


Damn, Neom is gonna have a space elevator!
In the same vein, I will paste the entire job req in white 1pt to try and tick all the keywords they want.
For your situation, if you just want to fill the gap but not have to show something you worked on then, say you were a primary caregiver for a family member during that period
I was amused with the tanks and hang gliders, that's for sure
The Intifada one didn't show up for a few weeks at mine, the only one solution made me feel a bit off at first, but overall I don't mind it as much.
After reading the other poster's reply here, I do see the point about contradiction with what the PFLP have asked for. Perhaps I see it as a way to tie together struggle and revolution in Palestine with how protests and organizing in your location can also be the solution.
Thanks, that is well articulated
Slowly or quickly progressing towards disaster!
Fuck all these people moving to North Georgia. A decade ago it was a nice place with some sense of community. Now it's filled with massive RVs, high priced massive new build 'cabins' that are all posted to rent, and destruction of many wooded areas for more of this development; paved roads that used to be gravel are leading to so much roadkill now too. Not even getting into all these incredibly tourist focused downtown with incredibly expensive food that most actual residents can't eat at
Agreed, had a fellow protester try to start a chant about supporting resistance fighters and hang gliders or something at the last action I was at. I'll be the first to say individually that I do support them, but it was obvious the chant was rubbing people the wrong way and would detract from the wider ceasefire message at the gathering.
Almost seems like leftist virtue signaling, it is only for you and not helping any other part of the movement
Speculation it was deleted in part due to the laptop showing a picture of an IOF member which is blurred in the current one
From the Cato Institute:
In 2009, General Stanley McChrystal pushed the conversation in that direction. He pointed to the counterintuitive aspects of terror recruiting. Calling it “COIN Mathematics,” he laid out his argument. “Let us say that there are 10 [insurgents] in a certain area. Following a military operation, two are killed. How many insurgents are left? Traditional mathematics would say that eight would be left, but there may only be two, because six of the living eight may have said, ‘This business of insurgency is becoming dangerous so I am going to do something else.’ There are more likely to be as many as 20, because each one you killed has a brother, father, son and friends, who do not necessarily think that they were killed because they were doing something wrong. It does not matter – you killed them. Suddenly, then, there may be 20, making the calculus of military operations very different.”
The implication is clear: it is time to stop focusing on killing terrorists. The seventeen‐year American military campaign against terrorism, which began in Afghanistan but spread to Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen, Libya, Syria, Somalia, and most recently to Niger, has failed to stem the jihadist tide and has created more problems than it has solved. It has also cost the United States nearly 7,000 lives, more than 52,000 wounded, and an estimated 5 trillion dollars.