Miscellaneous News

horse

Colonel
Registered Member
What I find baffling about the whole thing isn’t so much that the Eurocucks are evil as they are woefully unprepared. Shouldn’t they have warned their companies before taking such drastic actions? A month or two of stocking could mean the difference between bankruptcy and hanging on by a thread.

Those people never had a real job in their lives.

Worked in MacDonalds, or an assembly line in a factory. Those are real jobs, what they used to say in the past. A paper pusher was not a real job.

This Nexperia thing is truly bizarre.

If we do not know anything about it, like me I did not know anything about them, still we can figure out that Nexperia was basically a branch plant of a larger Chinese company.

So when the Dutch said they were going to take it over, that outrageous stunt was mystifying. Like the parent company will not want to do anything it the far away branch plant.

Why would they?

Then other people start talking about no parts. LOL!

They had no clue what they were doing. They could even understand this corporate structure and how that usually works.

Even Trump knows how it works, because he wants Ludnick to shut down GM plants in Canada.
 

GulfLander

Brigadier
Registered Member
The United Nations is warning of a "terrible escalation" in Sudan, where civil war has raged for more than two years.

More than 150,000 people have been killed since the violence began, with hundreds of thousands more dead due to malnutrition.

Redmond Shannon reports on the fears of mass atrocities in El Fasher, where paramilitary forces have captured the last army stronghold in Sudan's Darfur region.
 

luminary

Senior Member
Registered Member
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Soon after the ICBM is detected over the Pacific — who fired and why remains a mystery for the film’s runtime — Army personnel at Fort Greely, Alaska, fire two ground-based interceptors to take it out. One fails to fire while the other misses, leaving the United States with only minutes until impact and no way to stop the missile. That narrative choice is a major point of contention for the Department of Defense.
“The fictional interceptors in the movie miss their target,” the memo complains. It goes on to note that interceptors have been shown to be 100% accurate in tests for several years. It also disputes the $50 billion price tag given in the movie for their costs.
 
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