Then again there's a lot more people in the US than in Canada, so the energy demand is higher in the former. Denmark is also often praised for covering more than half of its elecricity needs with renewables, but they have a population of only 6 million.
"Re-education", that's one way to describe what they do in these camps.
And please stop deflecting with "the West did way worse" arguments. To me, China is just as bad as the West.
It sounds like a great train system they have in China. Too bad you'll be barred from buying tickets if you cross too many pedestrian red lights.
This doesn't make the US better, it just shows it's not black and white.
Didn't foresee this as a consequence to the rise of the antivax conspiracy.
Sure I knew we'd be in trouble to reach herd immunity for the next epidemic/pandemic, but now we have to worry about rabbies in pets too. And what's next? Antivax farmers refusing to vaccinate their cattle?
Maybe your teacher uses vous not as a formal address to one student but rather to speak to the whole class? Or he/she respects some students more than others and uses vous to talk to them, in spite of the age difference.
Yeah I'had been wondering if the ink and glue in those stickers could be bad for the soil if you threw them in your compost. So as a precaution I throw them in the recycling bin.
In French/France I use the formal vous when talking to strangers or customers. Here people generally switch pretty quickly to the informal tu when they get to know each other (at my first day at work with my colleagues and boss).
But I'm quite an oddball since I use the formal address even for kids, which no one does. Also my neighbor was a bit annoyed at me for continuing to say vous to her after having met her one month ago. It can make people feel old.
I also wish health gurus would stop treating autism as the end of the world for parents. That's insulting for autistic people. And being autist myself, I'm wondering if it wouldn't be be better to have autistic kids. Maybe we'd understand each other better you know.
Then again there's a lot more people in the US than in Canada, so the energy demand is higher in the former. Denmark is also often praised for covering more than half of its elecricity needs with renewables, but they have a population of only 6 million.