@xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
310 followers 310 following 5K posts
Politik, Klimawandel, Politikwandel ⛽
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xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
das ist blanker Rassismus. Und Rassisten stört immer irgendwer im Stadtbild. Immer.
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
es zeigt treffend, wie Menschen die Erde verwüsten. Karl der Käfer schaut aus seiner Wohnung und sieht, wie ein ganzer Stadtteil abgeräumt wird.
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
völiig richtig, allein deine treffende Zusammenfassung der Lage zeigt den Grad der Verrücktheit der allgemeinen Lage.
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katjadiehl.bsky.social
Ich habe bisher KEINEN Pressebericht gefunden, der das thematisiert.
Unfassbar.
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
da liegen nur noch Milimeter zu schwarz-blaun. Könnte mir vorstellen, dass bei der Bürgergeldabwrackung Merz im Kabinett schon getönt hat, entweder mit der SPD oder dann eben mit den Stimmen der AfD. Und die SPD hat sich dann gleichmal selbst aufgegeben. Wir müssen auf die Straße.
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
yep, seh ich auch so. Russland hat echte Probleme, die Unzufriedenheit im Land ist hoch, vieles funktioniert nicht mehr, da muss jetzt eindeutig die AfD ran
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chanda.blacksky.app
'“Can we fix the showers? Gas chambers don’t fit the Hitler aesthetic,” Joe Maligno...wrote'

'Many of the chat members already work inside government or party politics, and one serves as a state senator.'
‘I love Hitler’: Leaked messages expose Young Republicans’ racist chat
Thousands of private messages reveal young GOP leaders joking about gas chambers, slavery and rape.
www.politico.com
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
und Stadler baut Eisenbahnwaggons. Aber du lenkst ab: Beide sehen Kermit kritisch.....
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
Waldorf und Stadler sehen das anders
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
aber hier in D sind alle am Jubeln, dass zumindest einer weniger unser Land abwürgt.
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
nope, Österreich als Staat nicht, aber alle Einwohner/innen
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
wtff? Varwick, Schreiber, Precht und Gaschke auf einem Haufen? Da wird Laschet sofort wie ein Sozialist mit Tendenz zum Anarcho wirken und Restle wird eh nicht zu Wort kommen.
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
I see. As I work in hydrology: Deregulating rivers is a core topic and includes retreat. The coming floods will be that massive that even with deregulated rivers flood levels will reach unseen levels (as in Valencia 2024 or Queensland or Louisiana etc). So structures have to leave all flood plains
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
and if you compare it with Southern Italy right now - this is pretty similar there, too, now. Desert like landscapes are growing fast there but once a year or every two years there's the huge »maltempo« bsky.app/profile/mm-f...
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
Mostly you are right. In Ma'rib the irrigation just gave any plants a chance. In air images it's still greener where the dam left sediments than anywhere else there. And I found this which gives an impression what kind of flash floods Sabaeans made use of: bsky.app/profile/nick...
nickjbrumfield.bsky.social
"When rain does arrive, it comes in a torrent...two or three times a year

If the flood were to begin around 3pm, [by 6pm] it would reach...2.4 meters

The genius...lay in their ability to harness...these floods...The Sabaeans [were able] to irrigate...fields every year...without major destruction."
A page from "Arabia Felix: From the Time of the Queen of Sheba" the quoted excerpt is taken from A torrential flash flood in or near Wadi Dhana in modern-day Ma'rib A map of the major wadis in Yemen, with Wadi Dhana labeled as "Wadi al-Sudd" (literally "Valley of the [Ma'rib] Dam")
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
regulations nowadays, yes, they are almost all a failure and are part of our problems. Others are nutrients overkill, soil degredation and compression, drainage which hinders a groundwater refill in winter and and and
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
Ma'rib didn't regulate a river. It calmed flash floods, gave parts of it time to infiltrate as groundwater refill and made it possible to irrigate fields. It had a breaking device so with too much flood water it would break so the important structures were unharmed. That worked thousands of years
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
There's a farmer on a Greek Island doing just that and is pretty successful. But even him says, now, with only 100 mm rain in winter and growing season, it's not enough on the long run. That's why the Sabaeans installed this, to regulate rare but hefty floodwater: www.britannica.com/place/Marib
Ma’rib | Yemen, Dam, God, & History | Britannica
Ma’rib, town and historic site, north-central Yemen. It is famous as the location of the ancient fortified city of Ma’rib, principal center of the pre-Islamic state of Saba’. Located in a fertile oasi...
www.britannica.com
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
I see we are lost. We had the opportunity to turn the tide but we ignored that. Now it's very improbable to succeed.
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
I checked this for Southern Italy. They have now climate more and more like in Oman or Yemen, very rare rainfalls, but then super hefty. They need old Sabaean water works, low tech but super efficient, but nothing in sight. Only a handful of people may try that. All others think of desalting plants
xfuereinuplan.bsky.social
maybe immediate adaption means protection against floods, hurricanes, heat etc. which is needed to be able to work local, low tech. You see this in Alaska, the Inuit lived local and longest times low tech and hunting based, but without protection they are swept away. bsky.app/profile/news...
newseye.bsky.social
NEW: There’s a disaster unfolding in Alaska right now. And no major network is covering it.

The remnants of Typhoon Halong battered western Alaska overnight. Homes, with people in them, have literally been swept into the Bering Strait.

At least 20 are missing. No comment from any federal agency.