Well, we knew this was coming.
LUL. Quoting Jordan Schneider at the end.
LUL. Quoting Jordan Schneider at the end.
What is this dude anyway, I saw some videos of his, bur IMHO he does make alot of bad takes that age like milk in australian summer.Well, we knew this was coming.
LUL. Quoting Jordan Schneider at the end.
Supposedly his pops worked at National Semiconductor, which is now under Texas Instruments.What is this dude anyway, I saw some videos of his, bur IMHO he does make alot of bad takes that age like milk in australian summer.
Alot of it is his videos from 1-2 years ago so I can't make proper judgement on his current content
So much for freedom in HK, now really this place should have its entire system overhauled and fully integrated into China so that China can fix these issues that these so called leaders in HK refuses to do themselves, properly. Western values that the west have tried to push into HK has done nothing good for HK and have made it into a laughing stockWhen Chandrayaan rocket successfully launched that means all "rockets" now erected and coming your way...like it or not
No matter what happens with TSMC's high-profile facility in Phoenix, many cutting-edge chips it produces for Apple, Nvidia, AMD and Tesla will still require assembly in Taiwan
Some one need to buy that Podolyak chap a copy of the famous Dale Carnegie book...Been about a month since the Ukrainians say Asians lack human qualities.
Now they are saying Asians (Chinese, Indians, etc) have “weak intellect.”
The Vatican actually exhumed, tried, and excommunicated, a pope that had been dead for about 400 years, if I’m not mistaken (I was mistaken; he’d only been dead for 7 months)!
LMFAO impeaching a dude with dementia now? What's next, executing a dead guy?
Yeah, read a few of the replies, mostly from seemingly Indians.Poor bloke is about to get Jai Bharated on Twitter, and this time I support the Bharatis.
Public views of China are mixed, the study finds. While nearly six in 10 people overall view Beijing negatively, and one-quarter believe China is doing nothing to fight climate change, substantial slices of young respondents between 18 and 24 years old in the United States, United Kingdom and France have positive views of the country.
Most people on both sides of the Atlantic also want more cooperation with China in areas such as trade, energy and technology. But many also want a tougher approach to human rights. A striking 30% see China as becoming the most influential global actor in five years — just behind the United States, at 37%.
Younger people especially, Weber says, are skeptical of narratives pushed by leaders like U.S. President Joe Biden on the importance of democracy versus autocracy in looking at China, for example.
“It’s something Generation Z doesn’t necessarily buy,” Weber said. “When I think about the political memory of this generation, they have these images of ‘forever wars’ in Iraq and Afghanistan … and also of the storming of the [U.S.] Capitol and violence against people of color in the U.S.”
China, by contrast, “offers a powerful counternarrative,” she said.