jeena

joined 1 year ago
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[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 11 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

Sure she is antisemitic, but what is the French government in this case? Isn't it Sippenhaft? The Nazis back then loved to punish whole families or bigger groups for the crimes of individuals. We overcame that after WWII to some degree, but it seems we're seeing a comeback to some degree.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 14 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (3 children)

Is it because praising Adolf Hitler is much worse than copying him?

21
submitted 14 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) by jeena@piefed.jeena.net to c/parenting@lemmy.world
 

Our 11 year old told us that all her friends watched it already and everyone is talking about it so we watched it as a family last week together.

Since then the whole family is in K-Pop Deamon Hunters feever. The music io on the TV on heavy rotation, the 2.5 years old is totally excited, mom is watching all the behind the scenes videos and I'm reading about the producers and what they did before.

I remember the Frozen craze back then when my niece was little, I am getting the feeling that this movie has the same potential.

I'd say it's worth watching it as a family to understand the craze being it together with your kids, and what costumes you'll need to prepare for the next Halloween :D.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 1 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago) (1 children)

Never heard about the fertilizer.

Dog meat is now technically forbidden. As far as I know, but 4 years ago there were still restaurants serving it and I also had it, but mine at least was terrible.

Yes Soju is indeed the main drink of choice, I like to mix it into my beer which makes the lager kind of sweet.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 12 points 15 hours ago (5 children)

Do I need to start steam at least once a month to show up in the stats?

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 16 points 16 hours ago (1 children)
  • Disabling personalized advertising
  • Turning on digital wellbeing tools
  • Adding safeguards to recommendations, including limiting repetitive views of some kinds of content

Couldn't they just make this default for everyone? No need to distinguish between teens and adults for that.
YouTube says it plans

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 2 points 1 day ago (4 children)

If there suddenly would really be a Palestinian state then Hamas would become one of the most successful rebel/freedom fighter organizations ever.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ah I can tell you which one me and the wife liked:

  • When live gives you tangerines
  • Our Blues
  • Mask girl
  • Replay 1988
  • Squid Game
  • Karma
[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 2 points 1 day ago

For the environment it might be better, but for the people I don't know, I always liked it much more to live in the countryside and never really liked living in cities, even though I have to now.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

They are closed because most young people moved to Seoul and very few people go on vacation to rural areas. The population here is very very old. First the young women move to Seoul for studies or WOR and soon the men follow because they need to find a partner. There is much more to it with the birthrates and so on.

My favorite food is Korean Beef BBQ. A second is Korean Fried Chicken, they make it very different and exceptional.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 2 points 2 days ago

Behind the house there is a garden and they grow here eggplant, chilli, 부추 (chives), cabbage, corn and sesame (we art the leafs). All good but I didn't have any exceptional things.

 

I've been living in South Korea for 4 years, but in the city.

Therefore we decided to spent time in very rural areas which to be honest are kind of dying here in Korea. Many shops and tourist attractions are closed.

But it's amazing to be so close to nature.

[–] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 1 points 2 days ago

How many toe do you have?

I remember that when my son was born the doctors and buses kept counting how many he had for some reason.

Did you know your wife had a Lemmy account?

Did you make her use Lemmy or did she make you?

Do you like Karaoke? We are at a Airbnb for a week and here is one which we use constantly.

 

Tariff bomb!
Defense cost sharing
Raise threat!

An alliance?
Day robbery?

progressive party
Gyeongnam Provincial Party

 

Today we'll have grilled fish for dinner. I have two more of those bad boys.

I'd love to have space for a grill at home like we have here at this Airbnb.

 

What I often have to do is to copy something from my editor to the browser and vice versa. But this seems not so easy in some editors. I feel I have to add that I'm on wayland under hyprland.

In some Editors it's super easy like GNOME Text Editor or nano, you mark some code in the text editor with the mouse and then in the browser you press the middle click on the mouse where you want to paste it, done. You could do it with ctrl-c and ctrl-v but with the mouse only it's just so much faster. And it works both ways browser <--> editor

But in VSCodium I can do that from editor -> browser, but I can't do it from browser -> editor, I have no idea why.

In neovim it's the opposite I can do it from browser -> editor, but I can't do it from editor -> browser.

Any ideas what is going on?

 

Seosan City (South Korea) (AFP) – At least three people were killed and more than 1,000 evacuated Thursday after South Korea was hit by torrential rains, officials said, with one region pummelled by the most rainfall per hour since full records began

South Korea typically experiences monsoon rains in July, but three areas in the country's South Chungcheong province this week saw some of the heaviest hourly downpours on record, official weather data showed.

Three people were killed Thursday, the Ministry of Interior and Safety said, all in South Chuncheong province.

"As of 4pm local time at least three people have died today due to torrential rains," a Ministry of Interior and Safety official told AFP, adding that more than 1,000 people had been evacuated.

Police told AFP that one person was found inside a submerged vehicle, an elderly man was swept away near a stream, and another elderly man had been found dead in a flooded basement apartment after his son reported him missing.

The western Seosan area was hit by rainfall peaking at 114.9 millimetres (4.5 inches) per hour, "a level typically seen only once in 100 years", a weather agency official told AFP, adding that this was the highest rate since full records began in 1904.

The heavy rains were due to "warm and moist air flowing in along the edge of the North Pacific High, triggering strong atmospheric instability", the official added.

South Korean broadcasters ran videos of severe flooding in Seosan, with water swamping markets and apartment complexes, as well as submerging parked cars.

AFP reporters saw residents in Seosan struggling to clean up the aftermath of the floods on Thursday, with parking lots and shops still seen flooded with muddy water.

Choi Hee-jin, a nightclub owner, told AFP it had been "heartbreaking" to return to her business after the floods had swept through.

"Water had completely filled the club, and everything -- sofas, fridges, furniture, even computers -- was just floating around," Choi said.

"How do you think it feels to see that? Honestly, it felt like the world was collapsing. There are no words to describe it."

The national weather agency said in a statement that nearly 440 mm (about 17.3 inches) of rain had fallen in Seosan by 10:30 am on Thursday -- equivalent to 35 percent of the region's average annual rainfall.

"The water is just too deep and so much mud has been pushed in that I've already been working for about five hours trying to drain it all out," said Kim Min-seo, a 50-year-old restaurant worker, as she scrubbed the muddy floor.

"I'm still not done," she added.

Residents in Hongseong county, in South Chungcheong province, were ordered to "evacuate immediately to a safe location" early Thursday morning due to flooding from a nearby stream.

Several schools and nurseries in the county were also closed.

South Korea is regularly hit by flooding during the summer monsoon period, but is typically well-prepared and the death toll is usually relatively low.

Scientists say climate change has made weather events around the world more extreme and frequent.

South Korea also endured record-breaking rains and flooding in 2022, which left at least 11 people dead.

They included three people who died trapped in a Seoul basement apartment of the kind that became internationally known because of the Oscar-winning Korean film "Parasite".

The government said at the time that the rainfall was the heaviest since records began, blaming climate change for the extreme weather.

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