Djehngo
Isn't the original post here a Reddit screenshot?
Best of luck with the job search, linkedin is awful, but at-least the need for it passes.
"Big government" means thinking the government is bigger and more expensive than it needs to be.
When all the government needs to do is keep me happy then any program which I understand benefits me is vital and any which doesn't is "big government"
I love the detail on this! The numbered towers are the legacy dungeons, The pipes are ways in/out of the underground areas like siofra river, the switch palaces are the divine towers and the stars are the four-bellfries, the crucible that teleports you to ashen lyendel, and the town in the snowfield that teleports you to the haligtree. Not sure what the one at ranni's place is though.
To be fair it has been a while since I played but I'm sure the red/yellow dots and the haunted mansions signify something too.
Bristol is supposed to be very nice, Brighton is probably the most LGBT friendly city in the UK from what LGBT friends have told me, London is generally accepting of everyone but can be expensive.
Obviously do some more research, but I figure it's worth putting those two cities on your radar.
A bit of both, I got Manchester from the skyline then needed to sate my curiosity
I think this is why the OP mentioned buy less stuff and travel less, these two directly reduce the demand for environmentally harmful goods and services, reducing the ecological impact of the companies which issue the shares that make the billionaires in question billionaires.
It's kinda disappointing to see a post about good actionable advice to do the best you can to reduce climate change and the first reply on Lemmy is non actionable (and more controversially; to my mind irrelevant) advice to assassinate billionaires.
? Why come up with a hypothetical outcome just to make yourself mad? Is there some trend of speedrunners ruining educational games I am missing?
So as far as I can tell the rule for deciding if a french word is feminine is "does it end with an e".
There are exceptions and French people claim that's not how it works, but it is an incredibly useful heuristic
"A Line in the Sand" by James Barr is a good book on the topic, it goes into how the rivalry between Britain and France wound up with them attempting to carvr up the middle east between them after the fall of the ottoman empire.
War and destabilisation of the Arabian population was the outcome, but I think it is highly reductive to say it was the intent, for one that would imply some level of cooperation beteen the colonial powers against the native populations when they regarded each other as bitter enemies and didn't really regard the people of the middle east at all.
Every step taken by Britain and France was with the aim increase or secure their territory while undermining the other. A lot of these steps were training arming and funding of local military/gorillas/terrorists opposed to the other country, but usually these were inflaming and exploiting existing religious/ethnic/tribal tensions rather than manufacturing them from nothing or drafting into an officially military force, which has the unpleasant property that even after the colonial powers have departed, the trainings traditions and blood feuds continue.