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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 7:56:42 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1573092
 
ELON MUSK SAYS AMERICAN WORKERS R LAZY BUMS WHILE CHINESE WORKERS WILL BURN THE 3AM OIL
Elon Musk, the hero of Republican tRumptards says Americans are lazy a-holes... if it wasn't for double standards, moron republicans would have no standards

Wed, May 11, 2022, 8:20 AM·2 min read
yahoo.com
Elon Musk said China would produce "some very strong companies," praising the country's workforce.

By contrast, he said, "in America people are trying to avoid going to work at all."

Musk famously slept on the factory floor during the Model 3's "production hell" back in 2018.

Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, said he expects China to produce "some very strong companies" because of the country's workforce.

"There's just a lot of super-talented, hardworking people in China who strongly believe in manufacturing," Musk said in an interview with the Financial Times on Tuesday.

"They won't just be burning the midnight oil. They will be burning the 3 a.m. oil," he continued. "They won't even leave the factory type of thing, whereas in America people are trying to avoid going to work at all."

Musk himself famously slept on the floor of Tesla's Fremont factory during the " production hell" for the Model 3.

"I wanted my circumstances to be worse than anyone else at the company," he told Bloomberg in 2018. "Whenever they felt pain, I wanted mine to be worse."

Last month, workers at Tesla's Shanghai Gigafactory were required to sleep at the facility as production resumed following a three-week shutdown, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter. A memo, which Bloomberg reported, indicated that each worker would be provided with a sleeping bag and an air mattress and expected to work 12-hour shifts with one day off per week.

But workplace tides may be shifting in China after tech workers there protested the "996" schedule that had many working 72 hours per week, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. for six days.

"This way of working is very harmful for the human body, we've heard a lot of news about deaths from working overtime in recent years, but this deformed overtime system still prevails," one blogger wrote at the time. "We can't help but ask — is it really worth it to exchange our lives for money?"

Musk's recent comments came in response to a question about which electric-vehicle startups impressed him the most, to which he responded that Volkswagen — though far from a startup — was "doing the most" on the EV front.

Musk later praised the software engineers and technologists on his team, saying that his companies' focus on challenges such as artificial intelligence and spaceflight help him attract top talent.

The best minds, he said, are more interested in pushing the bounds of innovation than in getting paid a lot to work on something boring.

"It's not a money thing," he added. "It's really just how interesting are the projects."

Read the original article on Business Insider



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 7:59:15 AM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1573092
 
Putin, the Dumbass Poisoner, didn't cleverly steal the election. HE TRIED his damnedest though.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 8:02:31 AM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573092
 
@RuralThree

What grooming and indoctrination *actually* looks like. A ten year old's birthday cake.




To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 8:04:17 AM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1573092
 
New York Times Pitchbot

Whether it's liberals denying a Twitter account to Donald Trump or conservatives denying formula to starving babies at the border, both sides have a problem with denying their enemies basic life necessities.


@RepTroyNehls

Baby formula should go to Americans before illegals. This should not have to be said.


Demosthenes

“I hate brown people so much I want their babies to starve” says no Christian or Jew ever.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 8:04:57 AM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1573092
 
nikki mccann ramírez

Glenn Greenwald tells Tucker that tweeting death threats and watching porn is an "outlet" for people who harbor a desire to murder and rape. He and Tucker argue that removing those "safety valves" of expression lead to things like January 6th. (Choppy video from FN, sorry)

twitter.com



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 8:12:07 AM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1573092
 
PUTIN DID THIS: Finland Joining NATO Will Help Bloc Control Baltic Sea: Officials
If it wasn't for double standards, Putin loving tRumptards would have NO STANDARDS
BY DAVID BRENNAN IN ESTONIA ON 5/13/22 AT 4:35 AM EDT
White House: Putin ‘Caused’ Finland And Sweden To Consider Joining NATO
newsweek.com
Finland's imminent accession to NATO will strengthen the alliance's control of the Baltic Sea—a strategic body of water in northern Europe bordered by Russia—and bolster the bloc's deterrence of Moscow, according to NATO officials and military commanders.

Newsweek spoke with several officials and commanders in Estonia—which shares a 182-mile border with Russia—about the significance of Finland's announcement this week, in which both the president and prime minister called for NATO membership "without delay."

The decision will end decades of official neutrality in Helsinki, a seismic shift spurred by Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February. Sweden, also historically neutral, is widely tipped to follow Finland's lead. The pair are expected to become the 31st and 32nd NATO nations, coinciding with the alliance summit in Madrid in June.

At a press conference at the Estonian Defense Ministry in the capital Tallinn, Undersecretary for Defense Policy Tuuli Duneton told journalists her compatriots "would welcome our dear neighbors to NATO, and of course are more than keen to continue our very good bilateral cooperation with those two countries in the context of NATO as well."

Thie file photo shows Finnish Border Guard ship "Turva" near Helsinki on April 28, 2015. Finland's imminent NATO accession will bolster the alliance's presence in the strategic Baltic Sea, officials have said.MIKKO STIG/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES"It's going to be a very positive step for the whole of the security around the Baltics," Duneton explained at the press conference, on the sidelines of the Lennart Meri Conference, an annual event focused on foreign and security policy issues in eastern and northern Europe. "We think that we could do even better military and defense cooperation, as we have been doing so far."

"It is clear that [with] the accession of those two countries, the Baltic Sea region airspace and maritime space will become a new, coherent space that is belonging to NATO nations," Duneton said. "So there is much room for future cooperation. And I think we will be stronger together against Russia."

Brigadier General Enno Mõts, the chief of staff of the Estonian Defense Forces' headquarters, said at the press conference that Finnish—and possible Swedish—NATO membership would improve the alliance's operational ability in the Baltic Sea.

Putin Only Has Himself to Blame for Finland Joining NATO: White House
How Long Does It Take to Join NATO? Timeline for Finland and Sweden
How Putin's NATO Nightmare Became a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy

"Most important as we see it, frankly, is situational awareness in the maritime domain," Mõts said. "Obviously, in Finland for instance, they have really strong military capability as well."

Expanded NATO presence in the Baltic Sea would frustrate Russian efforts to control and operate from the narrow Gulf of Finland, through which Russian vessels must sail to reach the key port of St. Petersburg. Likewise, the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad would be surrounded in all directions by NATO eyes.

"This is a great opportunity," Mõts explained. "We'll have a shared picture about what is going on in the maritime domain. Having awareness of what is going on, we can react in the proper time."

Commanders at an Estonian military base in the town of Tapa, some 70 miles from the Russian border, also expressed their support for Finland joining NATO.

The base at Tapa is home to the British-led enhanced Forward Presence NATO force, which was doubled in size in February amid tensions with Russia. French and Danish troops are also part of the force, which on Thursday celebrated the fifth anniversary of the eFP rotation in Estonia.

Colonel Dai Bevan, the commander of the British contribution to the eFP rotations in Estonia and Poland, told Newsweek that the broader NATO mission would be boosted by the two potential new members.

"Both the Finnish and Swedish have really impressive defense forces, and they are really credible," Bevan explained. "And so I think what they will bring to the lines is of huge benefit. But that is for the Swedish and Finnish people to decide."


A soldier takes part in the military exercise "Arrow 22" in Niinisalo, Finland on May 4, 2022. Long-time cooperation with NATO militaries leaves well-prepared for its apparent imminent accession to the alliance.ALESSANDRO RAMPAZZO/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGESColonel Andrus Merilo, the commander of Estonia's 1st Infantry Brigade at Tapa, said Finnish and Swedish accession "will make everything, looking at least at the map, different."

Membership would open "additional access to the Baltic Sea region," Merilo told journalists at a briefing at the Tapa base. "But I think the most important question is not about when and how Finland and Sweden will join NATO, but why those nations have decided to join NATO."

"This is clear evidence that Russia is a threat not only for the Baltic states anymore…but it's also considered a real threat for Finland and Sweden. This is a significant change in the security environment."

Merilo noted that Finnish and Swedish accession would likely prompt some action by Russia. Moscow has already threatened additional military deployments in response.

"Most likely they will do something, at least to disrupt the joining process of Finland and Sweden," Merilo said. "Most likely in the future, they will deploy additional forces closer to the borders, this just militarily makes sense. But I would say it's maybe an illusion to think that all this joining goes peacefully, and Russia just sits and waits for it to happen."

Newsweek has contacted the Russian Foreign Ministry to request comment.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 8:42:53 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1573092
 
HOW PUTIN's NATO NIGHTMARE BECAME A SELF-FULFILLING PROPHECY
If it wasn't for double standards, Puting loving Republican tRumptards would have no standards
BY BRENDAN COLE ON 5/12/22 AT 11:09 AM EDT
newsweek.com

Russian President Vladimir Putin is getting exactly what he has been railing against after Finland announced it would seek NATO membership.

The foreign ministry in Moscow was swift to vow "retaliatory steps" to Helsinki's pledge on Thursday that it would move to join the alliance "without delay," ending decades of neutrality that have shaped ties between the two countries who share an 810-mile border.

Putin used the encroachment of NATO towards Russia's borders as part of the justification for his invasion of Ukraine on February 24. Now his actions have galvanized the alliance in potentially raising its membership by two— Sweden is also likely to follow suit—and giving Putin the very thing he said he did not want.

"It's the fundamental paradox of Russian action, that the result is precisely the opposite of what President Putin wanted to achieve," said Keir Giles, a senior consulting fellow of the Russia and Eurasia Programme at London's Chatham House think tank.

"This was clear even before he launched his invasion of Ukraine, because he wanted to intimidate his neighbors into not joining NATO. But military intimidation just demonstrated for them how important it was to be members of the alliance," he told Newsweek.

"Every single time Russia throws its weight around and makes direct threats to Sweden and Finland, about NATO membership, support for membership ticks up."

"It's a symptom of President Putin's detachment from reality and his inability to assess the real state of affairs in the world around him, either because of his own paranoia, or because he is fed inaccurate information by his circle," Giles added.

A tricky balancing act has been a feature of relations between Russia and the neighbor it once occupied before Helskinki declared independence after World War I.

The Soviet Union invaded Finland in 1939 in what was known as the Winter War. It was followed by a short-lived peace treaty in 1940 before hostilities resumed the following year. In 1948, Finland signed the Agreement of Friendship, Cooperation, and Mutual Assistance with the Soviet Union recognizing its desire to remain neutral.

FinlandizationKatie Laatikainen, a political science professor at New York's Adelphi University, said Cold War Finland was independent and democratic, with the freedom to trade and travel across Western Europe—"but its foreign relations and especially security policy were constrained by Russian interests."

"The treaty stipulated a strict neutrality with the result that Finland could not join western European organizations like NATO or even what became the European Union," she told Newsweek in March. Finland joined the EU in 1995.

Before Putin's invasion, French President Emmanuel Macron suggested the post-World War II deal between Helsinki and Moscow could be a blueprint to defuse tensions between Kyiv and Moscow.

"Finlandization," in which peace is swapped for a foreign sway over defense policy, was cemented by the Paasikivi-Kekkonen doctrine—named after former Finnish President Juho Kusti Paasikivi and his successor Urho Kekkonen.

However, Laatikainen said, "most Finns, based on their experience of the 1948 Agreement, have reacted very negatively to this model being applied to another European state in the 21st century."

Meanwhile, Giles said that Finlandization was out of date "well before the start of the Ukraine invasion."

"Finland was an example of a nation which was fully integrated with Western security structures, showing that NATO membership is not the defining factor for ensuring your security when plugged into Europe as a whole.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 8:45:47 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1573092
 
It is wasn't for Nazi DUMBASS Putin invasion of Ukraine, Finland and Sweden never would have thought of joining NATO... so many thanks DUMBASS NAZI Putin...
If it wasn't for double standards, Putin loving Republican tRumptards would have no standards



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1358468)5/13/2022 9:05:56 AM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573092
 
TWITTER EXPLODES as Laura Ingraham Asks Why There Was No Hoarding Under Trump
If it weren't for double standards, Republican tRumptards would have NO STANDARDS
news.yahoo.com
Laura Ingraham Asks Why There Was No Hoarding Under Trump. Twitter Explodes.
Ron Dicker
Fri, May 13, 2022, 4:27 AM·2 min read

Laura Ingraham asked with a straight face on Thursday why there was no hoarding under former President Donald Trump, prompting outraged people on Twitter to jog the Fox News host’s memory. (Watch the video below.)

Ingraham used the current baby formula shortage to assert her blatant falsehood. A recall by a major formula manufacturer has exacerbated an already stressed supply chain, prompting retailers to limit purchases.

President Joe Biden on Thursday announced actions to mitigate the crunch, and outgoing White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the administration has called on stores to impose restrictions “to prevent the possibility of hoarding.”

“We know that is an issue,” Psaki added in the clip Ingraham showed Thursday night.

Ingraham then asked with a smug cackle: “Why didn’t we have hoarding during the Trump administration?”

Her guests, Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) and conservative author Horace Cooper, heartily agreed.

Let us take you back in time, Laura, to the beginning of the pandemic, 2020. Under Trump.

We’ll let Twitter take it from here: