I don’t understand the sarcasm, but each to their own I guess.
How is this helping children who are being actively slaughtered for being the wrong ethnicity? It’s like tens of thousands of Palestinian children dead in this war and I’m unsure how this technology helps them…
It doesn’t.
But it might eventually help some Palestinian children who are wounded or injured.
How about we don’t let them get to that point?
I think that is something we would all prefer.
These doctors started working on the technology inspired by human accident (although entirely predictable) in Beirut, I am sure they would prefer that they did not feel that they have to.
I really don’t think trying to help people who have been injured does any harm to any efforts to end the attacks.
I was picturing something like what we learned in back-country medicine, but this is still pretty advanced stuff if you are not an orthopedist.
https://www.imperial.ac.uk/a-z-research/external-fixator/
What we used involved 2 sticks and a t-shirt! (But was intended for very short term use.)
Sorry. I was out line. Apologies.
Think nothing of it, no harm done.
A review of a volunteer made flashlight for ukrainian soldiers/ambulance corp workers made with 3d printing, off the shelf parts from vapes and a healthy dose of patriotism (on the right)
https://www.reddit.com/r/flashlight/comments/1g3dwqr/flashlight_of_the_ukrainian_military/
x2 1939 Maxims
If the Logan Act was enforced with half the zeal and 100x the good faith of the Russian equivalent, we’d have a surplus of high-profile MAGAt officials as hostages to trade with Putin.
Re: the first story, the group’s nickname is a nice call-out to the days when the Russians fought fascism instead of indulging in it.