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How Bread Was Made in the 80's

How Bread Was Made in the 80's

How Bread Was Made in the 80's

Estonians try for Eurovision with craziest show ever

Sylvester_Ink says...

And I thought nothing would ever beat the old Russian ladies making bread.
The issue with Eurovision in recent years is that a lot of entries tend to be very generic-sounding and sung in English, rather than the native language of the singers. I feel that goes against one of the main concepts behind Eurovision, of showcasing a particular aspect of your country's culture. It's groups like this, with . . . . creative songs like this that ensure that the program continues to have some variety.

Arduino The Documentary

dgandhi says...

At first these boards really annoyed me, they have 20mhz processors, faster than the PCs in my high school computer lab, and are used mostly to switch a few lights on and off.

After I bought one to work on projects with some other people, I realised that while they are an immense waste of processing power, these things make bread-boarding a hell of a lot easier than when I had to pull and flash chips for every firmware revision. There is also all the time you save by not having to rebuild the basics of voltage regulators/ output resisters and such for every project.

I suppose I'm still stuck in the past, but when I hear of people selling consumer gadgets that have a barely utilised arduino inside ( I have met people that do this), it makes me cringe.

I get that things pass a price threshold where devel time becomes more expensive than underutilised hardware, but I still can't seem to completely get over my moral indignation. Won't stop me from using one though, and at ~$20 a pop, I'll probably get some more.

Unreported World: The Battle for Israel's Soul

demon_ix says...

My cool level-headedness goes away when the other guy tells me that my driving a car on my street on a saturday offends him, and I should stop.

My cool level-headedness goes away when the other guy tells me I can't buy bread in April because Jews leaving Egypt couldn't make bread millenia ago, so now I can't.

My cool level-headedness goes away when the other guy tells me I have to work hard and pay taxes so that he can live with his wife and 9 children and study Torah all day long.

My cool level-headedness goes away when the other guy tells me that my taxes have to be spent on the military because God said this land is ours and no one else's.

My cool level-headedness goes away when my life is affected on every turn by the other guy's faith, and I've grown so accustomed to it that I don't find it odd anymore.

How not to make bread

How not to make bread

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'dancer, omg, 80s' to 'dancer, dancing, hunk, 80s, bread, make, making bread, cheesy, funny' - edited by yoghurt

Making Bread The Homoerotic Way

Making Bread The Homoerotic Way

Making Bread The Homoerotic Way

Making Bread The Homoerotic Way

TYT - Would You Bomb A School?

Asmo says...

>> ^Retroboy:
... and here's Godwin.


Lol, so it's okay to use "the Holocaust" and accusations of anti-semitism to shout down criticism of Israel, but not okay to liken them to a regime who's actions they seem determined to emulate?

Typical double standard. It's not okay when the German's did it, it's okay when Israel does.


I think it's important to point out here that we don't know the circumstances behind this location's attack. Was the Israeli soldier who pushed the button operating on his own judgement, or was it ordered by an Israeli commander who knew the nature of that location? Was it fog of war, or a known free ticket to kill third-party children?


Does it matter? The US has been lobbing rockets around Iraq (oh gee lookit, a foreign country) for a good long time now, if an Iraqi bombed a US school you guys would lose your fucking minds no matter what the "extenuating" circumstances were...


Yes, I am absolutely in agreement that it shouldn't have happened. But the majority of the reaction seems to be pointing the finger at the entirety of Israel. Their military is invading Palestine, but was it considered acceptable to incur third-party casualties such as this in the process as part of collateral damage? If so, they should be vilified for it, but if they took as many precautions as possible to avoid things like this happening, the reaction should be less.


No, it's not, it's pointed at the leadership of Israel. I think a lot of Israeli's will be disgusted by their government's actions but they can't effect change. I think this will be a national shame for Israel for a long time to come.

As bad as it is, the situation in Palestine is NOTHING compared to what Jews suffered during World War 2. This is not even a tiny fraction of the systematic extermination of millions that occurred in that event. Israel might want to remove all of Palestine, but they're not acting on it in the same way the Germans did.


You live in a dream world...

Norwegian People's Aid
http://www.npaid.org/?module=Articles;action=Article.publicShow;ID=7118

We can say the situation is extremely difficult but this is not the case; actually no one in the world could imagine how the current situation is and the depression people here are living in; we are now very close to re-experience the living of primitives in the Stone Age.

Talking about living under strict siege and deprivation from electricity, water, cooking gas, fuel, flour etc., which are the main essential materials for surviving, is common and occupying minds of several households. Some people are short of water for several days continuously.

What are we going to use for food next few days after gas or flour runs out and bakeries are closed. Are we going to continue to mill the animal fodder and make bread ; why not as we are forced to do so!

Since 5th November till this day 1st December the number of truckloads were less than 150 for the whole period compared to average of 123 truckloads/day during October 2008. International Agencies and diplomatic missions were denied entering the Gaza Strip as well as media including our Country Director Kirsten Belck-Olsen.

Our office in Gaza, staff and partners are facing serious challenges to implement activities as initially planned and they are moving around to find source of power to accomplish them in a different locations and different time, and this is the case for all in the Gaza Strip.

Palestinians people are paying very high price due to factors beyond their control, but their first choice is to be one entity to be able to obtain, defend and protect their rights.

Despite the internal political dispute among the Palestinian factions, Israeli occupation is the main reason for the suffering of Palestinians by preventing humanitarian aid and blocking all crossings sending Gazans to their certain destiny in a modern way.

Mahmoud Hamada
NPA-Palestine
Written by candle light

Should Our Resident "Hater" Be Banned? (Wtf Talk Post)

Should Our Resident "Hater" Be Banned? (Wtf Talk Post)



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