@kumicota No Jews, a repressive culture and economy, it being a police state albeit a polite one, we should look at how the tolerance of the manga and anime you mention has not translated into their own Globohomo with Japanese characteristics. They just might be able to keep it tamped down enough.
@Vidmastereon Often the author of a story has nothing to do with the title the editor slaps on his story.
For that matter, one reason I'd never work under a byline in "journalism" is that editors reserve the right to change anything you wrote into what they want, while still blaming you for it.
@Vidmastereon This is perhaps an "AI" generated article where the headline doesn't match the contents??
I found lots of stuff about the manga getting sold out, Blurays as well, and the latter all but uniquely getting a second production run, but no sign the publishers aren't going to satisfy the manga demand where scarcity games aren't to my knowledge played like they often are with video media releases.
@Floydian_Psychology You've got to define "black" before you make such sweeping assertions.
Safe to say @Shadowman311 is referring to African-Americans, who due to I assume an admixture of white genes and much better "nurture" than in sub-Saharan Africa, better food, shelter, medicine, and +much_ less of a disease burden, weight in at an average of 85 IQ. A US white male's SD is 15 points and up to about now we mostly defined the average for the whole nation, so....
Now, if we're importing negroes from Africa the numbers are of course a lot more grim. But I haven't yet heard of that WRT to airliner piloting ... except maybe see below:
This nigger was from Antigua, and Caribbean negro IQs are not so good as you might imagine. That island per Wikipedia is 87% negro, there's only 1.68% whites, "nurture" still might be better than Africa though. Couldn't quickly find any average IQs for it, it's pretty small.
In any case, in times past when this pilot got overwhelmed, he was noted to just start pressing buttons randomly. Here he likely made a mistake causing his watch band to flip a switch as he was doing something else (bad UI design), things went to hell immediately and the other pilot had only seconds to figure out what was happening before it was too late to recover since they were low, coming in for a landing.
On the other hand, the more diversity's close calls which we saw a lot of in 2023, the FAA is pushing this hard for air traffic controllers, become actual lethal accidents, the fewer people will be willing to play Russian Roulette. Lots of flying by air is optional or thereabouts if/when things get bad enough.
Note as the same time Boeing has gutted the quality of its construction; I doubt the first two of the three incidents in the last few days have anything to do with them, but it won't take much more for that to play a factor in all this as well.
And see that the shares publicly floating, the ones out of which your 1.34 million come from, are 19.53 million. Although that set of statistics, don't know for what period, say "Average Volume" is 1.53 million.
There's also a great deal of tasty data in the other tabs, like 323 employees and 79% 2023 (FY likely) sales growth, although those will be snapshots from previous reporting.
If you can grok the Charts one, you can see how much of its prior stock moves were likely based on secular stock market moves unrelated to the company itself. It's also a technology stock if you want to drill down to that. See Financials for lots more, Net Operating Cash Flow which is a key thing and looks good up to now, is going up.
The current stock moves are not yet historically super bad. To recap, IPOed at ~4,800 yen, then hit a high of ~6,300 in late 2022, and now I note it hit a low of 2,110 March 5th, 2023.
Which was bad depending on the secular trends, because Japan has been in economically choppy waters ... well perhaps for most or all your lives. After the bubble its ruling trash decided to prop up the system, the existing banks and big businesses/conglomerates instead of taking short term pain. It's been in serious decline since, although the birth rate really started dropping in the early 1970s.
OK, since then the stock price has been bouncing around 3,8-900 or so to around the current price. So we've got to see if it breaks through that recent floor of around 3,100 yen. And continues.
@wizardyuuka@ElDeadKennedy@coolboymew@thatbrickster When I bought a smol, old house and had to do lots of renovations on it, I discovered my flip phone with about the same control set gave me texting elbow from all the communications I had to do with the renovators etc. and that prompted me to get my first smartphone.
I also find them useful for reading stuff while I'm waiting in a doctor's office, looking up prices and other details while in a (home improvements) store etc. The easy trick for me is to not do social media and the like, all the way to email, at all on my phone. Partly so because the Fediverse is the first type I've used beyond forums and the like, also because I prefer using a good Cherry MX keyboard to do my typing.
@smugumin@Rudolf_von_Goldenbaum@Will2Power@dickflatteningenthusiast Hard to find a better exemplar of “there’s griefers out there [and/or] Also a lot of idiots [and/or] Plus a lot of bad actors deliberately trying to mess up the other side.” than Zerglingman@freespeechextremist.com
In response to my first posting he flung thought terminating cliches or just plain shit at least four different ways, all designed to discourage you from productively thinking. When called on it, he completely ignores that except to bizarrely Favorite both replies, which is basically thumbing his nose by acknowledging he read them.
(I didn’t write the above until now when I see he’s again active on the Fediverse, you do need to make sure a lack of an immediate response is not due to someone’s sleep etc. cycle.)
This is exactly the sort of account you should axiomatically mute for you own well being.
I have a very strong biology background, from real work in a microbiology lab to courses at MIT before I realized chemistry was my calling, and I have no fucking idea what you could possibly be referring to with “biologists, who appear to be under extreme pressure to lie on a daily basis.”
You’d also do well to explain or point at details of your attempt to say we can learn nothing? or only so much from history. BTW, you do know carbon dating it a thing??
For it to be really good it’s a learned ability, and the more you practice it the better you’ll be at it. Plus below certain IQs people can’t make these associations or see image, per that green text below IQ 90 people can’t grok conditional hypotheticals, and African-Americans have a mean IQ of 85, and along with white women have a narrower than white males SD, 12 vs. 15, meaning there are fewer outliers on the bell curve. That is, many fewer smart and really smart people.
Which brings up what follows pattern recognition. What do you do with your realizations??
Also look at current “AL” systems that are based on pattern recognition as I understand it, they freely hallucinate, just make shit up like citations. The more you know through whatever means, the more you’ll see people engage in such nonsense, including pushing pattern recognition beyond what it can do.
The JQ is again a useful example. You can’t just ignore or worse go in the opposite direction of everything a Jew says because they don’t always lie.
In my experience the more STEM they are, the less likely so (in part because that doesn’t work at all for technology and engineering, and tends to have bad consequences for science and math professionals), although it’ll depend on a lot of factors including obviously the domain being discussed.
If you follow the more sophisticated principle that everything they say goes through the filter of “Is it good for the Jews?” that’s still not very predictive, for there’s many answers to that question. See “renegades” like Ron Unz or as of late even Alan Dershowitz (!).
TL;DR: pattern recognition is a if not the foundation of human thinking and sensing, but it’s just a start.
If they’re good at communicating, you don’t have to read every book they’ve read.
Degrees, especially the advanced not so vocational ones (that is, not law, MBA law), should have required learning how to teach as grad students.
Life experiences, though, you’ll have to take on faith unless you seek out someone else who’s had the similar relevant ones.
Otherwise, a good intellectual (OK, I’m modeling it on myself) will get across the concepts and principles you don’t know, you will today be able to find more about them on the net if you don’t understand, and he’ll help explain or point you to such references or search terms, including in replies, although he might (also) point you at a book (!).
Let’s take the JQ: one forum I recall said don’t start commenting unless you’ve read Henry Ford’s early 1920s The International Jew (which I haven’t) or the more academic and recent but still very approachable Kevin MacDonald 1988 https://www.unz.com/book/kevin_macdonald__the-culture-of-critique/ (available there along with the two preceding in the trilogy because the last two have been banned by Amazon).
If you’re going to think about Jews constructively (for you own purposes) you do need a grounding. And, heh, a quarter century of dealing with them, “life experience,” helped reify and confirm what MacDonald was saying.
And you certainly don’t have to feel like the guy on the right of the bell curve, assuming of course you really are of IQ … I don’t know, 95 or greater? 55 is below officially retarded, is below what I remember of the lowest averages for sub-Saharan Africa.
That said, from what I’ve experienced all my life, and have read about more recently, an IQ gap of > 20 is hard to bridge. The smarter person has to put real work into learning how to communicate, and he’s not likely to be able to bond with you. Again, I’ll explicitly recommend face to face teaching experience, or now just working hard at teaching over the net.
And of course, pretty sure it’s implicit in what we’ve been discussing, there’s griefers out there who are in this to flaunt their all of the above and not be constructive or worse; thankfully the Fediverse has a Mute feature (Blocking generally goes too far in removing discussions which just mention that handle). Also a lot of idiots, no matter how technically smart or accomplished they are (see all the MD/DOs who forgot their high school biology of DNA->mRNA->proteins). Plus a lot of bad actors deliberately trying to mess up the other side.
A really rare win, assuming it’s for real and durable. That said, the real instigators (see below) are bring politically targeted by the Right:
“Intuit Reverses Ban On Gun-Related Businesses”
This is for payroll and credit card types of services, akin to (((Salesforce))) which offers customer relationship management (CRM, for salesmen) but as a cloud service so they can really cancel you.
“According to [Senator Ted] Cruz’s letter, Intuit’s policies against firearms sellers and manufacturers were not ‘entirely of its own making.’ The company said that its two banking partners, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase & Co., demanded that it enforce such policies.”
JPMorgan Chase, while pro-fossil fuels, is otherwise SJW central and admitted to it, BoA denied it, but….
BTW, if you read this old article:
“On Sept. 22, a federal judge from California determined that the state’s ban on gun magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition is unconstitutional.”
Disregarding their rules about case assignment, the same Ninth Circuit panel that previously reversed, and then got reversed by the Supreme Court, got the California appeal and reversed again.
We in the gun community are serious about applying civil rights laws and political action like impeachment against such gun grabbers. Here within the current system I’m not sure what the remedy is, although I think the Supreme Court does have some tools.
The other tool is of course to move out of the terrible eight states, as well as the ones going very bad like the two above California. In Oregon, although haven’t checked the progress, soon or now you can’t legally buy a gun….
Nothing says free speech like a blanket subpoena to cough up thoughcrime violators:
“Meta Ordered to Identify Users Who Violated Facebook’s ‘COVID Misinformation’ Policy”
Ostensibly “to determine whether the company has kept its word about reducing vaccine misinformation on its platform.” This is a favorite tactic of the Left … something they outlawed for things like NAACP membership names back in the “Civil Rights era.”
Jew mad, and the Constitutions is not quite dead yet:
“Twitter’s Former Top Censor Yoel Roth Bemoans Success of GOP Lawsuits, Congressional Investigations”
“[…] complained that disinformation researchers were now being ‘silenced’ by Republican lawsuits.
“‘We’ve stopped having a conversation about the facts. We’ve stopped having a debate about which ideas are good, which ideas are bad. We’ve entered this phase where silencing people has become the de facto way to advance your interests,’ said Roth.
“‘Hundreds of university researchers, people who are not usually in the limelight… university researchers are now getting sued, and are subject to discovery in these lawsuits, and are having to turn over thousands of emails between them and their students, and about research projects, for ultimately frivolous and vexatious lawsuits about, I dunno, censorship or something.’”
“Roth went on to claim that disinformation researchers “could never censor anybody,” despite the fact that academic organizations like the Election Integrity Partnership openly admitted to building tools for government actors to report ‘disinformation’ accounts to social media platforms, boasting of a 34 percent success rate in censoring accounts.”
Such a conspiracy against civil rights is technically punishable by death. Although this sort of thing is common, most recent example I can think of similar government censorship was the “Fairness Doctrine.”
Clown World’s latest answer to right of center talk radio the fall of that enabled/juiced is to stop shipping AM radios in cars.
For example Marx claimed to have to the “one true science of history” and while that quickly failed it wasn’t Official. But a great deal of the appeal was people, especially intellectuals thinking they’d end up as commissars instead of anonymous bodies in a mass grave, and “We’re going to win” per Marx and Lenin, “so why not join the winning side now?”
Plenty were of course just opportunists; there’s no single psychological theory of Communism in practice for the people who ran/run it. How many members of the CCP are in it for the ideology vs. power and graft?
@pcachu@lain Very plausible Harris would push that button, and very much on the table thanks to PRC compromised Congressman Eric Swalwell.
But there’s a practical problem: the US Deep State is dependent on the things “Middle America” produces like food and fuel. But living in a deep Red state part of flyover country I’ve been thinking it might be used once or so in a program of terror.
“WATCH: The BLM felon who got his bicep blown off after pulling a pistol on Kyle Rittenhouse just got run over by a black dude”
Truth is stranger than fiction. Gaige Grosskreutz (Great Cross) Paul Prediger (trying a name change, but now seeking attention again and of course still suing Rittenhouse) “reportedly suffered multiple broken bones and a lacerated liver.”