Lucas Rubio studies the DPRK and in recent years he has been spreading knowledge about it, he even went on big podcasts to talk about the country and he is bothering a lot of different people, liberals, conservatives, ancaps, pretty much all of them are constantly coping really hard anytime he gets a lil bit of views

Ngl I really want the communist movement here to grow a lot and grow fast so we can have more pro-capitalist tears, it’s extremelly entertaining

  • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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    1 year ago

    This is, by the way, a very nice looking home, though it could use one or two more window on the side and the upper edge of the balcony is too deep, it will block the sun to the room.

    I like the third one though, i would love to live in it.

    • @cfgaussian
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      1 year ago

      I think that’s partly a matter of taste and partly a question of local climate. In warmer parts of the world you want to have homes that are less open to direct sunlight, in which case a deep balcony that provides shade, and a lack of extra windows make sense. You see this kind of stuff taken in to account when you look at traditional architecture in a lot of countries in the middle east and Africa. It’s all part of constructing houses with natural forms of temperature control rather than wasting energy on air conditioning (or on the other side of the spectrum heating in colder climates). Admittedly Korea has a temperate climate so that might not have been the reason in this case.