Vietnam waives visas for citizens from 13 countries: U.K., Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Russia, RoK, Spain, Sweden, Belarus.
Starting from March 15, 2022 to March 14, 2025.
MAJOR TW FOR SUICIDE-- My friend who was an astrophysics major killed himself back in October, and it's kinda made me hate astrophysics and physics in general since then (despite recently graduating in physics this May), but seeing you on here, still alive and kicking and being a cool space mom, it makes me kinda happy, you know? Like wow, maybe physics isn't so bad, maybe space can be cool again, maybe my friend is at peace with the stars...
It’s a stressful major but studying it definitely gives a lot of people peace in a way? Like it makes you realize the vastness of everything and how the universe is so much more than just us and idk. It can be very humbling and it gives some people this peace of mind in a way that’s comforting, hopefully it was for your friend. Idk what their beliefs are spiritually but hopefully it gave them some peace and continues to do so wherever they may be now
(cont. from the TW SUICDE message) you're absolutely right, it really does. Hell, he encouraged me to pursue it cuz he felt the same way (funnily enough, you're his age). But now he's gone... oh well. Thank you for your kind words, dude. I used to feel the way you do, and maybe I can be on the way to being in awe of the vastness of everything once again. All I can hope is to fall in love with a subject I had dedicated myself to again... thanks for your attention, I'll leave ya alone now~!
Thanks for the message and I hope one day you can find something to dedicate your time and passion to like that once again <3
Mapmakers often put secrets in their maps as copyright traps, to make sure no one copies their maps. For example, some map makers put fake streets in maps, sometimes fake features. If they see a map that has that street, they know it was copied from them.
Similarly, in 2005, the New Oxford American Dictionary published a new word: Esquivalience, meaning “Willful avoidance of one’s official responsibilities”. It was a made up word, a copyright trap to make sure no other dictionaries copied them. If anyone copied their dictionary, the stealer wouldn’t be able to come up with a source except for the New Oxford. (Dictionary.com fell for this trap)
Another example of a copyright trap was when the author of The Trivia Encyclopedia put a false fact in his book, because he was certain that the makers of the game Trivial Pursuit were taking his facts for the game. (The false fact was that “TV detective Columbo’s first name was Phillip” when the show never specified his name. Sure enough, the ‘fact’ showed up in Trivial Pursuit.
An Exotic Dancer Demonstrates That Her Underwear Was Too Large To Have Exposed Herself, After Undercover Police Officers Arrested Her In Florida
Dorothy Counts – The First Black Girl To Attend An All-White School In The United States – Being Teased And Taunted By Her White Male Peers At Charlotte’s Harry Harding High School, 1957
Austrian Boy Receives New Shoes During WWII
Jewish Prisoners After Being Liberated From A Death Train, 1945
The Graves Of A Catholic Woman And Her Protestant Husband, Holland, 1888
A Lone Man Refusing To Do The Nazi Salute, 1936
Job Hunting In 1930’s
German Soldiers React To Footage Of Concentration Camps, 1945
Residents Of West Berlin Show Children To Their Grandparents Who Reside On The Eastern Side, 1961
Acrobats Balance On Top Of The Empire State Building, 1934
Mafia Boss Joe Masseria Lays Dead On A Brooklyn Restaurant Floor Holding The Ace Of Spades, 1931
Lesbian Couple At Le Monocle, Paris, 1932
The Most Beautiful Suicide – Evelyn Mchale Leapt To Her Death From The Empire State Building, 1947
The Remains Of The Astronaut Vladimir Komarov, A Man Who Fell From Space, 1967
Race Organizers Attempt To Stop Kathrine Switzer From Competing In The Boston Marathon. She Became The First Woman To Finish The Race, 1967
Harold Whittles Hearing Sound For The First Time, 1974
Nikola Tesla Sitting In His Laboratory With His “Magnifying Transmitter”