$2.
A handmade sandwich. From a vending machine. Inside a train station in Japan.
JR Sapporo Station, Hokkaido.
The machine belongs to Sandria, a sandwich shop founded in 1978. The first 24-hour sandwich shop in the city.
No preservatives.
The egg filling is packed all the way to the edge of the bread. Every bite hits.
The machine runs from 6 AM to midnight.
Staff restock it 5 times a day.
It still sells out.
Commuters at the other ticket gate begged for their own. So the station added a second machine.
The best seller is the Double Egg.
300 yen. About 2 dollars.
Tour groups grab them for breakfast before their bus leaves.
What can you get for $2 at your train station?
Strange how voting, petitions and peaceful protests don't ever seem to achieve any results, but violence does immediately.
(The beheader wasn't illegal btw, illegals are only a small part of the problem)
BTW I've never written about street fighting... but Caltrops are the natural counter to a riot line
Police use drilled riot formations to stretch their limited personnel against superior numbers. But this means they MUST stand in certain spots
They must stand on the Caltrops
@PaulLadd1@ahirundorustica Doing all your deeds to be seen by others?
Tying up heavy burdens and laying them on people’s shoulders, unwilling to move them with your finger?
Sounds familiar.
You can tell how fast things are moving because this guy took this video expecting to be safe. A cheeky performative video to label Whitey as racist for some social media grievance points, deep down believing that we aren’t actually racist
But no, Whitey is ACTUALLY racist now, and he gets socked in the head
“To every thing there is a season & a time to every purpose under heaven…a time to kill & a time to heal; a time to break down & a time to build up…a time to keep silence & a time to speak; a time to love & a time to hate; a time of war & a time of peace.”
To protect yourself from COVID, I advise my Irish brothers to:
• Wear a mask.
• Use decentralized encrypted mesh networks like BitChat to communicate over short distances (a crowd or a city block).
• Avoid transmitting sensitive data over apps like Telegram or Signal. GCHQ can read it.
• For sensitive information, old school is cool. Good ol’ fashioned “Sneakernet” (physically walking with an SD card or note).
• Scout your routes and meeting spots in advance.
• Compartmentalize: only share what the other person needs to know. Loose lips sink ships.
• Learn basic countersurveillance: vary your routines, use public transport creatively, and watch for tails.
• Don’t carry your cellphone with you on an op.
Most importantly, have fun.