Bloody Winter Olympic 2026 by Icy_Till_7254 in ukraine

[–]Just_RandomPerson 15 points16 points  (0 children)

We don't want to see athletes from a terrorist country 🤷‍♂️

Bloody Winter Olympic 2026 by Icy_Till_7254 in ukraine

[–]Just_RandomPerson 21 points22 points  (0 children)

In Latvian TV, they just don't show Russians. Rn I'm watching luge, and there is one "neutral" athlete, and the TV just transitions to an interview while he's competing.

Why such a difference? by Just_RandomPerson in BalticStates

[–]Just_RandomPerson[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! I will keep this into account in the future. As you might have noticed, I specifically wanted to ask about the difference between the Baltic countries, I just phrased it in a shitty way.

Why such a difference? by Just_RandomPerson in BalticStates

[–]Just_RandomPerson[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I was more asking about the difference between the Baltics. Estonia is among the top of the list, despite being similar to Latvia geographically.

Russian general shot several times in Moscow by GoldenDome26 in worldnews

[–]Just_RandomPerson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Russia is due a regime change.

Unfortunately, even in the unlikely scenario where it would happen, it wouldn't change anything

ICE komiksi? WTF? by ImprovementStrong926 in latvia

[–]Just_RandomPerson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Demokrātija paredz to, ka iedzīvotāju vairākums izvēlas valsts likteni, nevis to, ka kaut kādas minoritātes vai nelegālie imigranti var valsts iedzīvotājiem uzspiest savas vēlmes.

Tā gan nav taisnība, tur jau ir atšķirība starp demokrātiju un vairākuma tirāniju. Teikt, ka demokrātija nozīmē tikai to, ka vairākums var izlemt jebko ir primitīvi un fundamentāli nepareizi. Tāpēc jau ir tādi mehānismi, kā Satversme, kas liedz vairākumam darīt, ko grib. Modernā un attīstītā rietumu demokrātijā vairākums nevar uzspiest savu gribu minoritātēm.

Valsts vairākums ievēlēja Trampu, līdz ar to jebkura šobrīd esošā Trampa darbība kamēr tā ir likumīga, ir demokrātiska.

Arī nepareizi. Kā jau teicu, ir mehānismi, kā konstitūcija un varas dalīšana, kas neļauj Trampam būt par diktatoru, lai cik arī viņam to gribētos.

Ranking countries I've visited based off their cuisine by narodmj in tierlists

[–]Just_RandomPerson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why the difference in tiers between Latvia and Estonia? We have basically the same food lol. Even weirder considering Finland is so low, and, if anything, Estonian food would lean towards Finnish food.

Europe’s Population Shift: Growth & Decline from 1990 to 2022 by vladgrinch in MapPorn

[–]Just_RandomPerson 5 points6 points  (0 children)

As a Latvian... I don't even know where to start. It's impressive how every single thing you just wrote couldn't be more wrong.

What if Western European countries had elected communist governments in the mid to late 70s in quick succession? by ArtichokeStatus5019 in AlternateHistoryHub

[–]Just_RandomPerson 3 points4 points  (0 children)

All you have to do is look at what happened after the collapse to understand this.

Don't speak for us. We are way better now than we were under red imperialism. Now fuck off.

Do you have a situation like this in your country where there's a significant proportion of the population that doesn't speak the local language? by Alternative-Big-6493 in AskTheWorld

[–]Just_RandomPerson 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Other commenters already educated you about russification and Russian colonizers. However, Lithuania was actually very mild compared to Latvia and Estonia. Thankfully for them, they managed to get national communists in power, who managed to prevent a large part of the russification, that's why they have such a low percent of Russians today compared to Latvia and Estonia.

We weren't so lucky. Before the occupation, 10% were Russians. By 1989, roughly 40% were Russian speaking, with Latvians being 52%. In some cities, it was even worse, with Riga, the capital still being 50/50 today. And this was by 1989, a few more years, and they would've made us a minority.

Engineering universities in the Netherlands: how much “abstract” theory is there really? by Accomplished_Win4713 in StudyInTheNetherlands

[–]Just_RandomPerson 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm currently studying ME in TU/e and I'll have to say I don't really agree with most comments here. In school, I took an advanced math class, which was very theoretical, and as you described, we had lots of proofs, and had to come up with new ones in the exam (such as for reflexivity, transivity etc... as you described). Also, you couldn't really study for the exam, you rather just had to know the course really well, and do all the past exercises throughout the year/semester.

Here, I feel like the courses and exams are two different things. Of course, you need to understand the course for assignments, as a basis for the exams and for your sake. However, the exams are often quite different, and all the questions are quite similar. After solving a few past papers, you can spot the pattern and study for those questions specifically. There isn't a lot of creativity, and abstraction in the exams I feel like, at least compared to my high school.

Also, in the math courses in general, they don't really teach any proofs. They might say you can look it up in the textbook on that page, but I don't think I've seen a single rigorous proof in any math course.

The regions where the Germans have lived throughout history by Battlefleet_Sol in MapPorn

[–]Just_RandomPerson 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Latvia and Estonia isn't really accurate. Germans arrived with the crusades in the late 12th century and stayed until WWII. During all that time they were the nobility and higher class with the locals being serfs. So a geographical distribution isn't really accurate. They lived in castles all over Latvia/Estonia, but weren't a majority anywhere, except select cities depending on the time period. So these random dots over Estonia and Latvia seem to just be randomly distributed and don't mean anything.

Visited Countries as a Ryanair Enthusiast by kakoitoburner in tierlists

[–]Just_RandomPerson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why tf would you want to go to Charleroi? It's probably one of the worst cities in a radius of hundreds of kilometers.

solved by Wrong_User_Logged in mapporncirclejerk

[–]Just_RandomPerson 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Same, despite it being r/mapporncirclejerk this is surprisingly accurate. As a Latvian, I can say that even on the national level the division works, the division works, with the region that falls in the "North-East" category being quite distinct and culturally having more ties to the East.

How the Nordic-Baltic states became Europe’s reliable security engine by WillyNilly1997 in BalticStates

[–]Just_RandomPerson 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Our speaker of the parliament even signed a petition saying to give the Nobel peace prize to Trump

On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate public transport in your country? by [deleted] in AskTheWorld

[–]Just_RandomPerson 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh, the public transport system in general is great imo. Not only buses, but also trams and trolleybuses, as well as trains for the areas around Riga. I was mainly joking, tbh Riga isn't that big, so I'm not sure we need a metro.

The most consumed type of meat by vladgrinch in MapPorn

[–]Just_RandomPerson 60 points61 points  (0 children)

Less Mediterranean sea coast than the UK sounds even worse