We hear this often—"Why would the Internet Archive preserve & digitize an out-of-print textbook from the 1930s?"
Because you never know when the information within is going to solve a decades-long puzzle, like this fascinating story about American theoretical physicist Richard Feynman: https://gwern.net/maze
Let's spread the ideas of liberty by playing a board game about war.
https://nitter.poast.org/Liberland_org/status/1713087243806462437
gamedev
Added a UI bar at the bottom which displays the current tile. I also added a yellow outlined rectangle which represents the area that is actually seen in game. Since the player can walk to one side and appear at the other, I have to include tiles that appear offscreen, so naturally the editor window is larger than the actual game window. This outline shows what will actually be visible.
Still updating my list, but if you want to buy farmer-direct products with Monero (or #gold, #Goldbacks or #silver), I've found farmers in:
Tennessee, Texas, Ohio, Idaho, Missouri, Arkansas, California (NorCal & SoCal), South Carolina, Iowa, Colorado, New Hampshire, Brazil, Netherlands, Canada, Cuba, Mexico, and always adding more!
And if you're a farmer or homesteader who wants to add yourself to my list, please DM me!
I'm really starting to think that this microplastic fearmongering is really just a psyop, just like man-made climate change. Think about it. Plastic is probably one of the most stable, non-reactive man-made substances. It's no different that dust in that sense. So, it can't be poisonous. Our bodies are designed to handle things that are much more reactive.
It only scares people because people immediately think of larger fragments of plastic that can actually cut up your organs, but on a microscopic level? No. People who accidentally swallow plastic without choking are never poisoned, (unless the plastic is already contaminated with other chemicals) how is it any different than plastic on a microscopic level?
And the crazy things that people are suggesting that you should do to reduce the releasing of microplastics are no different that what people suggest to reduce your "carbon footprint". Things like giving up your car (because apparently most of the ocean bound microplastics are from tires) and washing your clothes with cold water.