[-] bossito@lemmy.world 10 points 10 months ago

Austria is not applying Schengen in some of its borders currently, therefore should not have the right of veto. Instead it should be questioned if Austria should be allowed to continue in Schengen considering that it's the number 1 country closing Schengen borders on a regular basis.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 12 points 11 months ago

I think you meant 3706 years old.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

It already is. The doubt is when will it "sell voluntarily" Siberia to China.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

I'll never put invader and invaded on the same plate, ever. I find dangerous to even suggest it. A war is not fair and it's not pretty by definition, Russia started it and can stop it at any moment. Enough said.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

Did I say that? Did I say they're the only ones? I didn't. I said that that extra pollution serves no good purpose. It's for a status symbol and it's not just in the US. Of course it's not the only thing killing the planet but it's the easiest thing to cut, and not even that is being cut.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

This car is a status symbol. It's completely over dimensioned. It pollutes much more, without any added value in transport, harming air quality (people's health) and climate, it diminishes other's views on the road, it diminishes driver's own view of a child crossing the road, it kills much more easily any unfortunate pedestrian. it's a very strong statement of "fuck everyone else but me", damaging this car count as self-defense.

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A boar in Berlin (lemmy.world)

‘When he returned from the forest, everyone applauded him.’ The nudist chased the boar - and a yellow bag containing his laptop - into undergrowth near Berlin’s Teufelssee. Photograph: Adele Landauer/@adelelandauer_lifecoach/AFP/Getty Images 2020

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The images have spread across social media: instead of cars or on sidewalks, there were domestic, inflatable plastic swimming pools. It is an old tradition in the social housing hoods of Lisbon that stems from the old shantytowns, and it has even reached New York.

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submitted 1 year ago by bossito@lemmy.world to c/europe@feddit.de

publicação cruzada de: https://lemmy.world/post/1919859

In the Lithuanian border town of Barvoniskes, a small group of elderly residents gather at a local church for the Sunday service.

As they settle into their seats, a priest dressed in flowing cream-coloured robes takes to the altar to deliver the weekly sermon, followed by a short prayer for peace and security in the region.

The once-bustling Sunday service has become a solemn and sparsely populated event since Moscow launched its assault on Kyiv in February 2022.

Like residents of dozens of eastern Lithuanian towns along the border with Russia’s closest wartime ally Belarus, residents in Barvoniskes trickled out of their hometown over recent months. They fear an imminent Russian invasion of their country as the war on Ukraine rages on.

With the small Baltic state sandwiched between Belarus to the east and the heavily militarised Russian enclave Kaliningrad to the south, Lithuania – a NATO member with a population of nearly three million – has been deeply affected by the Russia-Ukraine war.

Wary that their capital Vilnius sits only 50km (31 miles) from Belarus, Lithuanian authorities beefed up border security with the start of the war and hastened the erection of a border fence initially intended to deter irregular migration into the EU.

But despite ramping up defence funding and border security, Lithuania’s border region has turned into a ghost town with residents deserting their homes in search of work opportunities and security elsewhere.

“It is no longer safe around here,” 68-year-old Rozalija, a Lithuanian housewife living in Barvoniskes, told Al Jazeera as she walked out of the old church with a small handkerchief in her hand.

Like many of the younger generation, Rozalija’s three adult children left Barvoniskes last year.

“We barely see anyone any more – everyone’s left,” she said.

Migration crisis

Formerly part of the Soviet Union, Lithuania’s animosity with Russia extends decades into the past, but its recent security crisis began months before the war on Ukraine.

After the European Union (EU) imposed sanctions on Belarus and its longtime president, Alexander Lukashenko, in April 2021 over what it perceived as fraudulent elections, the EU member state saw a dramatic rise in the number of undocumented migrants crossing over the Belarusian border to enter the EU through Lithuania.

Lithuania responded by accusing Belarus of orchestrating a mass influx of irregular migrants from Africa and the Middle East, which it estimated in August 2021 to be more than 4,000 over the past year.

As an initial response to the situation, Vilnius ordered in July 2021 the building of a 520km (323-mile) fence along its border with Belarus.

With the start of the war on Ukraine, Vilnius approved an exceptional budget of 152 million euros ($169m) to speed up building of the border fence – which it completed in August 2022 – and gave border guards the right to turn away migrants.

While Belarus has denied the accusations, Vilnius demands 120 million euros ($133m) in compensation from its neighbour, declaring in a diplomatic note sent to Minsk in April that the sum aims to cover expenses Lithuania “suffered not only by keeping migrants, but also by strengthening our border control, infrastructure that we did not have”.

According to Moze, a Lithuanian border security guard in Lavoriskes, despite the erection of the fence and installation of inspection cameras, securing the country’s eastern border remains challenging.

Unmanned parts near lakes and forested areas continue to be potential entry points for migrants or a possible attack, he told Al Jazeera.

“The border has become more important since the war – we fear it could be used [by Russia] to attack our country or by Belarus to increase the influx of illegal migrants,” said Moze.

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The Ball (lemmy.world)

New Zealand's Ria Percival and Katie Bowen, in black, compete for the ball with Norway's Caroline Graham Hansen on July 20. New Zealand won the opening match 1-0. It was the country's first-ever win at a Women's World Cup.

David Rowland/Reuters

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

This can easily be worse, saddly.

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[-] bossito@lemmy.world 14 points 1 year ago

How can you hold a country suffering a brutal invasion on such standards. The "persecuted left" were Kremlin puppets. Zelensky's party is a center-party. This is just spreading the Kremlin talking points.

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submitted 1 year ago by bossito@lemmy.world to c/portugal@lemmy.pt

Miguel Álvaro Pereira, de 34 anos, esteve quase 20 dias preso em condições subhumanas na Turquia. A razão? Simplesmente estava na rua a 25 de Junho, dia da (tentativa) de Marcha do Orgulho LGBTI+ em Istambul, quando a polícia turca começou a deter várias pessoas LGBTI+.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago

This was a misstep by the EU. No country should legitimize the stupid Argentinian expansionism, especially countries like Portugal, Spain or France, who also have islands that are closer to third countries.

The Falkland were never Argentinian, it makes as much sense to declare them Argentinian as to declare the Canaries Moroccan or Saint Pierre et Miquelon Canadian.

If being close is reason to annex it, than let the wars begin! Because every territory is close to some other territory.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

Assuming the person lives in a normal town or village, you always have plenty of options. Groceries by post is totally absurd.

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

Attraction for the abyss? Isn't Miami also having a population boom despite of all the signs of floods incoming?

[-] bossito@lemmy.world 13 points 1 year ago

The problem is that that only happens because aviation gets tax perks that trains or buses don't.

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bossito

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