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> inb4 illegal

no shit Sherlock

I am looking for practical ways to not get my kids ruined by the school system.
Ideally in or between Sauerland and Pfalz.
More precisely I want to get in contact with people who have similar ideas or are doing it allready. Moving to other parts of Germany is possible if necessary.
All I found on the web so far, are people to far away from me or overprized skype calls.
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 >>/54214/
I have assumed that "krautchan" is the same as the original.
But it appears that I am wrong and this thread is missplaced.

But as I am here allready, I might aswell elaborate on why school sucks.

> every kid is individual
in school everyone gets the same curiculum
> learning works best if the kid is motivated
motivation comes from the kid, its not given to him like schools pretend
> oversocialization
there are WAY to many kids in school


Interesting, there are a few doubts, however. Assuming the parents have the means, knowhow and will to properly educate their kids at home:
> how best to avoid sheltering them too much from the outside world, so they can be streetwise etc.?

> I know a girl who was homeschooled and grateful for her family values (she is very close to her family) but she claimed to have missed the social aspect of school and didn't have as many opportunities for friendships and perhaps social maturing, how could the parents best address this?

> how soon can the parents introduce the kids to the notions and dangers behind social media, normalized promiscuity, porn and the Internet?


Also,
> comfy_home_2.jpg

That looks extremely comfy and I have played with the notion of many people having lived like this throughout history and even prehistory. But would that closed environment with the fireplace not be dangerous in terms of CO2 and CO poisoning?

 >>/54574/
In the Nihon Shoki it mentions Emishi living in the ground.
The version of the Nihon Shoki I have is an English translation  from the early 20th century and the translator makes many interesting foot notes based on his knowledge of the area where he says Ainu still do live in the ground.

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 >>/54574/
 >>/54576/
Quite a few people find the idea of such buildings as comfy homes. The depicted one seems typically Slavic.
There are many places all around the world where people lived in similar dugouts. Even here the archaeologists found lots of remains of buildings which were half sunk into the ground (compared to the pic in OP, like it had half the depth of that) from the Árpád-era (the first dynasty of Hungarian kings) and they theorize that they were homes, others think they were tied to some kind of work. I'm not sure if all but many had a lower level in one corner, like in the depth of a human calf. They don't really know why, some guesses they sit there...
Slavs also had similar buildings with a fireplace in one corner.

Anyway there are many problems with these. The big plus is insulation, the big minus is waterproofing. It's easy to get a pool in spring in a place like OP. For harsh winter, like in Siberia, it's perfectly fine, for it snows a lot, everything is "dry" due to the -30 and lower.
Smoke issue can be solved with a chimney. But in OP that looks more like an oven for baking bread - those need a closed space that retains heat and not a windpipe like a normal fireplace.

There is a lot to write about these. Even today people plan dugout houses and homes.



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They are coming back tomorrow at 11am UTC they are undocking from the ISS. I still haven't watched any videos of their, despite on youtube there's hours long stuff. Perhaps that's why.
I heard with one ear Orbán had a chat with Tibi not long after they arrived to the space station.


Watching, listening this:
Ax-4 Mission | Return
https://yewtu.be/watch?v=PEgeSEsNbKI
https://youtube.com/watch?v=PEgeSEsNbKI
It's so fucking boring. A chick and a dude chitchatting and nothing happening.
There's some data displayed of the return vehicle (called Dragon or whatever), speed, height, time, current place over the globe.
Sometimes they cut to the cockpit where nothing happens, it's an automated return..
> the astronauts have no control but have situational awareness
Great.
Sometimes they cut to the control room at wherever, where people staring at monitors.
Literally they could do everything all this but not the actual spacefilght, that is entirely unnecessary.
As I mentioned they "splashdown" near California, close to Hollywood where they shoot the space footage. Nah i do believe they were in space.



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> niggers are degenerate
> Americans are degenerate
> t-shirts are degenerate
> blue jeans are degenerate
> wearing short sleeves is degenerate
> technology is degenerate
> science is degenerate
> all art is degenerate (and graven images)
> cosmopolitanism is degenerate
> touching your peepee is degenerate
> dating is fornication and degenerate
> materialism is degenerate
> gnosticism is degenerate
> philosophy is degenerate
> not having 10 children is degenerate
> music is degenerate
> shaving is degenerate
> Muslims are heretics
> Papists are heretics
> Jews are demons
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 >>/51116/
We'll never know sadly. Oh well.

 >>/51119/
Which site? Using Tor could alleviate the problem perhaps.
According to some https is:
- burden, both programmatically, and philosophically/politically (centralization, creating regulations, and authorities)
- gives false sense of security, serious actors can break it.





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I saw some Mexican asking for gulyás recipe on Kohl and because I don't really want to start posting there beside the World Cup I decided to reupload the gulyás cooking as the other thread is "File not found" as well. So here's with original text.

Cooking with Bernd: gulyás

I was planning to post a good gulyás cooking since day one but somehow the occasion eluded me until now. I know a Hungarobernd did this on KC main but it was regular "cooking in the kitchen" type of thread and not "over open fire in bogrács" (traditional Hungarian pot).
I couldn't do this live for technical reasons but it will be fine this way too.

Pic #1
Ingredients: meat (little bit over half a kilo, it's pork, not beef), taters (by volume I used about the double of the meat dunno their weight), onions, tomato, paprikas, black pepper in the mill, dried ground paprika in the jar with the red lid, salt in the middle, and the white wax paper on the right covers the salo (fatback).
You can also see my Mora for cutting needs and a bearly visible peace from a wooden spoon behind the meat and the potato, the masterpiece of my carving art, used for stir the food in the bogrács.
The taters are leftovers from winter, wizened but fine for our purpose. Some of the onions and the paprikas are also leftovers I utilized.

Pic #2
The initial setup. Two quarter logs at the sides and a nest in the middle for the fire itself also aligned toward the usual main direction of the wind. The rocks are there for a little draft control. Tripod to hang the bogrács.

Pic #3
Lighted a handful of dry grass, placed in the middle of the nest, then a large handful of dry twigs above, and sticks across the log above all. As these sticks burn in the middle they broke after a while and fall into the nest. The heat from the nest lights up the inside faces of the logs. The heat is very concentrated toward the nest. The cooking is going above the nest, and it really doesn't need much flames. The smoldering logs pumping up lotsa heat, only some sticks are needed to be placed inside the nest time to times. Also when a log burns through, a new can be placed there. I had several prepared.

Pic #4
First I chopped the salo, and dumped into the bogrács. I left it hang quite high because there still were much flames, and I didn't want it to burn fast. Burnt salo isn't a big problem tho if there are just a few chunks of it, even maybe adds to the flavor. Also for the flavor I sliced some skin of the salo into there.
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 >>/52673/
> mushrooms growing from a dead tree.
Some good, most bad or inedible so as usual, if you don't know 'em, stay away.
> white and brown-ish
Could be similar to agaricus campestris or a macrolepiota. But just from that description I can't guess.
> do some research online and pick them up if they look good.
By touching a mushroom you don't get poisoned. You can pick one take it home and do a thorough research on it. You can discard it after.
Dig it out carefully and take the whole thing, don't cut it down. Because the shape of the stem can help, and for example the existence of volva (see here:  >>/40533/) can help you exclude many species.
You can gather it into a plastic bag, but one that's made of some kind of cloth, cotton/linen/canvas, would be the best.


 >>/54250/
There could be species that edible dried. Those I know and pick I'm fairy sure they don't, they have to be re-hydrated, and cooked. Tho they grind dried mushroom and use it as seasoning, I know with boletes they do. So if chewed properly perhaps it's okay.
Thing is mushroom has a lot of cellulose. And people have a hard time digesting that. If you get tummy ache stop, otherwise it's fine I guess.

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 >>/54254/
> There could be species that edible dried. 
I mean, I just bought some from the store and ate them dried up

> Thing is mushroom has a lot of cellulose. And people have a hard time digesting that. 
I can eat mushrooms w/ no issues so I think I'll be fine.




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 >>/54139/
That's it for energy independence from Russia.
https://www.politico.eu/article/china-could-blackmail-germany-via-wind-turbines-government-linked-report-warns/
> Beijing could purposefully delay projects, harvest sensitive data and remotely shut down turbines if given access to wind farms.







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I've  already mentioned the book titled On Killing - The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society by Dave Grossman (Lt. Col. of US Army). It gave some food for thought and I'm planning to write some of my speculation.

But what did the author write? Let's summarize.
He starts with the observation that most men has a natural resistance to kill (only 2% of men - those who have "predisposition toward aggressive psychopathic personality" - can go on killing without becoming a nervous wreck). This resistance is so high that even at times that our life is directly threatened (like others shoot at us) still difficult to overcome it. This resistance is the reason why infantry fire was so embarrassingly ineffective in the past 300 years - with the exception of machine guns - despite the fact that infantry weaponry (rifles) are reliable and accurate enough to cause massive losses among the enemy.
The author gives examples and sources, such as a Prussian experiment in the late 18th century, several reports and notices from several authors during 19-20th centuries (American, French, Israeli etc.), and an interesting work by a US Army historian who (and his coworkers) made mass interviews with fighting GIs during and after WWII. Also he cites his own conversation with veterans of WWII and Vietnam.
He gives new ideas on what's really happening on the battlefield. He compliments the widely known fight-or-flight model with two other options: in reality the soldiers can fight, posture, submit or flight. And most soldiers choose the second option.
Then he ponders on what enables killing (I'm gonna write more about this later) and how modern (post-WWII) armies achieve this. Then he compares these methods with the ways of contemporary mass media. His conlcusion is (after pointing out the exponential rise of violent crimes) that mass media has an undesirable effect on society.

What interesting for me is this resistance, and the enabling part. These things are actually give an entirely new way of looking warfare, and how and why battles were won.
For example the part officers (the demanding authority to kill) play in the enabling. When people (professional historians, history pros and other armchair generals) comparing the Hellenic phalanx with Roman manipulus and why the latter was more successful they compare everything but the officers. In the phalanx he's only one among those who stand in line and do the poking with pikes, but a Roman officer is one outside the formation and pressuring the soldiers to kill. It makes a huge difference if someone shouting in your ears "stab! stab! stab!" and generally pressuring you to kill. Especially if this one person is an exemplary one, a veteran whose skill in killing surpasses all the others in that particular unit. However noone talks about this because noone thinks about it.

I'll continue this sometimes, maybe only next weekend, we'll see. If you wish to read the book you can probably find it on libgen.
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 >>/50179/
I don't remember the full details of it, I just know it was banned for soldiers in either 1940 or 1941 by the army not the government I think.

However, it's a commercial product and as I said I think it was banned by the army, so civilians and the Luftwaffe(and maybe SS and Navy) might still have been able to get it.
I know that the allies gave pilots amphetamines to keep them awake, maybe something similar was continued in the Luftwaffe.

A Deutshe Welle article says it was made illegal in 1941. I can't find the page that I was thinking of that mentioned the German army banning it because of the effect it had on soldiers though.

Pretty much everything that comes up are news tabloids and pop-history such.





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Venezuela coup has begun!

6 hours ago Reuters made an exclusive on Blackwater going around advocating for a 5000 PMC force to beat Maduro.
https://archive.fo/QsJdy
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-erikprince-exclusi/exclusive-blackwater-founders-latest-sales-pitch-mercenaries-for-venezuela-idUSKCN1S608F

And now this is happening:
https://mobile.twitter.com/AP/status/1123178811338776587?p=p
https://archive.fo/YtwLE

El PAIS live stream
https://youtube.com/watch?v=rqhhSJQRGkQ
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Events are unfolding in a completely predictable course. The opposition holds demonstrations but the military and police remain loyal. Maduro is content to sit on a throne of bayonets. Lula and other moderate leftists in the continent have offered negotiations, all of which have so far been rejected by Maduro. Lula is in an uncomfortable position, trapped between losing a longtime regional ally and losing votes for his party. Suggesting negotiations allows his ally to whitewash legitimacy without the PR disaster of directly endorsing Maduro's electoral results, which is precisely what Lula's party did. He has gone so far as to publicly disavow his party's position. Lately he called the Venezuelan regime "very unpleasant" and "authoritarian", but "not a dictatorship", which neither side was pleased to hear.
Negotiations could be a clever move by Maduro. He's done it before, goading the opposition into backing down from confrontation and fooling it with empty concessions. A repeat election would be even better, it would be a second chance to demoralize voter turnout and rig the results. Lula knows this, he's giving his ally a way out. Maybe Maduro will accept under further international pressure. So far he refuses to back down even on a rhetorical level, counting on his coup-proofing measures. The National Guard, Militia and even the colectivo paramilitaries are potential counterweights to Army unrest. Cuban advisors, even a handful of them, keep a watch on suspicious officers. Even then, all of this is a risky bet. Coup-proofing is always perfectly successful until it isn't. Individual officers know popular acclaim or even CIA cash await them if they refuse to disperse demonstrations.

Hispanophone Maduro apologetics resort to cheap claims like the voting tallies already having been submitted to the Supreme Court (whose presiding judge is a card-carrying member of the ruling party) or the release of tallies not being needed at all. Anglophone apologists resort to the beaten litany of color revolution, CIA-backed, upper class oppositionists and so on.
I've watched clips from Maduro's speeches and he's nothing like that. His rhetoric has some classical far left components (fascism, imperialism, bourgeois representative democracy is a lie, we're building a new democracy of the 21st century) but it's a chaotic mix. There's room for religion (reading the Bible, accusing his enemies of Satanism, mentioning the "Venezuelan family", describing himself as in a "spiritual fight between good and evil"), generation shock (uninstalling Whatsapp, attacking tech companies), Palestine-baiting or Jew-baiting (claiming his enemies are financed by international Zionism) and other colorful influences.
A much livelier personality than his defenders. He's funny in a buffoonish, unintentional way. None of Chavéz's charisma.

Also notable are the intelligence and police services running psychological terrorism through heavily edited footage of their arrests of opposition figures. Another bullet point to Venezuela's cyberpunk status. It's not cyberpunk because of purple filters and flashing lights (though these might appear) but from authorities publicizing a crackdown like it's a funny meme. It could even be awe-inspiring if they had a proper production quality.

https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/venezuela-politics-hatelaw/
Older news: this regime also relies on "hate speech" to suppress certain kinds of discussion, much like advanced Western democracies. The big difference is that in Venezuela, it's hate speech against individual authorities.

 >>/52325/
Sounds like Lula had to pick between two seats, and he chose sitting on the floor. Vaguely I remember him doing another failure of a balancing act some time ago, no?
> Maduro's rhetoric
He obviously has to refuse fascism. That is always a good move. Then has to claim he is democratic despite not fulfilling the liberal-democratic expectations of the West. Then have to ponder to the Catholic traditions of Hispanics, South Americans; they were always faithful, even commies. Then have to place himself within the geopolitical trends, USA is unfriendly, means have to align against Israel. etc etc. At least that's my impression from your sketch.

 >>/52326/
Hatespeech is ofc silly to begin with. And really if we say can do hatespeech against group X, then surely can be done against group Y. Since it's nonsense there are no rules where to apply.

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Memezuela update: half a year has passed since the elections and Maduro's new term has begun. Official electoral authorities have yet to publish 100% results (just the 2nd of August 96.87% counting) and a breakdown of the numbers down to the precint level. They haven't bothered to concoct an explanation for the mathematical magic of their earlier results and the National Electoral Council's website is still down. Relations with Brazil have soured but Lula sent the ambassador to attend the ceremony.

 >>/52329/
> Vaguely I remember him doing another failure of a balancing act some time ago, no?

Might have been his comments on a diplomatic solution to the Ukraine war. He was good enough of a negotiator in his trade union days and decades of domestic and international puffery must have inflated his ego. To some extent he still thinks he can win a Nobel Peace Prize or a permanent seat in the Security Council.




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