partner=slack&smid=sl-share
Ne do bob da zaista pomisle/otkriju da su Kina ili Rusija iza toga
- Posts : 15555
Join date : 2016-03-28
- Post n°386
Re: USA - США - SAD
Sta bi radili da otkriju? Jednima su udarili sankcije, sa drugima su u hladnom ratu 2.0Mór Thököly wrote:Solus_Rex wrote:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/12/us/politics/biden-cia-brain-injury.html?partner=slack&smid=sl-share
Ne do bob da zaista pomisle/otkriju da su Kina ili Rusija iza toga
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Što se ostaloga tiče, smatram da Zapad treba razoriti
Jedini proleter Burundija
Pristalica krvne osvete
- Posts : 5601
Join date : 2016-01-26
- Post n°387
Re: USA - США - SAD
+1
Шта могу да ураде? Ако и могу нешто, нећемо знати за то. Биће то као клање у потпалубљу и слање неких мафијашких сигнала.
Кинези су ликвидирали око 100 ЦИА агената метком у потиљак када су разбили њихову комуникациону мрежу.
ЦИА им вероватно није остала дужна.
Шта могу да ураде? Ако и могу нешто, нећемо знати за то. Биће то као клање у потпалубљу и слање неких мафијашких сигнала.
Кинези су ликвидирали око 100 ЦИА агената метком у потиљак када су разбили њихову комуникациону мрежу.
ЦИА им вероватно није остала дужна.
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Burundi is an exception among other nations because it is a country which gave God first place, a God who guards and protects from all misfortune.
Burundi... opskurno udruženje 20ak levičarskih intelektualaca, kojima je fetiš odbrana poniženih i uvredjenih.
- Posts : 16552
Join date : 2014-11-06
- Post n°388
Re: USA - США - SAD
WSJ exclusive: Microsoft directors started an investigation in 2019 into allegations by a female staffer of a sexual relationship with Bill Gates. Gates decided to resign from the board before the probe was completed. Our deep dive into what happened: https://t.co/sUykmiLtY2
— Emily Glazer (@EmilyGlazer) May 16, 2021
- Posts : 11141
Join date : 2014-10-28
Age : 45
- Post n°389
Re: USA - США - SAD
brt
upravni odbor mu namestio fuksu da bi ga se otarasio, poslao anonimne slike zeni koja je bila u fazonu znala sam! a sad mi daj moj deo
upravni odbor mu namestio fuksu da bi ga se otarasio, poslao anonimne slike zeni koja je bila u fazonu znala sam! a sad mi daj moj deo
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radikalni patrijarhalni feminista
smrk kod dijane hrk
- Posts : 11141
Join date : 2014-10-28
Age : 45
- Post n°390
Re: USA - США - SAD
za nekoga ko vazi za novog sorosa, rekao bih da je prilicno naivan
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radikalni patrijarhalni feminista
smrk kod dijane hrk
- Posts : 13817
Join date : 2016-02-01
- Post n°391
Re: USA - США - SAD
Stare čekalice, namestili mu fuksu 2000. da bi ga smenili 2019.
- Posts : 11141
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Age : 45
- Post n°392
Re: USA - США - SAD
tako se to radi u ozbiljnim kompanijama
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radikalni patrijarhalni feminista
smrk kod dijane hrk
- Posts : 13817
Join date : 2016-02-01
- Post n°393
Re: USA - США - SAD
Pritom su ga 3 meseca pre toga te iste čekalice izabrale na novi mandat.
- Posts : 11141
Join date : 2014-10-28
Age : 45
- Post n°394
Re: USA - США - SAD
- II -
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radikalni patrijarhalni feminista
smrk kod dijane hrk
- Posts : 11141
Join date : 2014-10-28
Age : 45
- Post n°395
Re: USA - США - SAD
stvarno je necuveno da izaberu bil gejtsa za precednika M$
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radikalni patrijarhalni feminista
smrk kod dijane hrk
- Posts : 7675
Join date : 2020-03-05
- Post n°396
Re: USA - США - SAD
States are opting out of $300 weekly federal unemployment payments
As of Thursday, 17 U.S. governors, each citing a drag on their state’s growth due to worker shortages, have said they will no longer participate in the federal unemployment benefits program.
The benefit, which is now $300 a week to those out of work, was part of the original COVID-19 stimulus bill passed in March 2020. It was initially $600 a week, and after it expired on July 31, 2020, was extended in subsequent COVID-19 aid packages. The money is paid in addition to state unemployment benefits.
The extra federal benefit, coupled with regular state unemployment benefits, helped replaced the wages of many workers who were laid off due to the pandemic. Lower-income earners, however, were often seeing more in the combined unemployment benefits than they saw in their regular paycheck.
Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte on May 4 was the first to announce his state would no longer take federal unemployment aid. Since then, 16 more governors, all Republicans, have announced their states will also cut off the federal unemployment funds. In addition to Montana, the states ending federal unemployment aid are: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah and Wyoming.
Idaho’s Gov. Brad Little told reporters Tuesday, “We want people working. My decision is based on a fundamental conservative principle — we do not want people on unemployment. A strong economy cannot exist without workers returning to a job.”
President Joe Biden on Monday disagreed with the idea that federal unemployment benefits were stunting economic recovery, saying Americans would return to work if they are paid enough to do so.
“People will come back to work if they’re paid a decent wage,” Biden said. “My expectation is that, as our economy comes back, these companies will provide fair wages and safe work environments. And if they do, they’ll find plenty of workers.”
Biden also stressed to those collecting unemployment benefits that if they are offered a suitable job, they must accept it or give up the federal payments.
As of Thursday, 17 U.S. governors, each citing a drag on their state’s growth due to worker shortages, have said they will no longer participate in the federal unemployment benefits program.
The benefit, which is now $300 a week to those out of work, was part of the original COVID-19 stimulus bill passed in March 2020. It was initially $600 a week, and after it expired on July 31, 2020, was extended in subsequent COVID-19 aid packages. The money is paid in addition to state unemployment benefits.
The extra federal benefit, coupled with regular state unemployment benefits, helped replaced the wages of many workers who were laid off due to the pandemic. Lower-income earners, however, were often seeing more in the combined unemployment benefits than they saw in their regular paycheck.
Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte on May 4 was the first to announce his state would no longer take federal unemployment aid. Since then, 16 more governors, all Republicans, have announced their states will also cut off the federal unemployment funds. In addition to Montana, the states ending federal unemployment aid are: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah and Wyoming.
Idaho’s Gov. Brad Little told reporters Tuesday, “We want people working. My decision is based on a fundamental conservative principle — we do not want people on unemployment. A strong economy cannot exist without workers returning to a job.”
President Joe Biden on Monday disagreed with the idea that federal unemployment benefits were stunting economic recovery, saying Americans would return to work if they are paid enough to do so.
“People will come back to work if they’re paid a decent wage,” Biden said. “My expectation is that, as our economy comes back, these companies will provide fair wages and safe work environments. And if they do, they’ll find plenty of workers.”
Biden also stressed to those collecting unemployment benefits that if they are offered a suitable job, they must accept it or give up the federal payments.
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"Burundi je svakako sharmantno mesto cinika i knjiskih ljudi koji gledaju stvar sa svog olimpa od kartona."
“Here he was then, cruising the deserts of Mexico in my Ford Torino with my wife and my credit cards and his black-tongued dog. He had a chow dog that went everywhere with him, to the post office and ball games, and now that red beast was making free with his lion feet on my Torino seats.”
- Posts : 7675
Join date : 2020-03-05
- Post n°397
Re: USA - США - SAD
Millennials had it worse. They attended the same academic resort spas, and were handed the same oft-preposterous degrees, but were additionally indoctrinated in affirming ideological oat-baths stressing the righteousness of their lived experiences. If the big surprise my generation faced was that our educations were worth bupkes to employers, the next generation had to deal with the shock of corporate bosses being indifferent to their emotional needs.
Meaning, we’ve come full circle. After training generations of Americans to forego personal lives and work their brains to mush in service of bigger profits, corporate leaders are waking up to find their companies staffed by people so psychologically dependent upon validation from work that they’re a net minus from a production standpoint, forcing bosses to beg them to shut up, go home, and get lives. Not many modern Americans know how to do any of those things, however, as can be seen in cases like that of Garcia-Martinez, where 2,000 employees claimed to be literally incapable of sharing a vast corporate structure with someone who once wrote a book containing passages they might have disagreed with, if they’d actually read it.
Another irony: despite the progressive sheen of these campaigns, Slack agitation doesn’t represent a resurgence of labor. Unions used the strength of the whole workforce to protect the rights of the individual employee, among other things insisting that management not act without due process, evidence, etc. Slack, as has been seen in cases like Antonio’s, or the oustings at the New York Times of editor James Bennet and reporter Donald McNeil, often urges companies to bypass process and act in the heat of the moment. In any case, it’s a weird kind of liberalism that tries to override management to get employees fired, but that’s where we are in the modern American workplace.
https://taibbi.substack.com/p/is-slack-destroying-american-companies-55e
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"Burundi je svakako sharmantno mesto cinika i knjiskih ljudi koji gledaju stvar sa svog olimpa od kartona."
“Here he was then, cruising the deserts of Mexico in my Ford Torino with my wife and my credit cards and his black-tongued dog. He had a chow dog that went everywhere with him, to the post office and ball games, and now that red beast was making free with his lion feet on my Torino seats.”
- Korisnik
- Posts : 4670
Join date : 2015-02-17
- Post n°398
Re: USA - США - SAD
Kakvo ownovanje pharma papana.
- Guest
- Post n°399
Re: USA - США - SAD
najveća prevara u industriji (bilo kojoj) je bila kada su spojili R&D
time su omogućili da skoro niko ne radi R
time su omogućili da skoro niko ne radi R
- Posts : 82754
Join date : 2012-06-10
- Post n°400
Re: USA - США - SAD
Jedna lepa prica
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/may/19/idaho-school-shooter-teacher-krista-gneiting-disarmed-student
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/may/19/idaho-school-shooter-teacher-krista-gneiting-disarmed-student
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"Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."
Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije