El socialismo es un caos.
La gente esperando la respuesta del gobierno y nadie hace nada.
En la Edad Media, los señores feudales lograban traer al agua a su fortaleza, a sus vasalllos y siervos.
Comunidad de San Antonio levanta protesta tras 70 días sin agua en #NuevaEsparta
Durante la semana, diversos sectores, como Los Chacos en Maneiro, superaron los 70 días sin agua, con bloqueos viales que requirieron mediación de la Guardia Nacional.
https://t.co/nVadrgMSHu
Israel has begun to STEAL olive trees in south Lebanon.
Typical trees last 100-150 years, but in Kawkaba and Deir Mimas, Lebanon some have survived 2,000+ years.
These HISTORIC trees are from the time of CHRIST, so Israel is destroying them.
Un desafío clave en medio de presiones fiscales que vendrán por la demanda de reconstrucción tras los terremotos. Nada fácil en las circunstancias actuales.
Muchos perros y gatos quedaron huérfanos durante el terremoto, es la oportunidad para darle luz a tu vida con seres que solo saben brindar amor. Adopta!
@vicenquintero Desde que lo construyeron funcionó de maravilla, silencioso, bien mantenido, ordenado, bien señalizado, veías que a las escaleras mecánicas les hacían mantenimiento, no permitían vendedores ambulantes. Lo mejor de todo es que pasó la prueba del doblete, el más poderoso. Gracias.
La gente tenía miedo cuando se construyó el Metro de Caracas, comentaban que si se producía un sismo ¿cómo iba a quedar eso? Pues, el Metro de Caracas y Parque Central aguantaron "el terremoto más grande en 126 años". Felicitaciones a los ingenieros que los construyeron. Gracias.
@nachomdeo Por ahora no veo una separación de ninguna región de Venezuela. Tampoco veo alguna figura o fuerza política que pueda llevar una insurrección contra el chavismo. Tampoco hay animos para levantamientos populares.
@HeverCastroB Excelente lo de Japón.
Me temo que sería muy costoso para Venezuela.
Me inclino a limitar la altura de los edificios y cumplir con norma como la COVENIN 1756-1:2019 Sismica
@alejita_73@AndrewsAbreu Le sugiero ver los primeros 10 mins del video.
La ventaja ahora es que tenemos martillos demoledoresbelectricosby esmeril es para romper esos materiales. Un trabajo de hormiga y meses.
https://t.co/kv0pPM6JhY
The rock that wiped out the dinosaurs was about six miles across, taller than Mount Everest, moving at 45,000 miles an hour. It hit shallow sea off what is now Mexico at 60 degrees, which a 2020 Imperial College London study found was close to the deadliest angle possible.
The steep angle mattered more than the size. Coming in at 60 degrees threw the most rock and gas high into the sky, where wind could spread it around the world. And the target was the worst it could have picked, shallow seafloor made of sulfur-rich rock. The impact turned that rock to vapor and threw billions of tons of sulfur into the air.
The blast, equal to billions of Hiroshima bombs, was only the start. As the debris thrown into space fell back to Earth, friction turned each piece into a glowing hot pellet. For up to an hour, the sky over much of the planet glowed like the inside of an oven set to broil. Anything caught in the open cooked. The only land animals with a real chance were the ones that could hide underground or underwater.
At a site in North Dakota, nearly 2,000 miles from the crater, scientists found fish buried with tiny beads of impact glass still stuck in their gills. Those fish died within an hour of the strike, killed by a wave that sloshed out of an inland sea when the ground heaved.
What finished the dinosaurs came slower. The sulfur and dust wrapped around the whole planet and blocked out the sun, and with the light gone the warmth went too, dropping global temperatures by several degrees and keeping them down for years, in some models more than a decade. Plants need sunlight to make food, so in the dark they died. The plant-eaters starved. Then the animals that hunted them starved as well, and the loss climbed up the food chain until about three quarters of every species on Earth was gone.
Here is the part the joke gets right. Birds are dinosaurs. They split off from small meat-eating dinosaurs more than 150 million years ago and lived alongside the giant ones for over 100 million years. Most birds died in the disaster too, including every last one that still had teeth. The ones that made it were small, ground-living birds with beaks that could crack open seeds, and seeds can sit buried in the soil for years, waiting out a disaster.
Those few survivors became every bird alive today, more than 10,000 species. The pigeon outside your window is a dinosaur whose family lived through the single worst day this planet has ever had.
Poco se habla de unos deportados de Estados Unidos que pusieron en un hotel y el hotel colapsó por completo y creo que murieron todos, que dolor uno estar bien lejos terminar en Venezuela y morir así.
Surreal ver esta foto de soldados americanos montados en una pick-up del Batallón Lanza de la Policía Militar en Caraballeda.
Probablemente la última vez que PMs venezolanos y soldados americanos interactuaron era cuando entrenaban juntos en Panamá.
Crédito foto: Agencia AFP.
Venezuela's earthquake killed thousands and exposed a hollow state. Absent authorities, rescuers digging by hand, social media running the relief effort: Washington's bet on continuity just failed its first stress test. My new piece for @ForeignPolicy:
https://t.co/CbzzEDuhyz