USA - США - SAD
- Posts : 41640
Join date : 2012-02-12
Location : wife privilege
- Post n°526
Re: USA - США - SAD
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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 : 7233
Join date : 2019-11-04
- Post n°527
Re: USA - США - SAD
After 11 Minutes in America, I Got Hit by the Crime Wave
I spent most of the pandemic abroad. It didn’t take long after I returned home for someone to try to rob me at gunpoint.
By Graeme Wood
JULY 22, 2021
Before the blessed release of full-dose vaccination, I spent much of the pandemic in Norway and Canada, dodging COVID-19 waves and rising violent-crime rates in American cities. Both of my hideout countries managed infection well, and their residents very rarely kill each other. (Today Norway marks the tenth anniversary of one of the exceptions to this rule.) But I missed America, so earlier this month, back I came, over the Rainbow International Bridge from Niagara Falls, Canada, to its sister city of the same name in upstate New York. A Customs and Border Patrol officer waved me in at 12:10 a.m.
Eleven minutes later, a man tried to rob me at gunpoint.
I was in a rented Toyota Corolla, driving with three family members who were also returning to America: a woman and her two children, a 9-year-old and a toddler. Soon after we crossed the bridge, the toddler’s diaper began emitting a horrendous stench, and we looked for a suitable place to change him. It took a few minutes. One candidate spot was too dark and secluded; another would have worked fine, but a car was idling there suspiciously, so we rolled down the windows and moved on. Finally we found a gas station by the highway. It was across from a diner, and had just closed but remained brightly lit.
We parked next to one of the pumps. I got out and stood on the passenger side, checking my phone and passing wipes as needed. The child wanted to keep his soiled diaper—his only souvenir of the Falls—and he howled through the two or three minutes it took his mother to change him on top of the trunk. During a lull in traffic, I noticed that his cries were echoing through the dark neighborhood beyond the gas station. Then I saw a man in the shadows, about 70 feet away, walking fast and crossing a street in our direction. When he entered the penumbra of the gas station’s floodlights, he stiffened a little, as if mildly surprised that I had noticed him, then ducked behind the gas station’s mini-mart.
“We need to go now,” I said.
The mom was leaning into the back seat to buckle in her toddler. She protested that she hadn’t yet attached every point of his harness. Then I saw the man reemerge, wearing a red hoodie and a mask that covered his whole face. He was striding toward us purposefully, past the mini-mart and into the light, and in his hand he had a pistol.
“Now,” I said. “Don’t strap him in. Close the door and drive.” This time she heard my italics. She slammed the door and jumped in the car, fumbled with the keys for half a second, then screeched the tires and drove away. I told her about the gun, and she didn’t stop driving until she saw an outpost of the popular Canadian coffee-and-doughnut chain Tim Hortons—which, under the circumstances, seemed like a potential gun-free zone, some kind of informal diplomatic sanctuary.
Over that weekend, 150 people were killed in shootings in the United States, according to CNN. I’m glad to say that we didn’t come close to being among them. As we accelerated away, the man was probably not near enough to kill any of us with a precisely aimed shot, although he might have managed to hit our rental car and force an awkward conversation at the Hertz return the next day.
I called two separate units of the Niagara Falls Police Department, to report the incident and to ask whether crime had risen recently. But neither called me back—and I suppose that is itself an indication of something. A man menaced a baby with a gun, and the police weren’t interested enough to return a phone call to find out more. (The city says crime has, in fact, been on the increase.)
One should not make policy purely from personal experience. I came away with no better understanding of how to improve policing or disarm criminals. But that night I drove for another six hours—the adrenaline kept me more alert than any cup of coffee—and I had a few thoughts. The first was facile, which is not to say wrong: There are too many illegal guns around. New York State has famously tough gun laws. But it is still America, where guns are ubiquitous. Then again, that ubiquity had complex effects on the interaction. On reflection, I wonder whether that furtiveness, when the man ducked behind the mini-mart, was a moment of hesitation—not a pang of conscience but a delay to assess whether I too was armed. That moment gave us time to get away.
Of this I am certain: I will never again visit Niagara Falls, New York, unless I have a .50-caliber machine gun mounted on my car, and maybe also one of those Koala Kare portable baby-changing stations. This reaction is not rational; at the wrong time, many nice places can be hellish. However, I feel chastened by the intensity of my irrational reaction to that awful experience. What must life be like in a place where such things happen, and the cops either don’t care or are too overburdened to respond? Apparently after experiencing an attempted robbery exactly once, I react out of proportion, and out of an abundance of caution and loathing I am treating all of Niagara Falls like a bad part of post-invasion Baghdad. Violence is a warping experience even when it leaves you unharmed.
I was in Baghdad in 2004, and I can attest that one does, to some extent, get used to violence. Eventually you hear gunfire and unconsciously judge its distance, caliber, and character (assassination? firefight? celebration?). You react, in other words, rationally. But the experience of a near-miss still messes with your mind.
During the rest of my drive, my messed-up mind turned toward statistics. One common reaction to the current uptick in violent crime is to note that rates may be up compared with a year or two ago, but are still down compared with a couple of decades ago, when crime was not the subject of a national panic—let alone compared with the height of the crack epidemic in the early 1990s, when panic was an appropriate response. Some statements can be true and yet also worthy of contempt; “relax, crime rates have been worse” is one of them. To erase two decades of decline in the homicide rate in a few years is catastrophic, and favorable comparisons to eras of even more wanton violence are not reassuring.
When heinous crime tracks you down somewhere where you didn’t expect it, you do not check the calendar and rejoice that it is not 1990. You wonder whether this appalling trend will ever reverse. You wonder whether actual demons are wandering the streets. How else do you explain someone reacting to the sound of a baby’s cries by chambering a round and running toward the changing table? Even if crime is lower now than in 1990, I now know that someone in my vicinity was capable of instantaneous evil, and I do not know the limit of what he would do. Many Americans living through the present crime wave are similarly unsettled, and they will do anything, or vote for anyone, that promises to restore their nerves.
Most of all, I wish those who talk glibly about crime numbers would consider that the rate of change in violent crime—not just whether there is more or less of it than before, but how fast that shift is happening—is as important a statistic as the absolute rate at any moment in time. When places get less safe in a hurry, even from a healthy baseline, pessimism and cynicism flourish, and things can easily spiral down from there. Some places need only a little pessimism to collapse entirely. Niagara Falls and Buffalo, next door, have several such neighborhoods.
I blame myself, in part. No reeking diaper stench will ever be enough to persuade me to stop again late at night at a closed gas station. I should have known better. But we all make mistakes. “After you have done it, you will wonder why you did it,” wrote Mark Twain when he visited Niagara Falls and got drenched by going too close. “But you will then be too late.”
Graeme Wood is a staff writer at The Atlantic and the author of The Way of the Strangers: Encounters With the Islamic State.
- Korisnik
- Posts : 4670
Join date : 2015-02-17
- Post n°528
Re: USA - США - SAD
A Frito-Lay worker at the Topeka, Kansas plant died on the assembly line due to dense smoke and fumes. Employees were told to move their body and continue working. Many of the 850 plant workers work 84 hours a week, no days off.
— Michael Kofi A.||♤ (@MikeKofiA) July 18, 2021
- Posts : 11623
Join date : 2018-03-03
Age : 36
Location : Hotline Rakovica
- Post n°529
Re: USA - США - SAD
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Sve čega ima na filmu, rekao sam, ima i na Zlatiboru.
~~~~~
Ne dajte da vas prevare! Sačuvajte svoje pojene!
- Posts : 11623
Join date : 2018-03-03
Age : 36
Location : Hotline Rakovica
- Post n°530
Re: USA - США - SAD
Indeed, it’s far from clear that Congress as a whole is on board with any plan for more Made in USA solar panels. After all, the greens want to get going on climate change right now, not wishing to wait for the U.S. to stand up new domestic factories and supply chains.
In addition, free traders have never worried about domestic manufacturing, so they don’t mind importing solar panels. Similarly, libertarians oppose anything that smacks of industrial policy.
And of course, even more lawmakers fear the coming of 1970s-type inflation, and so they are shying away from more spending; they might be mindful of a new report from the centrist Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which finds that that the Democrats’ $3.5 trillion “infrastructure” bill would likely cost $5.5 trillion. That’s an overrun of almost 60 percent.
So we can see: If the country goes solar, not only will traditional energy jobs shrink, but most likely, the solar jobs won’t pay well. Oh and also, there won’t be that many of them, since maintaining solar panels with no moving parts is a lot less labor-intensive than managing a whole power plant, including all those turbines.
We can add that the same general point holds true for other forms of renewable energy. Renewables are less labor-intensive; the real action is running the computers that run the grid. Moreover, the simpler the task at the point of production, the more likely it is that the work can be done by machines or robots.
For all these reasons, it’s easy to see how a Silicon Valley tech company such as Google could end up controlling most of the nation’s green energy supply. That’s great for profits for Big Tech, not so great for jobs on Main Street.
https://www.breitbart.com/economy/2021/07/24/pinkerton-nyt-compares-bidens-promised-green-jobs-to-grueling-low-wage-amazon-and-uber-gigs/#
- Posts : 5601
Join date : 2016-01-26
- Post n°531
Re: USA - США - SAD
The Iranian Regime says this guy learned to shoot in the basement of a hospital while working as a nurse….?! Really?! He was shooting in a hospital?
— Richard Grenell (@RichardGrenell) July 24, 2021
And why is Iran allowed to participate in the @Olympics at all? Denying basic human rights should be against the rules. https://t.co/NOLNP2Cv8n
Овај Гренел је спектакуларно туп ко ћускија и глуп ко ноћ, неваспитан и необразован.
Није ни чудо што су га обожавали Вучићеви другари у Србији.
Једини Американац кога су могли да превеслају неким глупостима и засењивањем простоте.
Али та је љубав кратко трајала, на срећу читавог света.
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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 : 13817
Join date : 2016-02-01
- Post n°532
Re: USA - США - SAD
#Javad_Foroughi, winner of gold medal in the air pistol men's final @Olympics, explains his long-term career as a member of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' Quds Force in Syria before the rise of ISIS (May 3, 2021)
— حافظه تاریخی (@hafezeh_tarikhi) July 24, 2021
-English Subtitle- @ISSF_Shooting @Tokyo2020 pic.twitter.com/M7IgmZO6Hd
- Posts : 5601
Join date : 2016-01-26
- Post n°533
Re: USA - США - SAD
Свакако има човек право да се бави стрељаштвом из ваздушног пиштоља.
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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 : 11623
Join date : 2018-03-03
Age : 36
Location : Hotline Rakovica
- Post n°535
Re: USA - США - SAD
Today’s politicians are bought & paid for HACKS who sell out America.
— Teddy Daniels for Congress (@DanielsCongress) July 28, 2021
Joe Biden turned his back on Scranton Pennsylvania, and now he’s turned his back on America.
We need Conservative outsiders to drain the swamp & shake up Washington.
DONATE:arrow_right: https://t.co/n6RymG6S7O pic.twitter.com/sdf93pjvwr
- Posts : 7233
Join date : 2019-11-04
- Post n°536
Re: USA - США - SAD
NY Gov. Cuomo's "sexual harassment" of multiple women violated federal and state law independent investigation finds.pic.twitter.com/1LOEUpyvZQ
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) August 3, 2021
- Posts : 82754
Join date : 2012-06-10
- Post n°537
Re: USA - США - SAD
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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 : 3803
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Location : Waystone Inn
- Post n°538
Re: USA - США - SAD
Wtf, ja sam ovo pročitala alexjonesovskim glasom.
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my goosebumps have goosebumps
- Posts : 15555
Join date : 2016-03-28
- Post n°539
Re: USA - США - SAD
Ubi ih prejaka rečBleeding Blitva wrote:https://www.jutarnji.hr/vijesti/svijet/samoubojstvo-pocinila-cetiri-policajca-koji-su-cuvali-kapitol-na-dan-upada-trumpovih-pristasa-15092538
Wtf, ja sam ovo pročitala alexjonesovskim glasom.
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Što se ostaloga tiče, smatram da Zapad treba razoriti
Jedini proleter Burundija
Pristalica krvne osvete
- Posts : 37661
Join date : 2014-10-27
- Post n°540
Re: USA - США - SAD
https://twitter.com/as_a_worker/status/1422570957235949569?s=19
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And Will's father stood up, stuffed his pipe with tobacco, rummaged his pockets for matches, brought out a battered harmonica, a penknife, a cigarette lighter that wouldn't work, and a memo pad he had always meant to write some great thoughts down on but never got around to, and lined up these weapons for a pygmy war that could be lost before it even started
- Posts : 15555
Join date : 2016-03-28
- Post n°542
Re: USA - США - SAD
Steta sto se dezurni forumski branitelji kolevke slobode,demokratije i ljudskih prava oglasavaju samo po partijskom zadatku kad su predsednicki izbori, moglo bi se svašta kreativno cutiboomer crook wrote:policija raseljava beskucnike sa plaze venis u LA
https://twitter.com/as_a_worker/status/1422570957235949569?s=19
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Što se ostaloga tiče, smatram da Zapad treba razoriti
Jedini proleter Burundija
Pristalica krvne osvete
- Guest
- Post n°543
Re: USA - США - SAD
- Posts : 3803
Join date : 2020-09-27
Location : Waystone Inn
- Post n°544
Re: USA - США - SAD
Doduše danas mi je egzorcizam pao na pamet jer su mi Ameri nakon što sam im ispričala kako smo monokulturni (turizam) rekli da bi bilo najbolje da dođe Amazon kod nas i da zaposli ljude i spasi zemlju
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my goosebumps have goosebumps
- Posts : 7894
Join date : 2019-06-06
- Post n°545
Re: USA - США - SAD
Matthew Yglesias
@mattyglesias
·
22h
I feel like we should all talk more about how conservatives' dream is to make America more like this much poorer, rinky-dink little country in Central Europe.
Matthew Yglesias
@mattyglesias
Replying to
@mattyglesias
Hungary's GDP per capita is closer to Mexico than France, less than half of the United States.
Like how much do you have to hate immigrants to envy this? Paprika's not that great.
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????
- Posts : 15555
Join date : 2016-03-28
- Post n°546
Re: USA - США - SAD
Bleeding Blitva wrote:Mole se forumski amerofobi da prestanu prizivat propast US-a jer ja ne mislim konzumirat ruske, britiš, ili božemiprosti, francuske filmove ni podcaste ni ništa
Doduše danas mi je egzorcizam pao na pamet jer su mi Ameri nakon što sam im ispričala kako smo monokulturni (turizam) rekli da bi bilo najbolje da dođe Amazon kod nas i da zaposli ljude i spasi zemlju
Čuj propast, prizivam levičarsku tehnoloski naprednu vrstu vanzemaljaca koja laserima iz orbite spaljuje deo po deo Zapada dok proleteri svih zemalja u egzoskeletima prevrcu zadimljene ruševine trazeći one koji su pretekli
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Što se ostaloga tiče, smatram da Zapad treba razoriti
Jedini proleter Burundija
Pristalica krvne osvete
- Posts : 11623
Join date : 2018-03-03
Age : 36
Location : Hotline Rakovica
- Post n°547
Re: USA - США - SAD
Janko Suvar wrote:
Like how much do you have to hate immigrants to envy this? Paprika's not that great.
So true. A trpaju je u sve.
- Posts : 7233
Join date : 2019-11-04
- Post n°548
Re: USA - США - SAD
"The only hope for getting the money necessary to eliminate intolerable inequities is to facilitate the activities of people like Henry Ford, and Steve Jobs and even Donald Trump."
— Daniel Tutt (@DanielTutt) August 3, 2021
--Richard Rorty, "Intellectuals and the End of Socialism" (1992)
- Posts : 3620
Join date : 2018-07-03
- Post n°549
Re: USA - США - SAD
Dakle, ativnosti - ne konkretne neljude:
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"Sisaj kurac, Boomere. Spletkario si i nameštao ban pa se sad izvlačiš. Radiša je format a ti si mali iskompleksirani miš. Katastrofa za Burundi čoveče.
A i deluje da te napustio drugar u odsudnom trenutku pa te spašavaju ova tovarka što vrv ni ne dismr na ribu, to joj se gadi, i ovaj južnjak koji o niškim kafanama čita na forumu. Prejaka šarža." - Monsier K.
- Posts : 41640
Join date : 2012-02-12
Location : wife privilege
- Post n°550
Re: USA - США - SAD
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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...