Professional lurker, part-time poster

  • 18 Posts
  • 29 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: October 16th, 2022

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  • I figured it out! I just needed to use break.

    num = []
    Ms = []
    def Fmmin(va):
        while va == 0:
            for n in range(2, number):
                if number % n == 0:
                    va = n
                    break
                if n == number - 1 and number - 1 % n != 0:
                    va = '0'
        return va
    def Fmmax(va):
        while va == 0:
            for n in range(number-1, 1, -1):
                if number % n == 0:
                    va = n
                    break
                if n == 2 and number % n != 0:
                    va = '0'
        return va
    
    for f in range(1,10000000):
        number = 452021 + f
        mmin = 0
        mmax = 0
        mmin = Fmmin(mmin)
        mmax = Fmmax(mmax)
        if int(mmax) > 0 and int(mmin) > 0:
            M = mmax + mmin
            if M % 7 == 3:
                num.append(number)
                Ms.append(M)
        if len(num) >= 5:
            break
    print(Ms)
    print(num)
    






















  • Theres not as much support for USSR or even socialism as you would like to believe. Of course people are not antagonizing it as much as western countries do, but you should also take into account that Russia uses Soviet imagery exclusively as an aesthetic selling point and does not attribute its successes to socialism but rather to the “spirit of the russian people”. Experiences of older people are often dismissed as “grass was greener in my youth” and young people are very much fed distilled anti-soviet propaganda. The great problem with bringing back socialism to Russia lies with general political apathy of the people, getting through it would require rapid and substantial changes of the living standarts, be it good or bad. Best hope lies with China influencing Russian state, otherwise I see no “stumbling into socialism” on Russia’s part without some great disaster to kick off radicalization.






  • The biggest rift in Russia is caused by highly divided support for the war and for further mobilization. Majority of people stopped having positive outlook on the west and are in favour of self-sufficiency over Russia’s government seeking substitutions from other countries, which causes some displeasure. General opinion of Putin is about neutral-negative, there is not much respect for him but he is seen as necessary. Overall the government is perceived as incompetent/corrupt (even before the war) due to it not fulfilling promises and shitty budget allocation on anything that is not a big city, and there is a desire for a stronger leader against the west, which could either be good if the communists manage to exploit that after Putin leaves or extremely bad, because a lot of hardliners aim for that role. Currently Putin is in a fairly stable position since dislike of the western countries vastly overshadows dislike for Putin. I don’t see the cracks that would lead to him getting deposed yet (Its gonna have to be more than general dissatisfaction) so the best thing is to continue to observe how things play out.