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Online users searched for answers about a claim that Darden Restaurants planned to shutter the Italian chain eatery.
Freshly taken :)
With Pixel 6a.
You can see the Orion belt :).
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White House plaques on 'Presidential Walk of Fame' criticize Biden, Obama
Trump's second-term plaque promised, meanwhile, "THE BEST IS YET TO COME!"
What we know about suspected Bondi Beach shooters
Sajid and Naveed Akram are suspected of killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens during a Hanukkah gathering in Australia.
Replacing a roof vent in the motorhome - videos.trom.tf/w/qXUkwFVhsF4UB…
Our top bed roof vent sucked. So we bought a very slim one called Roofstar 4. In theory it is easy to add it. But of course like all things, it is more difficult than you think. Anyway now we love this roof vent and it makes a big difference. We can even stargaze from the bed 😃
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From that time we found snow :) videos.trom.tf/w/aSny2DpTqgRxu…
In Fuente Dé, Picos de Europa National Park.
#motorhome #travel #Europe #Spain #vanlife #RV #nationalparks #mountains #nature #hiking #picosdeeuropa
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Between equinoxes
The end of the fourth candle
Resting semester
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I use less than 5L of water to shower in our motorhome and I take a very decent shower. It is all about knowing how to use that water. Likely a shower at home would use over 10 times that. Here is the water consumption in EU on average:
statista.com/chart/19591/avera…
The average human in Spain consumes in a day as much as we two consume in a week in our motorhome.
Ride With Less videos.trom.tf/c/ridewithless/… :)
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Record frostbite amputations in Edmonton, Alberta
I'm ashamed of my province in a lot of ways these days but this is one of the worst
"A controversial practice in both Edmonton and Calgary has been to dismantle tents and homeless encampments. Both cities confirmed that policy will continue this winter, citing safety concerns."
cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/fr…
#RussiasWord #USAsWord
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We are sitting with our son and his partner in their tiny house in Somerset and watching the 1939 film Goodbye Mr Chips, and having a thoroughly wonderful afternoon!
We say goodbye tomorrow and won't see them again until the New Year!
Rokosun
in reply to Tio • •@Tio
I don't want to know how much water I use to shower 🙈 🥲
I don't think I'd be okay with having to wipe off my utensils instead of washing them, but I guess it makes sense in a motorhome considering limited water storage. Life in the motorhome might be an extreme example but in general I agree that people should be mindful of their resource usage..... I feel like it'd be better to use water from a well or something for our shower if possible, no need to have treated drinking water in our bathrooms at all.
Tio
in reply to Rokosun • •We wipe the dishes and cutlery a little bit before washing them. It is really not a bi deal and many people who use dishwashers do that before putting them in the dishwasher. As someone who always wanted comfort and wants to feel at home wherever I live, I can tell you these different practices like with the dishes or showering with little water are far from extreme :)
But yah water usage at home is insane. Maybe sensors can help, like when you are under the shower to have the water run but not when you are soaping and not directly under idk. But feels insane to consume so much water, like you go pee and flush 4-5L of fresh water for that...wtf....
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Rokosun
in reply to Tio • •@Tio
Oh so you always wash it off after wiping, that makes sense. Anyway good that you feel at home with this lifestyle.....
Wait, do people not turn off their shower when soaping? Why do you need a sensor for this lol 😂 It reminds me of those ads ran by a toothpaste company on world water day showing someone who doesn't turn off his tap when brushing his teeth, it was like a PSA to get people to close their taps when not using water. I never did those things so it sounded a bit crazy to me that someone just wouldn't close their tap like that.....
4-5L of water to flush down your pee is insane man. It reminds me of a little trick I saw on YouTube one day, where you fill a 1L bottle with water and put it in your toilet's flush tank, so that way you'll be saving 1L of water on every flush. This is also why I think you shouldn't use drinkable water in your toilet or bathrooms if possible.... If you can pump ground water from a well or something that could be used instead of using treated drinkable water.
Tio
in reply to Rokosun • •Yah as far as I know people do not turn off the shower or tap while washing or brushing. For shower I also didn't do it....so yah....
And for flushing the toilet I think the best would be to use the sink water to do that. Like store the sink water into the toilet tank basically...
I am sure there are solutions for these if there is an incentive for it.
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Rokosun
in reply to Tio • •@Tio
It also baffles me how people can apply soap on their bodies when the shower is running, especially if you have a small bathroom like in the motorhome - do you have space to move away from the shower stream? I usually just turn it off 'cause why keep the water running when you don't need it.
I don't know if people would be keen on reusing waste water like that, it could give off bad smell as well if not treated properly..... But we definitely don't need to use fresh water on our toilet flush that's for sure.
Maybe there will be more incentive in water scarce areas.... This conversation reminded me of this video I watched a while ago -
Yeah resource management is more complex than people realize.....
Tio
in reply to Rokosun • •No in the motorhome I dont think anyone does that. I used to do it at home were water was "infinite" and the space was bigger.
That is true but I've seen things like this in Japan where they reuse the sink water for flushing the toilet. Thing is you flush many times a day so that water wont stay too long in the tank. Maybe that wont make it smelly idk.
Yah but what is fresh water and non fresh water? Like you need different piping system for non-fresh? And fresh doesnt mean much from what I know mea
... show moreNo in the motorhome I dont think anyone does that. I used to do it at home were water was "infinite" and the space was bigger.
That is true but I've seen things like this in Japan where they reuse the sink water for flushing the toilet. Thing is you flush many times a day so that water wont stay too long in the tank. Maybe that wont make it smelly idk.
Yah but what is fresh water and non fresh water? Like you need different piping system for non-fresh? And fresh doesnt mean much from what I know meaning it goes to some filters and has some stuff added to it. But to have another system for non fresh water seems a lot of headache for big cities or towns.
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Rokosun
in reply to Tio • •@Tio
I didn't know Japan had such a system, that is so cool. And by fresh water I mean drinkable water, the one you get from the tap has usually gone through some processes to make it safe to drink. And I don't mean to do it on a city scale, but there are homes and apartments where they pump up ground water (from a well or something) to a separate tank - so you can use that water on your toilet and bathrooms but still get drinking water on your kitchen for example.
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Jacob Urlich 🌍
in reply to Tio • •It’s all about human behavior. You need to ask questions like: Would a person change how they use water if it saved them £10 a year? £100? £1,000? Some people still wouldn’t change their behavior, even if the savings reached £5,000 a year, or would invest in constant running water toilet, because it is hassle to them to use a toilet brush.
In a motorhome, water is scarce, so you change your behavior because you don’t want the hassle of running out. Being on the grid feels different—you don’t need to worry about turning off the tap while brushing your teeth, because water feels abundant. You might only close the tap if you’re short on money.
Constant awareness of every action feels exhausting. In fact, people often develop mental illnesses from living in a state of constant vigilance. Most people just want to feel comfortable.
To change human behavior and persuade people to change, you need to study them and build strong relationships with them—just as politicians do. Politicians adjust policies bas
... show moreIt’s all about human behavior. You need to ask questions like: Would a person change how they use water if it saved them £10 a year? £100? £1,000? Some people still wouldn’t change their behavior, even if the savings reached £5,000 a year, or would invest in constant running water toilet, because it is hassle to them to use a toilet brush.
In a motorhome, water is scarce, so you change your behavior because you don’t want the hassle of running out. Being on the grid feels different—you don’t need to worry about turning off the tap while brushing your teeth, because water feels abundant. You might only close the tap if you’re short on money.
Constant awareness of every action feels exhausting. In fact, people often develop mental illnesses from living in a state of constant vigilance. Most people just want to feel comfortable.
To change human behavior and persuade people to change, you need to study them and build strong relationships with them—just as politicians do. Politicians adjust policies based on their own interests of their position, or the interests of their city or town. But even after a policy is updated, how the population will react remains unknown. Will they make different decisions? It’s a complex interplay of emotions, money, and interests.
A poor person sees solutions through their own bias, just as a rich person does. A poor person might save water by turning off the tap, while a rich person might develop an automatic tap, start a tap company, and become even richer.
Tio
in reply to Jacob Urlich 🌍 • •I agree of course that you can't just shame people into changing their behaviors. You need a different infrastructure and incentive.
Hard to agree with that. Politicians, at least most of them, are business people.
Jacob Urlich 🌍
in reply to Tio • •Yes, it may look that way from your perspective. But how was that perspective formed? The tendency is for people to share only the "bad" things—scandals, failures, and controversies. Yet there are many good politicians, like regulators and policymakers, who work behind the scenes. You won’t see daily news articles celebrating how incredible it is that your phone’s battery doesn’t explode every day, for example.
Examining your own perspective (and biases) is a good starting point. Engaging in strong, open dialogue—with your biases acknowledged and an interest in diverse viewpoints—can attract people with different perspectives and lead to better solutions.
Consider the human body: it wasn’t created by anyone; it’s self-regulating. Yes, it has problems—illnesses that cause suffering and death—but if you only focus on those, the body itself might seem like a failure. The systems on this planet are also self-regulating. We adjust some aspects and study the outcomes, but no one fully controls them, just as no one c
... show moreYes, it may look that way from your perspective. But how was that perspective formed? The tendency is for people to share only the "bad" things—scandals, failures, and controversies. Yet there are many good politicians, like regulators and policymakers, who work behind the scenes. You won’t see daily news articles celebrating how incredible it is that your phone’s battery doesn’t explode every day, for example.
Examining your own perspective (and biases) is a good starting point. Engaging in strong, open dialogue—with your biases acknowledged and an interest in diverse viewpoints—can attract people with different perspectives and lead to better solutions.
Consider the human body: it wasn’t created by anyone; it’s self-regulating. Yes, it has problems—illnesses that cause suffering and death—but if you only focus on those, the body itself might seem like a failure. The systems on this planet are also self-regulating. We adjust some aspects and study the outcomes, but no one fully controls them, just as no one controls your body.
No one invented communism, fascism, democracy, or capitalism. Similarly, no one "creates" the flu, cancer, dementia, or Parkinson’s disease. These are part of an evolving process.
If you see rain every day, it doesn’t mean it rains every day of the year. Perspective shapes what we notice—and what we overlook.
Tio
in reply to Jacob Urlich 🌍 • •Jacob Urlich 🌍
in reply to Tio • •Clock setter Alexandra Bell was 8 years old when she wrote a letter to President George H.W. Bush expressing outrage about the Exxon Valdez oil spill and accusing him of spending too much time on nuclear weapons. A form response thanked her for writing and urged her to keep reading books. “I was like, this is garbage,” she says. “I was just radicalized.” Her righteous, youthful anger led her to a career in nuclear policy and diplomacy in both government and nonprofit roles, and in February 2025, she joined the Bulletin as its new president.
Reference :
Langin, K. (2025) Humanity is on a fast track to destruction, scientists say. I met the experts counting down to the apocalypse. Popular Mechanics, 17 December. Available at: popularmechanics.com/science/a… (Accessed: 21 December 2025).
Tio
in reply to Jacob Urlich 🌍 • •?And?
Who is the president now? And who makes the majority of politicians in her tribe?
I'll share again this:
Jacob Urlich 🌍
in reply to Tio • •I don’t see a clear argument here. Politics itself isn’t inherently corrupt—it’s a tool for **exposing** corruption and lies. The real question is: Does politics corrupt people, or are corrupt people drawn to politics? This is a well-founded debate with philosophical, psychological, and historical dimensions, and it’s one that will likely continue indefinitely.
Let’s draw a parallel: The human body creates cancer. Cancer evolved as a byproduct of cellular processes, and similarly, politics didn’t emerge from a single designer or master plan. It evolved as humans transitioned from small hunter-gatherer groups to complex societies. Just as cancer arises from the trade-offs of cellular reproduction, politics arises from the trade-offs of human cooperation, competition, and survival. Early human groups needed ways to resolve conflicts, allocate resources, and organize collective action. Politics, in its broadest sense, emerged as a solution to these challenges.
Is Corruption Inevitable?
... show moreWherever there is po
I don’t see a clear argument here. Politics itself isn’t inherently corrupt—it’s a tool for **exposing** corruption and lies. The real question is: Does politics corrupt people, or are corrupt people drawn to politics? This is a well-founded debate with philosophical, psychological, and historical dimensions, and it’s one that will likely continue indefinitely.
Let’s draw a parallel: The human body creates cancer. Cancer evolved as a byproduct of cellular processes, and similarly, politics didn’t emerge from a single designer or master plan. It evolved as humans transitioned from small hunter-gatherer groups to complex societies. Just as cancer arises from the trade-offs of cellular reproduction, politics arises from the trade-offs of human cooperation, competition, and survival. Early human groups needed ways to resolve conflicts, allocate resources, and organize collective action. Politics, in its broadest sense, emerged as a solution to these challenges.
Is Corruption Inevitable?
Wherever there is power, there is potential for abuse. Even the most well-designed systems will have flaws because they are run by humans—beings with biases, ambitions, and limited information.
Personally, I can't find enough scientific evidence to support both sides of this argument. But I’ll leave that for someone else to explore in depth—perhaps a future PhD thesis.
Tio
in reply to Jacob Urlich 🌍 • •You can go around the word itself and twist it any way you want, but in today's societal context likely politics is a lot of idiots and business people who seek personal gain. From what I observe this is the case.
It is the fault of the structure of our trade based society. As long as people are glued for survival to the trade game, nothing of importance can change in my view.
Jacob Urlich 🌍
in reply to Tio • •I hear you, and honestly, I get it. It’s hard not to feel cynical when you look at politics today and see what feels like a system full of self-serving people—whether they’re "idiots" or just businesspeople chasing personal gain. It’s frustrating to watch, and it makes total sense that you’d feel this way. When the system seems rigged to reward survival-of-the-fittest behavior, it’s easy to lose faith in the idea that anything meaningful can change.
You’re absolutely right to point out that the **structure of our trade-based society** plays a huge role in this. When everything—from healthcare to housing—is tied to money and competition, it’s no wonder politics feels like just another transactional game. People are so focused on surviving within the system that it’s hard to imagine breaking free from it. That’s not just your observation; it’s a critique a lot of people share, even if they express it differently. The pressure to "win" in a system that values profit over people can turn politics into
... show moreI hear you, and honestly, I get it. It’s hard not to feel cynical when you look at politics today and see what feels like a system full of self-serving people—whether they’re "idiots" or just businesspeople chasing personal gain. It’s frustrating to watch, and it makes total sense that you’d feel this way. When the system seems rigged to reward survival-of-the-fittest behavior, it’s easy to lose faith in the idea that anything meaningful can change.
You’re absolutely right to point out that the **structure of our trade-based society** plays a huge role in this. When everything—from healthcare to housing—is tied to money and competition, it’s no wonder politics feels like just another transactional game. People are so focused on surviving within the system that it’s hard to imagine breaking free from it. That’s not just your observation; it’s a critique a lot of people share, even if they express it differently. The pressure to "win" in a system that values profit over people can turn politics into something that feels more like a business deal than a way to serve the public.
I ask myself the same questions sometimes: *How can anything change when the whole thing feels so broken?* It’s exhausting to think about, especially when it seems like the people in power are either incompetent or only out for themselves. But I also wonder—what would it look like if we *could* change things? Even small shifts? For example, I’ve seen communities or movements where people try to do things differently—like cooperatives, local activism, or even just individuals who refuse to play the game in the usual way. It’s not perfect, and it’s definitely not enough on its own, but it makes me wonder if there’s any space for hope, even in a flawed system.
I’m not saying this to argue with you or to try to "fix" your view. I just mean that I feel that tension too—the frustration of seeing how broken things are, but also the tiny glimmers of people trying to push back. Maybe it’s naive, but I like to think that even if the system is rigged, there are still ways to resist it, even in small ways.
That said, I totally get if you’re not feeling hopeful right now. It’s okay to feel cynical when the world gives you so many reasons to be. If you ever want to vent more or brainstorm ways to cope with it—or even just laugh about how absurd it all is—I’m here for it. Sometimes just acknowledging how messed up things are can feel like a relief.
Tio
in reply to Jacob Urlich 🌍 • •Your replies feel like chatgpt :D - sorry but a lot of words and the wording itself repeating many things.
I know very well that there are some communities out there and the way they organize can be very different from the mainstream politics. But that mainstream politics, which is everywhere, is what I am referring to. And that seems like a corrupt and brainless world from my perspective.
That's all.
Maybe you can grow something better in that environment. But I am skeptical. Perhaps only pressure from outside can make politics shift to something helpful for us.
Jacob Urlich 🌍
in reply to Tio • •I’m skeptical only about my own opinion and my point of view. Me? I’m just my past experiences and knowledge moving as thoughts in the present.
If a person uses words like *"change the world"* or *"make the world a better place,"* it’s an instant red flag—they’re already corrupted. Block them from getting rich or gaining power, because they’re vulnerable to manipulation. And once they get a grip on power? They *will* become corrupted. Nobody can stop them from twisting the meaning of those big words: *"I will change the world!"*
Anyone who throws around these words—or claims they want to "change" something—is an idiot. But if a person has a **clear plan** and is legally bound to it, they’re resistant to corruption, even resistant to their own will to corrupt themselves.
To start cleaning the world of corrupted people, you need to actively engage in politics—by studying their bullshit words. A good politician doesn’t talk about vague "change." They have a **clear, simple plan** for what they want to
... show moreI’m skeptical only about my own opinion and my point of view. Me? I’m just my past experiences and knowledge moving as thoughts in the present.
If a person uses words like *"change the world"* or *"make the world a better place,"* it’s an instant red flag—they’re already corrupted. Block them from getting rich or gaining power, because they’re vulnerable to manipulation. And once they get a grip on power? They *will* become corrupted. Nobody can stop them from twisting the meaning of those big words: *"I will change the world!"*
Anyone who throws around these words—or claims they want to "change" something—is an idiot. But if a person has a **clear plan** and is legally bound to it, they’re resistant to corruption, even resistant to their own will to corrupt themselves.
To start cleaning the world of corrupted people, you need to actively engage in politics—by studying their bullshit words. A good politician doesn’t talk about vague "change." They have a **clear, simple plan** for what they want to achieve.
You can spot a scammer the same way. When someone says, *"I want to change the world,"* what they really mean is: *"I want to fix the world with duct tape."* They want to control others through their emotions and struggles, selling them a belief.
We’re all emotional animals. And when there’s a crisis—when there’s no time to study the situation for weeks—we have to decide **now**. We react through our understanding and experiences. So yes, that means we’re all idiots, vulnerable to corruption.
That’s why we created **scientific methods**: to overcome the unchangeable parts of our inner selves.
A person who can clearly see and admit they’re corrupted, selfish, and greedy? They can still create techniques to control themselves. When a person clearly sees that they **can’t change anything**, that’s the first step.
I think the most horrible things—what’s happened and what will happen—come from this sickness in our minds. **And it is unchangeable.**