klu9

joined 3 days ago
[–] klu9@piefed.social 13 points 3 hours ago (2 children)

Are you sure this is not The Onion?

saiga antelope

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 3 hours ago (2 children)

Next: Bashir and Garak talking Polari.

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 3 hours ago

"I lent 'im me finest tweed but never again. He tore up me 'Arris."

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 3 hours ago

What a cant!

Relax, I said cant.

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

needs more spinning

[–] klu9@piefed.social 1 points 4 hours ago

Why would anyone not like Russia or North Korea? They're led by great guys, lovely guys. So strong! The haircuts. The uniforms!

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 4 hours ago

Thanks for the interesting read!

Maize came to Italy (and the rest of the Old World) from the Americas as part of the Columbian Exchange, but not all the related knowledge and customs came with it.

A diet centred on simple maize actually leeches nutrients out of the body, hence vitamin deficiency diseases like pellagra.

People in America had for millennia treated maize with a process called nixtamalization (simmering in an alkaline solution), which changes the maize's properties, increases its nutritional value and prevents pellagra. People took the crop around the world but crucially not this process (or least, it didn't "stick"; people decided they didn't like the changed flavour and didn't bother with it).

So people outside of the Americas, like those in the Veneto (the mainland region by Venice), suffered health problems despite their full bellies. (This also happened among poor non-native people in the southern United States, who also had a diet heavy in maize but also no knowledge or custom of nixtamalization.)

I live in Mexico, in the state of Puebla, not far from where maize was domesticated and nixtamalization invented. I'm also not far from a town called Chipilo, where people speak... Venetian.

Because in the late 19th century, Venetians chose to emigrate away from the unnixtamalized maize- & pellagra-induced poverty in their homeland... and ended up in the place where maize and nixtamalization came from and never suffered pellagra again, and became prosperous.

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 5 hours ago (2 children)

Only started with Reddit last year, left when the country it's based in started to threaten the country I'm in and a bunch of others, too.

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 5 hours ago

Thanks, enjoying it now :)

 

Teaser trailer

Rise of the Deceiver is an action co-op game in which players, imbued with powers bestowed upon them by the legendary members of the Wu-Tang Clan, fight against invaders that wish to corrupt their home. It’s been in development for three years, and started as a companion piece to Angel of Dust, a movie produced by Ghostface Killah and directed by The RZA.

While there have been numerous hip-hop-centric video games over the years, very few of them tackle the artistry, history, and culture of the genre beyond using it as set dressing. “We wanted to create something where it was built from the ground up,” Dabby Smith said. “It was by the culture, for the culture, and actually representing what [Wu-Tang Clan] put out there through the years.”

 

Written by George Takei, Steven Scott, Justin Eisinger
Art by Harmony Becker
Published by IDW Publishing

It Rhymes with Takei fills in the massive blanks George left in his bestselling autobiography of the 1990s by sharing the story of his being a secretly gay man. It’s a book about love, not sex, a book about the pain of hiding one’s true self. It’s a book about fear, about ambition, about shame, about hollow success, and, most of all, it’s a book about growth.

 

Exactly what it says on the tin.

The Voice has some artifacts, but I had to get it out of my head and into yours.
Peter Griffin Backed by the Sky Power Band:

[–] klu9@piefed.social 5 points 1 day ago

Everyone's complaining about AI taking jobs away from real human beings.

But surely using an AI-generated image here would have prevented his suffering.

 

On May 19, 2025, federal prosecutors charged Rep. LaMonica McIver, a New Jersey Democrat, under a little-known federal statute—18 U.S. Code Section 111—for allegedly assaulting and impeding Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers during a visit to a Newark detention facility. The officers refused her entry to conduct a federally authorized oversight visit. It’s still unclear whether the claimed assault was alleged to be physical or verbal. But what’s clear is that Rep. McIver’s prosecution reveals something much larger: Under the current administration, Section 111 is being reimagined as a blunt political weapon. Not to deter violence—but to silence dissent and criminalize opponents.

Section 111 makes it a crime to “forcibly assault, resist, oppose, impede, intimidate, or interfere with” federal officials engaged in their duties. But here’s the problem: You don’t even need to know they’re federal officials. You can be convicted for shoving someone you think is just someone yelling in your face, even just placing them in “reasonable fear of harm” without physical contact—if they turn out to be a plainclothes agent. That’s not hypothetical.

That’s precedent, courtesy of the Supreme Court over 50 years ago.
Which means this: An undercover agent embedded in a protest, a public meeting, even a constituent town hall could claim to have been “impeded,” and the federal government can treat that moment as a federal crime. Under the current administration’s appetite for authoritarianism, that’s not a loophole, it’s a feature.

Archived at https://archive.is/JvUOO

[–] klu9@piefed.social 2 points 1 day ago

If a redshirt falls on an away mission and there's no around to hear him, does he make an "AARRRGGGHHH"?

[–] klu9@piefed.social 8 points 1 day ago

A few years ago, China's National People's Congress overtook the US Congress for the number of members that are (USD) millionaires.

 

182
My face when... (media.piefed.social)
 
 

Out of five critical tech sectors, “China has the most immediate opportunity to overtake the United States in biotechnology,” the Harvard Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs said Thursday in its release of a “Critical and Emerging Technologies Index,” covering AI, biotech, semiconductors, space and quantum.

11
submitted 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) by klu9@piefed.social to c/china@sopuli.xyz
 

Online culture and censorship have broken the ties that once spurred protesters.

Today, June 4, marks the 36th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre—a moment of both tragedy and hope. It was the bloody end to a nationwide democracy movement that brought together workers and students, the most promising push for political reform in the history of the People’s Republic of China. But despite the courage of many individual Chinese who fought for democracy and the solidarity of their international supporters, there has not been a comparable movement since—and it’s hard to imagine one arising anytime soon.

It wasn't paywalled on my phone, but apparently it is when viewed elsewhere.

One of the key factors mentioned in the article: the erosion of the "the middle ring" from many societies (not just China): "close-ish" but not intimate/familial face-to-face relationships (neighbours, coworkers etc.) that are key to growing a social movement with real world activity.

view more: next ›