W tym pojebanym świecie są jeszcze cząstki dobra.
Pieczona papryka, faszerowana pieczarkami, orzechami włoskimi, czosnkiem i startą mozzarellą z cheddarem.
Od razu trochę lżej.
Ediit: oczywiściie Garam Masala, "się sypnęło" dużo.
Kierunkowy74 reshared this.
I searched the #DokuWiki #Forum and #Plugins, to no avail. I like #FediAsk better anyway.
I am looking for a way to put a shortcode (preferably in my new page template, or in my sidebar/navigation or at least in my layout code, to generate dynamic #RSS link to currently displayed page, so one can subscribe to page's updates and new comments (NOT talk page!). The closest I got is https://www.dokuwiki.org/plugin:feed, but there is no way AFAIK to apply it to a single page - let alone dynamically.
Any idea, please?
Same question applies to #email #subscription, currently in the pipeline.
BRUSSELS — Trump administration officials at the Pentagon invited a far-right activist, Jack Posobiec, to participate in Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s first trip overseas, according to a planning document obtained by The Washington Post and people familiar with the decision, triggering alarm among U.S. defense officials worried about the military being dragged into partisan warfare.
(...)
The Pentagon’s media invitation to Posobiec, a podcaster with millions of followers online, comes as the Trump administration signals a desire to use the U.S. military in unconventional ways domestically, fueling concern that the nonpartisan institution could be employed for overtly political purposes.
Something seemingly obvious I was missing for years, and now I am looking for explanation.
An archetypical scene from a #WesternMovie is, when a #BountyHunter delivers a heap of (ususally dead) villains to a local #sheriff, claiming huge amount of money as promised by publicly distributed wanted posters.
Now, I am curious about the economics behind that system. The #OldWest was running rather slow #money #circulation, and local reserves of cash were small. A public bounty posters, accumulated in any given sheriff's office, if cashed en masse, would easily kill local bank liquidity. On the other hand, waiting for a train or wagon to bring more money was probably not practical for a hunter who just killed someone with friends in the heigbourhood.
So, any of you #history buffs can explain how it worked in reality?
Maybe cheque. To some big bank far away.
On a more serious note, how probable was catching/killing more than one or two villains* in one run? And if they were to be collected over longer time, the logistics of moving around with either bunch of prisoners or carriage of carrions would be hard. So, I suppose such cases were rather unfrequent.
- in case of a group, bounties for low-rank members were probably much lower.
KlemensGak
in reply to 8Petros [$ rm -rv /capitalism/*] • • •8Petros [$ rm -rv /capitalism/*]
in reply to KlemensGak • •A co to ma do rzeczy?