Flash Animation Hypnosis

Flash Animation Hypnosis




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This fully tested programme is proven to completely take away any of your problems through the power of hypnosis.
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The dot thing was cool, now I need a cigarette and a real sweet martini

From the ancient Greek for equality in freedom of speech; an eclectic mix of thoughts, large and small
Take a gander at these Hypnotic Flash Animations. They respond to your cursor as you move it. (And they make wind-chimey music, so turn down your speakers if you’re at work.)
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Gavin Longmuir: Goober: “It’s too much “eggs in one basket”, and doesn’t seem to recognize the very real possibility that one might be sunk.” Definitely agree with you there. However – “I would argue that they [aircraft carriers] are a key asset, period, even and especially against a peer opponent.” Good for posturing against a peer opponent, yes. But a peer opponent is going to be a nuclear power, just like China and Russia. Even the old apartheid South Africa developed a...
Goober: Vxxc: You make excellent points. Warfare, starting in the early 20th century, was punctuated by all sorts of “massive technological advances via Wunderwaffe” that would render the old ways obsolete. Most of them panned out to be roughly equivalent to a flash in the pan. It’s the old folly of assuming a compliant enemy. Torpedos were supposed to obsolete battleships. The French Juene Ecole was the natural response to this assumption, and it turned out to be complete folly. Like...
Goober: “Aircraft carriers are certainly a key asset for any country which wants to act as the world policeman, and deal with non-peer adversaries who would not have the capability to sink a large naval vessel.” I would argue that they are a key asset, period, even and especially against a peer opponent. It’s just that against a peer opponent, you need to go into the war prepared to lose a few of them, and therein lies my only issue with the US carrier strategy. Any ship that is...
vxxc: “His entire thesis rests on the claim that “we have no defense against ballistic missiles”; this claim is just not true.” Very correct, there are a variety of defenses from CIWS to missiles to electronic. Luttwak goes into this extensively in The Logic of Strategy, which I am reading. A great example is The Torpedo Boat, debut 1870s. That was supposed to be the end of the Behemoths ..but given small guns to shoot the boats and anti-torpedo boats combined with small fast boats to chase...
vxxc: Duty vs. Tasks: We need courage not intelligence to be entrusted with Duties. Intelligence is for performing TASKS. Duty requires COURAGE, moral and physical. Meet our Elites and their striving Managerial Class: We selected for intelligence and ended up with sociopaths dominating smart cowards. Yes, it’s true across the board in our elites and certainly in the Army, I saw and see nothing in the Air Force to indicate the pattern does not hold.
gwern: “Carrell and West started by identifying which of the 1,314 incoming cadets had lower SAT scores and GPAs. These were the students most at risk of dropping out. They were assigned to special squadrons with a makeup of extra numbers of high-achievers.” I haven’t read the study in question, but as described, this is nothing but regression to the mean. You filtered out and selected extremes on a noisy measure (SAT/GPA) who were, however, admitted based on their strengths elsewhere,...
McChuck: Wow, it’s almost like the researchers and social engineers had never met actual human people before.
Gavin Longmuir: Goober: “I truly don’t see how we could possibly stomach the loss of one of these behemoths and her entire crew.” That is the key point. If some identified enemy sinks a carrier (eg China in the Taiwan straits), the only choices for the US would be to Go Nuclear or Go Home. Even with sock puppet Biden* in the loop, China would have to think long & hard before taking that risk. Aircraft carriers are certainly a key asset for any country which wants to act as the world...
Goober: One more point: The carrier still provides an important function that has yet to be replaced, and so carriers are still necessary. Since WWII, the folly of moving a fleet around without at minimum a CAP to protect against air strikes has been clear. Look at what happened to Prince of Wales and Repulse during the Force Z mission, or, for that matter, the fates of both Yamato and Musashi. You absolutely must have at minimum air cover, but preferably at least local air superiority to move your fleet...
Goober: I suppose a good proof-read would have helped my previous post. Apologies for the typos. I also left out the second reason the Harpoon does its P trajectory, which is to make its flight path a bit more evasive to anti-missile defenses right at the last minute, to make it harder to track and hit — but not impossible, simply because it sort of tracks a ballistic arc. It’s more of a “shuck, juke and jive to avoid being tackled” than it is a “ships can’t hit missiles on...
Goober: Isegoria, The War Nerd seems to be pretty contemptuous of the officer corps in the Navy. It’s just dripping off of him. While I can definitely see how a person could use a study of history to determine that complacency and being stuck in a rut through organizational inertia is definitely an issue in military hierarchy, I don’t see where he’s provided any actual evidence of this, outside of assertions that “they are doing nothing” and “they have no...
VXXC: If you can see a schoolhouse, know that you are doomed. As for the “tests” we failed, we failed all the tests, because we were conditioned to the system — by school. It was and is the schools that are our doom. Burn them, and have hope again.
Altitude Zero: If this doesn’t exist, someone is missing a great opportunity. Lots of horse fanatics out there, with lots of money
Isegoria: I’ve discussed horses and history before, but I don’t have a go-to book recommendation for horses in World War 2.
Isegoria: By the way, the War Nerd has been saying that this is how the carriers will die for a dozen years.
Borepatch: 19 is a pretty small sample. I guess it would have to be if you want the very old. But I’d be interested in what the margin of error is calculated to be.
Altitude Zero: Great to know that he’s still hanging in there. The role of horses in World War II is often overlooked. Does anyone know of a good book out there on this topic?
Isegoria: I was not expecting to find that Guy Sajer was still alive. I also had no idea he’d been a cartoonist before writing his memoir — which is on sale, at the moment, as an audiobook (for Audible members).
Mike-SMO: It isn’t obvious but persistent old links mean that someone is paying for server space. If something matters to you, save it locally so you will have it. Don’t expect someone else to do it and pay for it for your convenience. Consider buying a printer and a used file cabinet. Yeak, I know. Indexing is a real pain.
Mike-SMO: There is no consensus that ability to “do the test” is equivalent to “do the job”. In a modern world, rules, laws, procedures, and manuals involve the ability to comprehend written and/or graphic material. It isn’t just the test, however, so many believe that they will be able to succeed once the written tests are eliminated. Maybe on a farm or in a mine. Show and they can learn, if they want to. The “functional illiterates” that I got to work with had...

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