huppakee @ huppakee @lemm.ee Posts 25Comments 1,187Joined 2 mo. ago

Fatima Houssana and 9 of her family members murdered 24 hours after film accepted in Cannes festival
Well I'm sure as hell not gonna forget, can they just stop already
I read the headline and couldn't believe it
Nice, was this in Finland?
This is not a meme (͡•_ ͡• ) But take my upvote!
Signed it, wether it helps or not worth the effort
Please me know if you get a picture of a tattooed ball sack, I have a kink
Europe might find a bunch of small allies all over the world though, democracies hanging on thight against autocratic bullies. We, the people of all free countries, just need to stick together as much as possible.
China has been accused time and time again.
This is from July 2023: https://www.politico.eu/article/china-firms-russia-body-armor-bullet-proof-drones-thermal-optics-army-equipment-shanghai-h-win/
This is from May 2024: https://www.bbc.com/news/60571253
I'm afraid Europe can't and won't let go of their big trade partner as long as China keeps a 'low profile' in the war. We are supporting our side much more then China supports their side. China might lie about their support of Russia, but I think secret service agents and government officials know the extent of Chinese involvement. But it's a good thing media is putting pressure on western governments.
I also didn't notice any serious bias or censoring, so I read the articles in other comments. In it they deny any outside influence.
Euronews said in a statement that it “does not know the details of the controlling shareholdings in the company” but it “contests and denies any idea or suggestion regarding editorial interference in its news mission”.
It said its Budapest bureau has continued to work in full independence over the past two years.
I believe that, but reading this news makes me sceptical to be honest. Especially since their CEO seems to have been fired https://www.politico.eu/article/guillaume-dubois-euronews-media-company-ceo-fired/
Even before the Euronews investment, there were attempts by government circles to expand into foreign media markets. As Direkt36 and other newspapers have previously reported, pro-government actors have invested significant sums in the media markets of Balkan countries, with the apparent aim of helping local allies of the Orbán government there.
In addition to the Euronews investment, David and his business partner bought a Portuguese weekly newspaper, “Nascer do Sol”, and a daily newspaper, “I”. According to Expresso’s research, these two newspapers are owned by the same Dubai-registered company, Alpac Capital, as Euronews.
So what I seem to get from this all is a fascist is trying to get media outlets on his side. This is not something new, but them paying the bill doesn't have to mean they get any influence. Maybe that goal hasn't been achieved yet.
I'll try and keep my eyes open. But probably will continue reading Euronews for now.
I hope so, but if their intent is to commit fraud what is and isn't legal might not prevent them from ending up with manipulated results
One that triggers me is the one about post work society, because it reminds me of the work of a Dutch artist who died 20 years ago, he believed that one day humans no longer would have to work and he made models and drawings of what he called New Babylon. https://stichtingconstant.nl/constant/periods/new-babylon-1956-1974
I find looking at the future also very interesting if you look not from here but from a place in the past. Just like 2001: A Space Odyssey, of this man (Kubrick) who envisioned the time we live in now very differently as to what it actually turned out to be.
But to me honest, I would probably end up talking about the steps that lay before us now (the next 5-25 years) than actually imagine myself if I lived a 100 years from now; don't know why that is.
France doesn't do new food stuff
Filtered coffee for the win
The Dutch do it like this too, but I don't know who started it
I think if you'd rank all European countries according to how important milk is in their coffee culture, France might be at the bottom. Although I'm not sure about south-eastern countries regarding this, they might score low too.
Agree with this, regular but unsweetened has much less fat and sugar.
For health reasons you might take it a step further one day, the unsweetened versions have a lot less fat and sugar in them. I got used to it after barista oat milk and now I prefer the more coffee-y taste of my coffee tbh
I also didn't like soy milk at first now I have it with cereal almost daily, so I guess it's also getting used to the flavour.
Part of why it's relatively bad is because they still make it the same way as they did back then