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Изходен канал @clockstackwheels · Post #310 · 21.04

Поймал себя на том, что иногда мне нравится ездить на автомобиле, а иногда нет. Понятно, что чилить на автостраде это прикольно, а пробиваться через городские пробки — нет. Но я осознал, что иногда мне в городе вполне прикольно, а иногда нет. Я даже в пробках иногда стою спокойно. Начал рефлексировать, и понял: мне приятно ездить, когда я никуда не тороплюсь. Когда можно опоздать на 5-10-15 минут, а то и на полчаса. В гости к друзьям обычно можно опоздать. В магазин можно опоздать, если ты не под закрытие едешь. А вот если едешь на какое-то мероприятие ко времени, то опаздывать нельзя, и обычно даже 10 минут неприятны. Дорожная ситуация меняется не слишком предсказуемо. Время на поиск места парковки тоже не определено. Да и постоянное искушение где-то что-то нарушить, чтобы не опоздать. Либо наоборот — выезжаешь на машине сильно заранее, и на месте просто ждёшь полчаса. В общем, машина хорошо решает задачу "Добраться куда-то в место, плохо доступное другими видами транспорта". Но не слишком хорошо решает задачу "Добраться куда-то к заданному моменту с точностью плюс-минус 5 минут". А, например, пешком + метро решает хорошо. Можно, конечно, пофантазировать на тему какого-то предсказания и правильного планирования, но на деле пара забитых перекрёстков вполне могут стоить вам 10 минут, что в контексте городской жизни довольно много. P.S. Скоро у меня отпуск, и будут очень интересные посты про дроны и мототехнику. Хотя погода в Питере как обычно норовит подвести в самое неподходящее время. С таким климатом хоть на автомобиле езди! #life

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Търсене: #irantalks

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🇺🇸🇮🇷IRAN REJECTS SECOND ROUND OF PEACE TALKS AS US NAVAL BLOCKADE CONTINUES 🔹 Iran refuses to join Islamabad talks amid US blockade of Iranian ports — Trump team including JD Vance flew back empty-handed 🚢⛔ 🔹 Major sticking points: Iran wants 5-year nuclear pause, US demands 20-year suspension or complete dismantling program 🧨💥 🔹 Strait of Hormuz blockade continues until '100% complete deal' while Iran calls it ceasefire breach destroying trust 🌊🚨 Middle East powder keg getting more volatile by the day. Diplomacy or war — Trump's red line on nukes means force if talks fail 🔥💣⚖️ #IranTalks#MiddleEast#Diplomacy @america

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5047 · 04.02.2026 г., 01:33

🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩 📰 Trump to Iran: “Bad Things” or a Deal — Pick One 🇮🇱 Israel’s Role: The Hardline Whisperer Israel, for its part, is playing the role everyone expected: the quiet but insistent voice in the ear of the U.S. Witkoff is expected to visit Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Israeli military chief, with the understanding that Israel wants Washington to stick to Trump’s three demands — especially limits on Iran’s missile program and support for Hezbollah, Houthis and other Tehran‑backed groups. After the 2025 war, Israel already hit Iran’s nuclear sites, missile factories, and terror‑group infrastructure. It claims it “debilitated” Tehran’s regional proxies and degraded its nuclear and missile programs. Officials in Tel Aviv are under no illusions that diplomacy will erase Iran’s threat. They just want the U.S. to bake hard constraints into any deal — and be ready to back Israel militarily if the deal fails. Netanyahu put it in his own language in a speech to the Knesset: “Whoever attacks us will face serious consequences.” The message is clear: if the U.S. deal looks soft, the next big wave will be Israeli, not American. ⚔️ War or Theatre? The real decision in Istanbul is not about missiles or enrichment. It’s about who holds the trigger — and who looks like the one who tried to stop the war before the bombs went off. The U.S. wants a deal so it can claim the region didn’t explode. Iran wants a deal so it can say the West didn’t break the country’s back. Israel wants a deal that’s strict enough to justify not going it alone — and flexible enough to let it strike when it decides Washington bent the rules. If the talks fail, the “bad things” Trump promised may start: limited strikes, proxy escalations, an Iranian threat against Israel and U.S. troops in the region. If the talks “succeed,” the real question will be the same as last time: did the West manage the war, or just postpone it? #Iran#US#Trump#nuclear#diplomacy#Israel#missiles#protests#MiddleEast#IranTalks 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5046 · 04.02.2026 г., 01:00

🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩 📰 Trump to Iran: “Bad Things” or a Deal — Pick One The U.S. and Iran are set to resume nuclear talks in Istanbul this Friday, and Donald Trump is already setting the script: “bad things” will happen if there’s no deal. On the other side of the table, the clerical regime in Tehran is quietly hoping that diplomacy works — not just to avoid American bombs, but to avoid the one thing that truly terrifies the leadership: a public that’s no longer afraid to rise up. Reports indicate that U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff will meet Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in an attempt to revive a deal over Iran’s nuclear program before the region slides into a new war. Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and other regional players are expected to join, turning the talks into a high‑stakes diplomatic show — the kind that looks like peace‑making but smells like bargaining with an armed regime. Trump, never one for nuance, has made it simple: a U.S. naval flotilla, including large warships, is heading toward Iran. “If we can work something out, that would be great,” he told reporters in the Oval Office. “If we can’t, probably bad things would happen.” Washington’s official line is that Tehran must accept three conditions: no enrichment of uranium, limits on its ballistic missile program, and an end to support for regional proxies. Iran has rejected all three as violations of its sovereignty, but sources say the regime is actually more worried about its missiles than about enrichment. The clerical rulers see the ballistic program as the core of their deterrence, not just a side project of the nuclear file. 🔥 Iran’s Deeper Fear: The Streets, Not the Bombs The real vulnerability for Tehran is not the U.S. Navy, but the streets inside Iran. Last month, a brutal crackdown on anti‑government protests left the regime deeply shaken. Intelligence and security officials have told Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that the “wall of fear” may have collapsed. Many Iranians, they say, are ready to confront security forces again, and a limited U.S. strike could be the spark that turns unrest into open rebellion. One official put it bluntly: an attack combined with mass demonstrations could lead to a collapse of the ruling system. That’s the real concern at the top of the pyramid — and the reason the regime is quietly signaling that it’s ready to make some concessions on uranium, including handing over several hundred kilograms of enriched material and accepting a zero‑enrichment arrangement under international supervision. The price: U.S. warships and planes move away from Iran’s borders before talks start. “Now the ball is in Trump’s court,” an Iranian official told Reuters. From this angle, Tehran is not just negotiating for sanctions relief. It’s trying to buy political survival — the kind of survival that depends less on centrifuges and more on whether the public stays in the streets or organized in online protest networks. #Iran#US#Trump#nuclear#diplomacy#Israel#missiles#protests#MiddleEast#IranTalks 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸