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1000 results for “Molly_0303”

  1. #conclave #retraites

    Ah la retraite des femmes calculée sur les 23 ou 24 meilleures années au lieu des 25 meilleures.

    À ce stade il faudra deux siècles pour revenir aux 10 meilleures années, que Balladur avait porté à 25.

    On n'oubliera pas de remercier le MEDEF pour cette avancée considérable lubrifiée par la CFTC et la CFDT. C'est plus un conclave c'est une BDSM party.

    Et même pas droit à un Mars ou un TopSet ?

  2. "Stop What You’re Doing and Check if Your Ding Dong Is Moldy"

    gizmodo.com/ding-dong-hostess-

    I'll take "headlines I didn't expect to read today" for $200, please.

    #Recall #Food #hostess

  3. "Stop What You’re Doing and Check if Your Ding Dong Is Moldy"

    gizmodo.com/ding-dong-hostess-

    I'll take "headlines I didn't expect to read today" for $200, please.

    #Recall #Food #hostess

  4. "Stop What You’re Doing and Check if Your Ding Dong Is Moldy"

    gizmodo.com/ding-dong-hostess-

    I'll take "headlines I didn't expect to read today" for $200, please.

    #Recall #Food #hostess

  5. "Stop What You’re Doing and Check if Your Ding Dong Is Moldy"

    gizmodo.com/ding-dong-hostess-

    I'll take "headlines I didn't expect to read today" for $200, please.

    #Recall #Food #hostess

  6. "Stop What You’re Doing and Check if Your Ding Dong Is Moldy"

    gizmodo.com/ding-dong-hostess-

    I'll take "headlines I didn't expect to read today" for $200, please.

    #Recall #Food #hostess

  7. As #NewHampshire summers grow drier, farmers evolve to cope

    by Molly Rains, September 8, 2025 at 5:00 AM EDT

    Excerpt: "Some more analog farming techniques are also crucial for drought resilience, Mathur said. A foundational element of soil health is related to how much organic material it contains, a measure boosted by additives like #compost, #manure, or #CoverCrops. In addition to adding nutrients to the soil, these materials also cling to water, helping keep soil damp and cool in times of limited rainfall, she said.

    "Once organic materials are present in the soil, they can be retained for longer with methods like #NoTill farming or #ReducedTill farming, in which farmers refrain as much as possible from plowing their fields. Chewing up a field before planting a crop adds air to the soil, fueling the decomposition of the important organic matter within, Delisle said. While no-till and reduced-till farming isn’t a good fit for every crop, he added, many New Hampshire farmers have had success using the method with the common local crops of corn and pumpkins.

    "Preserving the organic matter in New Hampshire’s soil is important not only in times of drought but also, Delisle said, in times of heavy rain and flooding, when farm equipment can compress fields. This compacts the soil and makes it less hospitable to plants.

    " 'Soils with higher organic matter in them have the capacity to spring back once they’re pressed down, and that’s an important factor in the resiliency of that soil,' Delisle said."

    Learn more:
    yahoo.com/news/articles/hampsh

    #SolarPunkSunday
    #ClimateChangeAgriculture
    #ClimateChange #Composting #ClimateChangeAdaptation #Resiliency

  8. As #NewHampshire summers grow drier, farmers evolve to cope

    by Molly Rains, September 8, 2025 at 5:00 AM EDT

    Excerpt: "Some more analog farming techniques are also crucial for drought resilience, Mathur said. A foundational element of soil health is related to how much organic material it contains, a measure boosted by additives like #compost, #manure, or #CoverCrops. In addition to adding nutrients to the soil, these materials also cling to water, helping keep soil damp and cool in times of limited rainfall, she said.

    "Once organic materials are present in the soil, they can be retained for longer with methods like #NoTill farming or #ReducedTill farming, in which farmers refrain as much as possible from plowing their fields. Chewing up a field before planting a crop adds air to the soil, fueling the decomposition of the important organic matter within, Delisle said. While no-till and reduced-till farming isn’t a good fit for every crop, he added, many New Hampshire farmers have had success using the method with the common local crops of corn and pumpkins.

    "Preserving the organic matter in New Hampshire’s soil is important not only in times of drought but also, Delisle said, in times of heavy rain and flooding, when farm equipment can compress fields. This compacts the soil and makes it less hospitable to plants.

    " 'Soils with higher organic matter in them have the capacity to spring back once they’re pressed down, and that’s an important factor in the resiliency of that soil,' Delisle said."

    Learn more:
    yahoo.com/news/articles/hampsh

    #SolarPunkSunday
    #ClimateChangeAgriculture
    #ClimateChange #Composting #ClimateChangeAdaptation #Resiliency

  9. As #NewHampshire summers grow drier, farmers evolve to cope

    by Molly Rains, September 8, 2025 at 5:00 AM EDT

    Excerpt: "Some more analog farming techniques are also crucial for drought resilience, Mathur said. A foundational element of soil health is related to how much organic material it contains, a measure boosted by additives like #compost, #manure, or #CoverCrops. In addition to adding nutrients to the soil, these materials also cling to water, helping keep soil damp and cool in times of limited rainfall, she said.

    "Once organic materials are present in the soil, they can be retained for longer with methods like #NoTill farming or #ReducedTill farming, in which farmers refrain as much as possible from plowing their fields. Chewing up a field before planting a crop adds air to the soil, fueling the decomposition of the important organic matter within, Delisle said. While no-till and reduced-till farming isn’t a good fit for every crop, he added, many New Hampshire farmers have had success using the method with the common local crops of corn and pumpkins.

    "Preserving the organic matter in New Hampshire’s soil is important not only in times of drought but also, Delisle said, in times of heavy rain and flooding, when farm equipment can compress fields. This compacts the soil and makes it less hospitable to plants.

    " 'Soils with higher organic matter in them have the capacity to spring back once they’re pressed down, and that’s an important factor in the resiliency of that soil,' Delisle said."

    Learn more:
    yahoo.com/news/articles/hampsh

    #SolarPunkSunday
    #ClimateChangeAgriculture
    #ClimateChange #Composting #ClimateChangeAdaptation #Resiliency

  10. As #NewHampshire summers grow drier, farmers evolve to cope

    by Molly Rains, September 8, 2025 at 5:00 AM EDT

    Excerpt: "Some more analog farming techniques are also crucial for drought resilience, Mathur said. A foundational element of soil health is related to how much organic material it contains, a measure boosted by additives like #compost, #manure, or #CoverCrops. In addition to adding nutrients to the soil, these materials also cling to water, helping keep soil damp and cool in times of limited rainfall, she said.

    "Once organic materials are present in the soil, they can be retained for longer with methods like #NoTill farming or #ReducedTill farming, in which farmers refrain as much as possible from plowing their fields. Chewing up a field before planting a crop adds air to the soil, fueling the decomposition of the important organic matter within, Delisle said. While no-till and reduced-till farming isn’t a good fit for every crop, he added, many New Hampshire farmers have had success using the method with the common local crops of corn and pumpkins.

    "Preserving the organic matter in New Hampshire’s soil is important not only in times of drought but also, Delisle said, in times of heavy rain and flooding, when farm equipment can compress fields. This compacts the soil and makes it less hospitable to plants.

    " 'Soils with higher organic matter in them have the capacity to spring back once they’re pressed down, and that’s an important factor in the resiliency of that soil,' Delisle said."

    Learn more:
    yahoo.com/news/articles/hampsh

    #SolarPunkSunday
    #ClimateChangeAgriculture
    #ClimateChange #Composting #ClimateChangeAdaptation #Resiliency

  11. As #NewHampshire summers grow drier, farmers evolve to cope

    by Molly Rains, September 8, 2025 at 5:00 AM EDT

    Excerpt: "Some more analog farming techniques are also crucial for drought resilience, Mathur said. A foundational element of soil health is related to how much organic material it contains, a measure boosted by additives like #compost, #manure, or #CoverCrops. In addition to adding nutrients to the soil, these materials also cling to water, helping keep soil damp and cool in times of limited rainfall, she said.

    "Once organic materials are present in the soil, they can be retained for longer with methods like #NoTill farming or #ReducedTill farming, in which farmers refrain as much as possible from plowing their fields. Chewing up a field before planting a crop adds air to the soil, fueling the decomposition of the important organic matter within, Delisle said. While no-till and reduced-till farming isn’t a good fit for every crop, he added, many New Hampshire farmers have had success using the method with the common local crops of corn and pumpkins.

    "Preserving the organic matter in New Hampshire’s soil is important not only in times of drought but also, Delisle said, in times of heavy rain and flooding, when farm equipment can compress fields. This compacts the soil and makes it less hospitable to plants.

    " 'Soils with higher organic matter in them have the capacity to spring back once they’re pressed down, and that’s an important factor in the resiliency of that soil,' Delisle said."

    Learn more:
    yahoo.com/news/articles/hampsh

    #SolarPunkSunday
    #ClimateChangeAgriculture
    #ClimateChange #Composting #ClimateChangeAdaptation #Resiliency

  12. The deconstruction of class system is really well done in #loot

    In lady Molly episode there is a trip to England and a cricket match and all of these different locations where people stand and it's fascinating I mean these are all still upper class but they are all sequestered and they are all different it's in the long run part of the system of separating people into desirables and undesirables

  13. The deconstruction of class system is really well done in #loot

    In lady Molly episode there is a trip to England and a cricket match and all of these different locations where people stand and it's fascinating I mean these are all still upper class but they are all sequestered and they are all different it's in the long run part of the system of separating people into desirables and undesirables

  14. Klasse, Erinnerung und jüdischer Antizionismus

    Jüdische Radikale haben schon lange das Staatsprojekt in Frage gestellt, das in unserem Namen aufgebaut wurde.

    Angesichts des modernen Völkermords, den der israelische Staat gegen das palästinensische Volk begeht, scheint es vielleicht nicht ratsam oder wünschenswert, die eigene Position dazu zu hinterfragen.

    Es kann egoistisch wirken, sich angesichts solch dystopischen Leids einen Moment Zeit zu nehmen, um die eigene Geschichte zu hinterfragen. Als Jude fühlt sich das aber etwas anders an. Uns wird gesagt, dass die einzige Möglichkeit, Sicherheit für #Juden zu schaffen, ein #Nationalstaat mit einer Politik der Ausgrenzung ist, die uns begünstigt. Aber wenn man sich, egal ob Jude oder nicht, für die Geschichte politisch aktiver jüdischer Gemeinschaften interessiert, findet man eine Fülle von radikalem #Antinationalismus – ja sogar #Internationalismus. Der #Zionismus war eine von der jüdischen Oberschicht geschmiedete Geschichte, und sein Projekt beruhte darauf, die Juden der #Arbeiterklasse davon zu überzeugen, den Kampf zu kämpfen und auf gestohlenem Land eine Festung nur für Juden zu errichten.

    Die Geschichte der Beteiligung von Juden an linken Bewegungen ist viel zu umfangreich, um sie hier zusammenzufassen. Emma #Goldman und Rosa #Luxemburg sind nur zwei der bekannteren Namen, aber es gab unzählige jüdische #Streikoordinatoren in Fabriken, unbekannte #Zeitungsredakteure, #Pädagogen und #Künstler – Menschen der Tat und Menschen des Denkens, die nicht nur auf die Linke, sondern auf den politischen Diskurs insgesamt einen enormen Einfluss hatten. Milly #Witkopf zum Beispiel (1877–1955), die mit dem bekannteren Rudolph #Rocker verheiratet war, und die Juden ihrer Art werden in der Diskussion oft nicht erwähnt – obwohl sie einen Großteil der Grundlagen für diese Bewegungen gelegt haben.

    In der heutigen Zeit sind diese Figuren Zielscheibe unverhohlener Verleumdungen durch zionistische Intellektuelle und Aktivisten. Ihnen wird oft vorgeworfen, sie hätten hochfliegende „linke“ Erwartungen (auch bekannt als politische Prinzipien) und kümmerten sich zu wenig um die Sicherheit des jüdischen Volkes. Aber für jeden, der auch nur ein bisschen Medienkompetenz hat, ist klar, dass diese Verleumdungen von denselben Leuten kommen, die die Politik der ethnischen Säuberung der #Netanjahu-Regierung bejubeln – und daher nicht vertrauenswürdig sind. Aber für diejenigen, die dumm genug sind, sie ernst zu nehmen, sehen solche Leute zumindest wie ernsthafte politische Akteure aus und müssen diskutiert werden, soweit man das ertragen kann.

    (...)

    Weiterlesen in meiner Übersetzung des Beitrags  "Class, memory, and Jewish anti-Zionism" von James Horton ursprünglich veröffentlicht am 10. Juli 2025

    #Anarchismus @anarchism @israel @palestine @gaza #Gaza #Israel

  15. If you've read some of the mainline books, you're immediately let in on one of the big reveals (in fact, you are sort of on a knife edge waiting for it). The story is also tied very nicely into the backstory of the other books with David Cartwright, and Charlie Partner. We also get tonnes of back story on Molly and Jackson (like the idea that, at this point, Jackson can make a bottle of whisky last 2 weeks). It's a feast for anyone that has read 2 or 3 of the mainline books.

    #SlowHorses #books

  16. The Secrets Hours is absolutely fantastic, probably the best book in the series, and it's not actually a mainline #SlowHorses book. It may take me a couple of toots to explain just why it hit so well for me.
    If you're a #SloughHouse book completist and have read all the shorts, you've had glimpses of a couple a story in Berlin with Molly and Jackson. The Secret Hours basically lets us in on the rest of it. Heron does it in a very clever way that sort of makes this 3 books in 1...

    #books

  17. How to Date Your Dragon by Molly Harper is only $0.99, likely everywhere. It starts the Mystic Bayou paranormal romance series. I haven't read it, but I like Harper's books and I'm sure this is fun too.

    amazon.com/Date-Your-Dragon-My

    #BookSale #ParanormalRomance @bookstodon

  18. How to Date Your Dragon by Molly Harper is only $0.99, likely everywhere. It starts the Mystic Bayou paranormal romance series. I haven't read it, but I like Harper's books and I'm sure this is fun too.

    amazon.com/Date-Your-Dragon-My

    #BookSale #ParanormalRomance @bookstodon

  19. How to Date Your Dragon by Molly Harper is only $0.99, likely everywhere. It starts the Mystic Bayou paranormal romance series. I haven't read it, but I like Harper's books and I'm sure this is fun too.

    amazon.com/Date-Your-Dragon-My

    #BookSale #ParanormalRomance @bookstodon

  20. How to Date Your Dragon by Molly Harper is only $0.99, likely everywhere. It starts the Mystic Bayou paranormal romance series. I haven't read it, but I like Harper's books and I'm sure this is fun too.

    amazon.com/Date-Your-Dragon-My

    #BookSale #ParanormalRomance @bookstodon

  21. How to Date Your Dragon by Molly Harper is only $0.99, likely everywhere. It starts the Mystic Bayou paranormal romance series. I haven't read it, but I like Harper's books and I'm sure this is fun too.

    amazon.com/Date-Your-Dragon-My

    #BookSale #ParanormalRomance @bookstodon