Cutecity [he/him]

  • 10 Posts
  • 90 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: November 5th, 2023

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  • Cutecity [he/him]togamesChristmas games
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    3 hours ago

    Batman Arkham Origin DKC3 there's a cheat to make every bonus level christmas themed with a very nice alternate music Bully theres a christmas section or christmas DLC and the music is also banging




  • My investigation of dialectics in science has led me to understand that the whole big bang thing is likely wrong and that space-time curvature as described was basically a thought experiment. It led me to then believe that black holes don't have singularities and don't exist below masses of around 3 solar masses. This is all supported by evidence, but I'd rather discuss this in DMs if you wanna know more. Stuff like the precession of mercury, the shape of spiral galaxy arms and dark matter/energy can be explained by fluctuations in the quantum field and electro magnetism in spinning stars, which as far as I know was kind of neglected in galaxy modeling since thoses effects are poorly understood.













  • Like you said, there is no mention of tolerance to what. But you only mention pain and then viewpoint (or ideology). I personally saw it as tolerance to expression (for example of identities, such as culture, religion, gender). Then of course if anyone wants to hijack the concept they can just conflate those expressions to whatever intolerance they want (for example, religious people are homophobes). I'm not disagreeing, just thought the precision might be useful.



  • My solution is I'm always playing to get better. I didn't win or lose, I succeeded in getting useful practice in. I observed the state of play and tried things out. I was practicing plays or techniques. Since I'm training a skill, I need to see wins and losses. If I end up winning a lot, it means I can apply whatever I learned, but there's always so much more to learn.


  • Cant access the article, here's a dumb AI summary "The article by David Fickling on Bloomberg Law discusses China's electric vehicle (EV) subsidy system. Fickling argues that China can't reduce its EV subsidies because it isn't actually paying them in full. While the Chinese government provides financial incentives to encourage the growth of the EV industry, much of the support is being delayed or deferred, and in some cases, the payments are not made at all. The article highlights the gap between China's ambitious EV targets and the practical realities of its financial commitments, pointing out that many EV companies rely on the promise of subsidies, even though the actual funds have often not been disbursed as expected. This reliance on delayed payments could undermine the sustainability of the industry and the broader transition to electric vehicles."