Anyone have experience running this on linux? the protondb reviews seem pretty mixed
Azarova
#Tradle #807 3/6
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https://oec.world/en/games/tradle
Anyone else played their new Pick 5 game? I thought it was pretty fun
#pick5 2024-05-21
🟢 🟡 🟢 🟡 🟢: 86.79%
Play it in #oecGames: https://oec.world/en/games/pick-5
spoiler
Japan, US, India, Italy, China. I tried to think of places that made or used a lot of motorcycles and then just kinda hail mary'd China in there at the end since they're the largest industrial power. I think I focused too much on the motorcycle part of "motorcycles and cycles."
West Asia North Africa, as opposed to the term MENA (Middle East North Africa)
:henry-morgenthau-apology-form:
you could also rewind and select timestamps
for real, why is this the thing now? iirc, even vine allowed you to seek
In 1985 the Stasi finally produced a new set of guidelines on how to prevent what it termed “the political misuse of homosexuals.” Some of its recommendations were unsurprising, such as ramping up surveillance of gay activist leaders. But its final recommendation was entirely novel. It insisted that the government find “resolution[s] to homosexuals’ humanitarian problems.” That is, the Stasi decided to actually address activists’ demands.
Their rationale for doing so was actually rather simple. If the government tackled gay men and lesbians’ concerns, then all those church-affiliated activist groups would have no reason to exist. No complaints to be made, Stasi officials reasoned, meant nothing to organize about.
Thus began a series of genuinely radical changes in East German society. The state-censored newspapers, which for decades had hardly ever mentioned homosexuality, suddenly started printing dozens of stories about gay men and lesbians. The government also freed periodicals to accept personal advertisements from gay men and lesbians looking for partners.
The state tasked Berlin psychology professor Reiner Werner with writing a book titled Homosexuality: A Call to Knowledge and Tolerance, which appeared in 1987. Its initial run of 50,000 copies sold out in a matter of weeks. (It would also approve a gay film, Coming Out, that premiered on November 9, 1989, the night the Berlin Wall fell.)
In addition, the state began granting official recognition to gay groups, such as the Sunday Club, a secular activist collective run by Sillge that had been meeting in East Berlin since the early 1980s. And it authorized East Germany’s first gay discos, such as Die Busche, a club that still exists today.
The government even allowed gay chapters within the Free German Youth (FDJ), the state’s official youth scouting organization, and mandated that all FDJ members attend educational sessions dealing with homosexuality. All of a sudden, East German youth were required to attend meetings of gay groups such as the Sunday Club. Remembering this moment, Rausch told me, “The joke was that suddenly everyone was standing in line to get into the Sunday Club,” only a couple years after it had been a target of state repression.
In 1987 the East German Supreme Court struck down the law that set a higher age of consent for gay men and lesbians. The following year, the military allowed gay soldiers, reversing a policy the government had instituted in the 1950s.
Source: https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/gay-liberation-behind-iron-curtain/
universities often have their own private police forces
at this rate im just gonna wear a fucking full on gas mask everywhere. holy shit i hate it here.
i come here every day, and yet every day i see a handful of emojis ive never seen before
They're still around with almost the same group of people from the 90s. They released another album a few weeks ago actually, though I haven't listened to it yet.
afaik most of them dont even talk to him anymore.