Wundei
Wundei t1_j8qpcg4 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL cashews are actually seeds that grow hanging beneath cashew apples, which are pear-shaped edible fruits that belong to the cashew tree by Arena-1
I love mangos.
Wundei t1_j8qodth wrote
Reply to comment by shillyshally in TIL cashews are actually seeds that grow hanging beneath cashew apples, which are pear-shaped edible fruits that belong to the cashew tree by Arena-1
I get full body hives if I eat cashews. It’s my main allergy, with green peas being a mild nuisance.
Wundei t1_j4cppij wrote
Reply to The Hag (OC) by LeeroyM
I don’t see the hat man or the hag per sé, it’s more similar to a Dementor but has a Hag vibe. Usually it floats right above me like we are nose to nose.
Wundei t1_j220e5q wrote
Reply to comment by mysticgohan84 in SPY 4h. Structural failure.. by gtrades31
Realizing….Losses…
Wundei t1_j1986ml wrote
Reply to Discovery of 1,000 previously unknown Maya settlements challenges the old notion of sparse early human occupation in northern Guatemala (ca. 1000 B.C.–A.D. 150) by marketrent
It’s worth noting that this is just surface mapping. Who knows what is in the ground underneath these structures. If there was this much unknown development hiding, who knows how long these cultures actually lived in the area for.
Wundei t1_ir0juqw wrote
To turn it into an industrial hub and spiritual home of the adeptus mechanicus…obviously
Wundei t1_jeb1n4z wrote
Reply to comment by macross1984 in South Africa supports Russian initiative to create BRICS geological platform for data sharing by Falls_stuff
From UnHerd - “The old guard of the ruling African National Congress, who still haunt every crevice of government here, have not forgotten that Russian support was crucial in their 80-year anti-apartheid struggle, finally won in a negotiated settlement in 1994. Many of the ageing elites studied at Russian or Bloc country universities. They may have forgotten the USSR’s egalitarian mantras in their rush to become wealthy, but nostalgia still lingers. The Russians have not been slow to capitalise on it.
Jacob Zuma, the disgraced former President currently facing criminal charges over alleged corruption in a 1999 arms deal, commissioned Russia’s Rosatom energy company to build eight nuclear plants in 2014. If completed, at a cost of £50 billion, the plants would have provided 23% of South Africa’s energy — and given the Russians an effective stranglehold over the country’s economy. Karyn Maughan and Kirsten Pearson, in their 2022 book, Nuclear, suggest the deal was clinched after Zuma received medical treatment in Russia for poisoning. The former President alleged a toxin had been administered by one of his wives at the behest of the CIA. No proof of this poisoning has ever been provided, but there is plenty of evidence of a strong bond forged between presidents Zuma and Putin afterwards — the latter reportedly knowing a bit about poisons.”