49 posts
I Can't Stress Enough How Much I Miss StumbleUpon

I can't stress enough how much I miss StumbleUpon
-
acediaooc reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
libraryofcryptids reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
yellow-the-color liked this · 5 months ago
-
vaporwary liked this · 5 months ago
-
atreusly liked this · 5 months ago
-
genmanque liked this · 5 months ago
-
cloudbower liked this · 5 months ago
-
isiton liked this · 5 months ago
-
pocketsfullofbees reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
afternoonspy liked this · 5 months ago
-
pinkguava101 liked this · 5 months ago
-
emi-d-123 liked this · 5 months ago
-
pumpkinspoon reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
pumpkinspoon liked this · 5 months ago
-
populationtyre reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
aspiringsunlight liked this · 5 months ago
-
rhymeswithhazel reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
diebrarian reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
scentedtrashwitch liked this · 5 months ago
-
marraskave liked this · 5 months ago
-
realmarysue liked this · 5 months ago
-
fermentedfriend liked this · 5 months ago
-
fangirlghost-19 liked this · 5 months ago
-
inkynull liked this · 5 months ago
-
shinyminbari reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
chaoticallyawkward liked this · 5 months ago
-
boobytrapzap reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
hannabel-phaege-gender-thief reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
cadythone reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
cadythone liked this · 5 months ago
-
fashionista-tm-blog reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
midnyaa reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
midnyaa liked this · 5 months ago
-
quantumatlas liked this · 5 months ago
-
moollyo12 reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
alterboyx liked this · 5 months ago
-
complete liked this · 5 months ago
-
raptorwhack liked this · 5 months ago
-
0m3g45n1p3r4lph4 reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
hettolandija liked this · 5 months ago
-
nowitsabby liked this · 5 months ago
-
nowitsabby reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
bigcatwhocosplays reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
bigcatwhocosplays liked this · 5 months ago
-
cottonegut reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
ra9chel liked this · 5 months ago
-
sigma-umbra reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
sigma-umbra liked this · 5 months ago
More Posts from Sonotit
that article going around abt firefox's new ad program is annoying bc it's phrased as though "mozilla has finally TURNED on its people and is SELLING YOU OUT for cold hard cash!!" when. that's not what's happening. it is specifically being implemented to discourage tracking behavior, and literally all the data they are giving to advertisers is aggregate and anonymized, which is like, the opposite of what that post wants you to worry about, lol









Bridget Jones’s Diary, 2001.
Dir. Sharon Maguire
Here's uBlock Origin's official guide to bypassing youtube's anti-adblock popups, updated weekly. Please share widely. Don't reward google for their predatory anti-consumer bullshit
To summarize: 1. Get uBlock Origin and make sure it's updated to the latest version. 2. Click on the gear icon to get to the dashboard, go to "Filter lists", and make sure that "uBlock filters - Quick fixes" is up to date
Repeat those steps any time you get another popup (google and uBlock are having an arms race right now so it might stop working at any moment), and if you have any more problems, read the reddit thread for troubleshooting advice
Much of the public discussion of Ukraine reveals a tendency to patronize that country and others that escaped Russian rule. As Toomas Ilves, a former president of Estonia, acidly observed, “When I was at university in the mid-1970s, no one referred to Germany as ‘the former Third Reich.’ And yet today, more than 30 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, we keep on being referred to as ‘former Soviet bloc countries.’” Tropes about Ukrainian corruption abound, not without reason—but one may also legitimately ask why so many members of Congress enter the House or Senate with modest means and leave as multimillionaires, or why the children of U.S. presidents make fortunes off foreign countries, or, for that matter, why building in New York City is so infernally expensive.
The latest, richest example of Western condescension came in a report by German military intelligence that complains that although the Ukrainians are good students in their training courses, they are not following Western doctrine and, worse, are promoting officers on the basis of combat experience rather than theoretical knowledge. Similar, if less cutting, views have leaked out of the Pentagon.
Criticism by the German military of any country’s combat performance may be taken with a grain of salt. After all, the Bundeswehr has not seen serious combat in nearly eight decades. In Afghanistan, Germany was notorious for having considerably fewer than 10 percent of its thousands of in-country troops outside the wire of its forward operating bases at any time. One might further observe that when, long ago, the German army did fight wars, it, too, tended to promote experienced and successful combat leaders, as wartime armies usually do.
American complaints about the pace of Ukraine’s counteroffensive and its failure to achieve rapid breakthroughs are similarly misplaced. The Ukrainians indeed received a diverse array of tanks and armored vehicles, but they have far less mine-clearing equipment than they need. They tried doing it our way—attempting to pierce dense Russian defenses and break out into open territory—and paid a price. After 10 days they decided to take a different approach, more careful and incremental, and better suited to their own capabilities (particularly their precision long-range weapons) and the challenge they faced. That is, by historical standards, fast adaptation. By contrast, the United States Army took a good four years to develop an operational approach to counterinsurgency in Iraq that yielded success in defeating the remnants of the Baathist regime and al-Qaeda-oriented terrorists.
A besetting sin of big militaries, particularly America’s, is to think that their way is either the best way or the only way. As a result of this assumption, the United States builds inferior, mirror-image militaries in smaller allies facing insurgency or external threat. These forces tend to fail because they are unsuited to their environment or simply lack the resources that the U.S. military possesses in plenty. The Vietnamese and, later, the Afghan armies are good examples of this tendency—and Washington’s postwar bad-mouthing of its slaughtered clients, rather than critical self-examination of what it set them up for, is reprehensible.
The Ukrainians are now fighting a slow, patient war in which they are dismantling Russian artillery, ammunition depots, and command posts without weapons such as American ATACMS and German Taurus missiles that would make this sensible approach faster and more effective. They know far more about fighting Russians than anyone in any Western military knows, and they are experiencing a combat environment that no Western military has encountered since World War II. Modesty, never an American strong suit, is in order.
— Western Diplomats Need to Stop Whining About Ukraine