That's cheating! Why would I want anything easier :)
I don't know. I was making rice today and the moment I left kitchen (for a nano second, of course) it burned.
Here's my today's rice recipe:
- put some oil in the pot
- put a cup of rice and set the heat to max
- add salt, a clove of garlic and a couple of cardamom seeds
- mix until rice changes colour
- think how well you have everything under control
- blink (I swear the new avatar has nothing to do with it!), take the burnt rice off the stove and throw it away
- realise I forgot my medication
- take another pot and repeat the steps, but avoid blinking
- when drive changed colour, add 1.5 cups of water
- reduce the heat and cover the pot
- realise that the pot is too small
- pour everything into a bigger pot
- add heat
- blink and realise the water is boiling out
- move it from the heat, reduce the heat
- wait
- wait some more
- move the pot back but turn the heat off
- wait 15 minutes
- rice is done!
- realise it's not salted but take the win and feed your child
Yey, we're society's outmost sensory system. I mean we do get to see the world for what it is. And then have the honour to tell folks on the inside how is it out there.
The worst was when it was stolen, while I was travelling, 3 hours before it was time to leave for the airport. Obviously my IDs, tickets, money, were all there.
Lol. Read the title and started giggling. Family asks why I giggle, I tell them and they start laughing.
So yes. After losing everything, including the backpack I always have it with me. It's a hard rule - the moment I'm far from it, I need something from it.
The contents are pretty much everything I might need during an average day. Keys, vallet, medicines, a notebook and a pen, bandages, headphones, deodorant.
They started spending that money after starting the war, so it's use is related to the war in question. Thus, when they will run out, whatever they were paying for (war related) will stop getting money.
It might not be a direct financing of the battlefield activities, but while the victory will be in the battlefield, the biggest chunk of the battle actually happens in preparation and logistics.
In other words, I'm hopeful that this will have a major impact on the invader's ability to cause harm.
It would be 9 years, if only one linear factor was at play.
I believe it's multiple factors, though.
One is that every plane taken out had its share of "work", which is now distributed across the remaining ones. Which means they get worn out a little faster. Similar to how they have to cannibalise parts from one civilian aircraft to repair another.
Then I'm going they cannot maintain the usual production speed because if the sanctions. Add to that an increased need to repair since the plains are more heavily used. And I'd guess that repairs are fine at the same facility that produces them, this also reducing production speed.
In other words, I think it's about snowballing and at this rate it could be way less than nine years.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukhoi_Su-34
Since 2006 they've built 150 units. That's 8 units a year. Some were sold, some got lost.
As of 20 May 2023, there have been 20 visually confirmed cases of Su-34s being lost, damaged or abandoned by Russian forces since the start of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. 23 now, apparently.
At their price, with sanctions, with wear of the remaining ones, at this rate, they might not have any left very soon.
There are other ways of passive or active resistance that is not a direct confrontation.
In the end, it's still a choice, I'm afraid.
Forced or obeying orders? There's a difference, you know.
About 50% of what they had at the beginning two years ago.
Ceiling, duh.