honeynut
yeah, It was on the relationship_advice sub titled "My (33F) husband's (35M) career in academic philosophy is ruining our marriage"
common osprey W
Recently me and my husband got in a huge fight because he was trying to demonstrate an example of the Hegelian concept of the "unity of opposites" (whatever that means) by claiming that the top and bottom bagels are opposite but also identical. I told him this is just wrong and that they are not "identical" in any meaningful sense (chirality is a basic concept in geometry/group theory). He kept stacking the bagels together and tried to show how they were "identical" and kept failing (because they're not) and then got angry and stormed out of the house. I haven't seen him since (this was about a day ago) and texted him and haven't heard back.
OP is legitimately a hexbear power replier along with awwyisss or whatever tf.
is this...?
21 > 1.6
If you're only looking at the "immediate action" options it's 4.5% independence vs 1.6% unification
Grouping the camps together, the graph shows 25% vs 8% currently while not too long ago in 2018 it was 20% vs 16%. It's a contentious issue, and opinions wax and wane depending on the diplomatic situation with the only consistency being that the majority of people favor maintaining the status quo. However, I think as more of the older generations die off, much like in South Korea, identification with a cross-border national project will likely diminish.
The DPP (pro-Independence party) polling seems to differ a bit from National Chengchi University's yearly poll where "maintain status quo indefinitely/decide later" were the two most popular selections.
"this is good for the Dinar"
I'm telling myself I'm gonna sleep soon but that's never how it works out.
sigh