Josquius
Josquius t1_j9xkoii wrote
Reply to comment by ILMTitan in [OC] How much territory Russia and Ukraine hold at one year of war by gridnews
Its the sea....
Josquius t1_j9to91j wrote
Why the dark colour around Crimea?
Josquius t1_j5y774m wrote
Reply to [OC] Current World-Champions and Gold-Medalists in most popular team sports at the end of 2022 by Levi_MS
Surprised the US isn't dominating basketball.
Josquius t1_j5y3y13 wrote
Reply to comment by Smooth-Dig2250 in A Customer on the internet at Burger King 1998 by Djf47021
Ohh captain Janway. Lace. The final brazier
Josquius t1_j5t88kb wrote
I honestly thought they'd cancelled this show? Good to hear its still going.
Josquius t1_j2egthn wrote
Reply to comment by kn1ghtcliffe in TIFU by going on a Grindr date by FoldPsychological589
Well. Hi.
I went out with a few girls I met on tinder. Though only one could be set to have been pure hook up and that it.
Eventually matched with my partner on there - though tinder being tinder we didn't even meet and ran into each other completely independently.
A tonne of people I know have similar stories. Most people who met their SO after 25 or so actually.
Josquius t1_j2d72bj wrote
Reply to comment by kn1ghtcliffe in TIFU by going on a Grindr date by FoldPsychological589
Tinder is that though right?
It's almost cliche the number of people sign up for easy sex... Get none of that. End up meeting the woman they marry.
Josquius t1_j1px21y wrote
Reply to comment by Tyg13 in What did the public actually want in the Iranian revolution of 1979? by ReecoElryk
The fundamental framing of the cold War as democracy or communism that is so common in the west annoys me so much. Its comparing a system of government and an economic system (or rather an economically focussed ideology).
Capitalism vs Marxism is a much better framing for what the cold War was about. That the USSR was a dictatorship and US a democracy is completely incidental to their economic systems.
Josquius t1_j1pwrwf wrote
The thing with Iran isn't that dictatorship beat democracy. On the contrary, Iran is/was pretty democratic.
The trouble is, as seen in the wake of the Arab spring, democracy in a very Conservative Muslim country often does lead to Islamicists rising to power - and much like the hard right in the west, they tend not to be too big on democracy once they use it to secure power.
Iranians we are likely to meet in the west are pretty well off city dwellers. Hence the image of Iranians as absolute vodka swigging party animals.
The rural poor have a very different outlook. Just think about how different life is for rural and urban people in Western countries and multiply it several times over.
Josquius t1_j0j00st wrote
Reply to comment by GuglielmoTheWalrus in Drought encouraged Attila's Huns to attack the Roman empire, tree rings suggest by ArtOak
Sure. But not many of those things were coin toss spur of the moment decisions. They came via a long chain of previous events that led people to act a certain way in particular situations.
Josquius t1_iyo8u3k wrote
Reply to comment by Boris_Ignatievich in [OC] Birth months of FIFA World Cup players. The top three are January, February and March, possibly due to the "Relative age effect" by desfirsit
Yes. Big historic issue in England that your chances of being scouted are much higher if you're born in the second half of the year so are the biggest in your age group.
These days scouts actively seek to look beyond this. Trying to look at fundamental ability rather than heavily physique related performance.
Josquius t1_iyo8h9a wrote
Reply to [OC] Birth months of FIFA World Cup players. The top three are January, February and March, possibly due to the "Relative age effect" by desfirsit
This is a big known issue in football. They've been working to remedy it in England this century as previously the overwhelming majority of players in the premiership were born in the second half the year, that meaning they were oldest in their school year.
I know several countries have the normal year for their school year cut offs which could be shown here.
Josquius t1_iy4qav7 wrote
Reply to comment by FartingBob in 'No K-pop on a dead planet': Meet the K-pop stans taking on the climate crisis by Always__curious__
Irrational insecurity about growing old probably.
Though I think there might be more logic to it in being a reference to a 20 year old song that was a big deal when it was new but otherwise hasn't had much of a cultural impact until this.
Josquius t1_iy46cig wrote
Reply to 'No K-pop on a dead planet': Meet the K-pop stans taking on the climate crisis by Always__curious__
The word Stan angers me
Josquius t1_ixkdrgi wrote
Reply to Lost islands cited in Welsh folklore and poetry are plausible, new evidence on the evolution of the coastline of west Wales has revealed by marketrent
I find it is a huge problem with a lot of modern Brits view of history is that we see the land and sea as a binary situation, somewhere is either one or the other.
Given years of reclamation, dredging, and swamp draining, the historic landscape of the country has radically altered. People just don't get how much used to be alluvium and other in between places.
Josquius t1_iwqcz0t wrote
Reply to comment by TheRogueMoose in Overhyping hydrogen as a fuel risks endangering net-zero goals by filosoful
Or, better idea, you don't have to drive home.
Josquius t1_iwqctfw wrote
It's one of those things like those who boost electric cars as the only solution we need. Pretending to care whilst simultaneously opposing any thoughts of actual change.
Josquius t1_iu65o3q wrote
Reply to comment by tacknosaddle in TIL about anti ninja floors in Japan. They were purposefully made to squeak as to alert people of intruders. by tpb01
Surely more pertinent is that some absolute monsters don't take off their shoes indoors? :p
Josquius t1_iu4waux wrote
Reply to How Morality Changes in a Foreign Language - fascinating ethical shifts come with thinking in a different language by fonliahea1994
I'm dissapointed to read little mentioned of truly bilingual people who are surely the best place to study anything like this?
If you're a shaky foreign language speaker then of course you must think before speaking more and engage different parts of the brain .
Josquius t1_itn72sd wrote
Reply to This website lists you put in two separate movies or shows, and show you all the actors common to both! by Saxon_man
Game of Thrones and peep show. Zero matches.
Well that saddens me and surprises me. Would have expected a bit part in an episode of both that nobody remembers.
Josquius t1_it6lrd4 wrote
Reply to comment by AJ_Lounes in Was there mass migration of Roman citizens from Western Empire to Eastern Empire during degredation and after fall of Western part of empire. by [deleted]
Really the Romans probably did more to bring down their own empire than did the barbarians from the outside with all the corruption and tax farming and the like. The far more simplified structure of the Germanic tribes would have been a help.
Josquius t1_irovpnn wrote
Reply to comment by Foxs-In-A-Trenchcoat in How the mother's mood influences her baby's ability to speak. Scientists found even children whose mothers suffer from mild depressive mood that do not yet require medical treatment show early signs of delayed language development. by Wagamaga
How did that work out for you? Did you catch up or forever suffer in education for it?
Josquius t1_ir1legw wrote
That's a nice positive graph. Though I do wonder on sustainability.
Josquius t1_jbipam5 wrote
Reply to comment by cavscout43 in [OC] The world's biggest banks in 1988 by Solid-Tea7377
Its interesting that though China is on a similar trajectory and hasn't quite reached the bursting bubble point, the media has very much moved on from the "The future is Chinese!" trope.