@sodnik Kar pravi Izrael je res, deal je slab, ampak neke izbire ZDA nimajo. Iran se je izkazal za pretrd oreh. Lahko bi šli all-in in jim razbili civilno infrastrukturo, kar bi na dolgi rok uničilo režim, ampak ob tem bi nastradalo 80 milijonov nič krivih ljudi. Tako da to ni opcija.
@ErnestBrownn@SamoGlavan@DrPogacnik Možno, da je jadrnica imela tehnične težave. Poznam te katamarane, sliši se ga na kilometre, zelo težko verjamem, da ga je 8 ljudi na jadrnici spregledalo.
@SamoGlavan@ErnestBrownn@DrPogacnik Jadrnica nima prednosti pred veliko linijsko ladjo. Pri srečanju s čolnom ja (ko dejansko jadra), sicer pa imajo tanker, kontejneraš, katamaran, trajekt, itd prednost.
@myselfAndI2022@hrastelj@valy434781881 Po mojih izkušnjah veliko folka ne pozna pravil srečanja in izogibanja. Vem za enega, ki se je pred mnogo leti z malo jadrnico zaletel v trajekt od Jadrolinije in jadrnico potopil, ker "je imel prednost".
@marcje74 This is Dutch tax policy. In Slovenia, Model 3 is priced similarly, while base Golf is 26k. For 38k, you get a GTI with 265hp and DSG in a car with <1500kg.
Take stvari se pogleda, potem se pa z njimi rit zbriše, če hočete ohraniti mentalno zdravje. Edini pravi odgovor na to, po tistem, ko si obrišete usta po slastnem stejku, piščančjem bedru ali svinjskem kareju (povsem zdravo, neprocesirano meso) je "boli me kurac".
The key to saving the environment is not looking backward, it’s moving forward.
I realized this the first time I visited Italy twenty years ago. Everything was clean and green. The rivers sparkled. The lesson for me was obvious: the answer is not underdevelopment. The answer is progress.
When China was poor, the air was so polluted that people could barely see the blue sky. Today, blue skies have returned to their cities. Development does not only create wealth, it also provides the resources needed to restore and protect the environment.
Some environmentalists want us to preserve every aspect of our biodiversity, including the mosquitoes for example, so that researchers can fly in once every ten years from their universities (which build particle accelerators and billion-dollar laboratories with their pocket money), study our ecosystems, and count how many people died from dengue outbreaks.
They want to buy our air through carbon credits. If carbon credits were such a great deal, they would be selling them to us, not the other way around.
Cleaning every river, lake, and water source in El Salvador, and ensuring they remain clean and sparkling, would cost roughly $12 billion. Where is that money supposed to come from without economic development? Carbon credits?
The path forward for our country is the path of Japan and Singapore, not the path of the Congo.
@ToneCricket To skoz govorim. Vedno je govora o izpustih CO2, ne menimo pa se o povečanem ponoru in zelenitvi vsega, kar teče na fotosintezo. Svet je vsako leto bolj zelen.