Not really surprising, both are OSS, they can implement designs from each other.

It could probably work as long as you only got a few of them per regiment.

The English in WW1 were for instance quite wary of drafting the Irish and had plans to arrest independence leaders just in case they would be starting to conscript.

Getting young firebrands military training and putting them together with a bunch of like-minded people. I don't see anything that could go wrong with that.

Actually they can place an order, the SC can deliver and then they pay for it. The last case was about getting money after. Getting money before is still illegal.

Also pretty acidic and very bad for the paint.

There are also those that made it out later but the vast majority are descendent from those, yes.

The C++ shared pointer is atomic. There is no non atomic one in stdlib.

Er hat außerdem die Friedensverhandlungen seines Vorgängers sabotiert als Wahlkampftaktik mit dem Resultat von tausenden Toten. Dagegen ist ein wenig Abhöreier Kleinkram.

At least that will not work with Biden. Trump isn't getting past the secret service.

Depending on who you ask microwaves are from 1 m to 1 mm (300MHz to 300 GHz), 30 cm to 3mm(1 to 100 GHz) or 30 cm to 0.1mm (1 to 3000 GHz). Radar in different applications are from 30 MHz to ~300 GHz, but in the usual applications is about 1 to 20 GHz.

I think SAO abridged is better than the original.

I personally would turn it around so that the screw is on top and put a cap with a label for the number on.

There are sentencing guidelines for a reason. I'm sure if he gave him jail time for each of the 34 counts consecutively there would be grounds for appeal, but as long as he stays inside the guidelines I don't see an appeal succeeding.

That said it's class E non violent felonies, that gets you usually No Jail, Probation, 1 1/3 to 4 years, however it's also 34 counts of them. I would like him to have a long stay in a jail, but I think he is going to get probation. That said, having to check in at his probation officer and getting mandatory drug tests would already be something and you just know he is going to violate his probation.

There is always a or else in those interactions. Mostly of the "do as we ask on your own or we are going to regulate you and then there are explicit rules" kind.

Cuba isn't really democratic. Their parliament only gets together a few times a year to legitimize whatever the central committee wants and there is only one candidate for each seat.

In all of Cuba's history there was only one law that didn't get unanimously approval by a single vote and that vote was Castro's daughter.

There was stuff like that we had to do back in the day.

UK has the system, but parties come and go. Yes in the last decades the only really relevant ones were the Tories and Labour but LibDems exist too and there are plenty of local parties that have influence, like SNP. Also UKIP came and went, Reform is now showing up and the Tories look like they are about to be wiped. That is a lot more dynamic then the US system.

They are that in Europe too. It's just not as obvious to Americans because instead of Latinos or Asians it's Eastern Europeans that do that work. They are white by American definition but that doesn't stop plenty of racism, just look at brexit rhetoric regarding Poles or Bulgarians.

Guilds were more employers associations then anything else. The members were the masters, not the people working below them.

The obvious answer is a sushi belt. You can easily put more then one pack on a looped belt.

That is always the playbook for fascists. The enemy is overwhelming and weak at the same time. Stupid subhumans but secretly in control of everything and so on.

I think you would feel different if you just read peace talks and had to wait for battle ground.

The Capitol Police Board – consisting of the Architect of the Capitol, the House Sergeant at Arms, and the Senate Sergeant at Arms – has the authority to request the National Guard to the Capitol but made the decision on January 3 not to do so.

Who are the people in those roles at the time?

Architect of the capitol: Brett Blanton, Trump appointee, Terminated by President Joe Biden following an inspector general's report found that he engaged in "administrative, ethical and policy violations"[7]

House :Paul D. Irving ex-fbi and SS nothing more to say about it, resigned Jan 7th

Senate: Michael Conrad Stenger, also resigned Jan 7th. Ex Secret service appointed by a resolution by Mitch McConnell.