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Russia lays siege to southern Ukraine, seizes nuclear plant
Russia is surrounding and bombarding Ukraine's largest cities.
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That is indeed a lot of people that need a place to go. A good friend of mine for the past 20 years is Ukrainian (moved over here as a teenager in the early 90s after they withdrew from the Soviet Union). He also got married recently, and his wife just moved here from Ukraine in the past year. I've been talking with him the past few days, and to your point he says that all of the women and children in their families are safe and have found places to go (not sure if that means they left the country though). But so far he has not been able to reach any of his male cousins or non-elderly men in either family (which includes his wife's 2 brothers). He suspects they are volunteering in some capacity, but doesn't really have any information. They are worried sick, but also happy that many of their family members are safe.We are approaching 1 million that have fled Ukraine. That is a lot of people that need a roof over their heads, the majority of them likely women and children.
Temps in Ukraine have been mid-30s °F by day and mid-20s °F by night. Not ideal.
Was on a little vacation, not in the region anymore.Eh Bud, can you sink it?
raise your hand if you've flown on an RC-135.View attachment 62287
Mission
The RC-135V/W Rivet Joint reconnaissance aircraft supports theater and national level consumers with near real time on-scene intelligence collection, analysis and dissemination capabilities.
Features
The aircraft is an extensively modified C-135. The Rivet Joint's modifications are primarily related to its on-board sensor suite, which allows the mission crew to detect, identify and geolocate signals throughout the electromagnetic spectrum. The mission crew can then forward gathered information in a variety of formats to a wide range of consumers via Rivet Joint's extensive communications suite.
The interior seats more than 30 people, including the cockpit crew, electronic warfare officers, intelligence operators and in-flight maintenance technicians.
No need to waste it. I'd rather use it as refuge for Ukrainian women and children.Eh Bud, how do we get you into that region to sink it?
Did you find this in the New Yorker?
Great post- when did it become acceptable to mispronounce "nuclear"?
I've been bitching about it for forty years.Great post- when did it become acceptable to mispronounce "nuclear"?
per Merriam-websterGreat post- when did it become acceptable to mispronounce "nuclear"?
I've been bitching about it for forty years.
There's no such thing as the nuculous of a cell, is there???
Good luck man
I feel like "things people are saying" is more accurate than "news".The real-time news in this war is unreal. Not sure if that's a good thing or a bad thing.
Me this morning: "How long until the mass graves turn up?"
per Merriam-webster
A lot of people react strongly to the pronunciation of the word nuclear as \ˈnü-kyə-lər\. It gets on their nerves. And it's true that \ˈnü-kyə-lər\ is considered stigmatized, meaning that while some educated speakers say it this way, others think that it's questionable or unacceptable. But let's think for a minute about why this particular pronunciation, \ˈnü-kyə-lər\, is used by so many people.
There are lots of words, some of them very common words, that have the pattern we hear in \ˈnü-kyə-lər\. Words like muscular, popular, circular, regular, molecular, and cellular. But the phonetic pattern for nuclear only shows up in pretty rarely heard words, the medical terms cochlear and trochlear.
We simply hear one pattern much more frequently than we hear the other. And by analogy, many people's ears gravitate toward the more common sound. Even if you dislike the \ˈnü-kyə-lər\ option, it's good to know that there's probably a linguistic reason behind it.