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Markus Oehler

@markusoehler.bsky.social

New Testament Scholar, History of Early Christianity, University of Vienna, Scientist for Future, Football Player/Fan

988 Followers  |  530 Following  |  241 Posts  |  Joined: 07.10.2023  |  1.8837

Latest posts by markusoehler.bsky.social on Bluesky

Preview
🚂 Sauvons les trains de nuit Paris-Berlin et Paris-Vienne Signez la pétition maintenant !

Rettet die Nachtzüge!

Frankreich will die Förderung streichen und damit die Nightjets Wien–Paris & Berlin–Paris aufs Abstellgleis schicken. Nach nur zwei Jahren!

Das wäre ein Rückschritt für Klima & Mobilität. Wir sagen: Non! 👇

07.10.2025 14:15 — 👍 19    🔁 8    💬 0    📌 0
Video thumbnail

My university has something called the "raft debate" where professors defend their disciplines. I've been chosen to represent the humanities and they asked me to make a promo video. You know what I had to do.

06.10.2025 14:20 — 👍 89    🔁 17    💬 2    📌 8
Bad Bunny: Tiny Desk Concert
YouTube video by NPR Music Bad Bunny: Tiny Desk Concert

Case you missed it and want to have something to look forward to. youtu.be/ouuPSxE1hK4?...

07.10.2025 03:00 — 👍 13    🔁 4    💬 0    📌 0
Programm Programm

Join the #OSfestival2025 Follow-Up from #univie on 13 October!💡 Reflect, connect and gain practical skills for a healthier, more human research culture. Free & open to all, register to join online 👉 osfestival2025.univie.ac.at/programm/#c1...

06.10.2025 11:23 — 👍 2    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0
Preview
Justice and the Parables of Jesus Yung Suk Kim, Korean-American biblical scholar, New Testament, Prolific Writer, Public Speaker, Hiker

Justice and the Parables of Jesus

06.10.2025 11:39 — 👍 0    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0
Figure 4. Plan of the Triodos with indicated changes in Late Antiquity (by author, adapted from Waldner (Reference Waldner2020)).

Figure 4. Plan of the Triodos with indicated changes in Late Antiquity (by author, adapted from Waldner (Reference Waldner2020)).

Archaeologist of early Christianity Irene Selsvold has an interesting new (open access) article on streetscapes at Ephesus. www.cambridge.org/core/journal... I do question the entire process of “Christianization” as a framework but this is an interesting dive into spatial studies in 1 street corner.

06.10.2025 11:43 — 👍 34    🔁 10    💬 0    📌 0
[204.144.212.78] Project MUSE (2025-10-06 13:09 GMT) The University of lowa
BOOK REVIEWS 493
"metaphor squared," defined as "merging or grafting one upon another" several dulled classical metaphors to restore their luster (131). Ennodius, Merobaudes, and Arator provide the evidence. Helen Kaufmann employs "constructed unity" to counter charges that long-form poetry lacked the "organic unity" idealized by Romantic criticism. She focuses on the allegedly disruptive "descriptive digression, which she repositions as examples of variatio that impart unity (115). Andreas Abel analyzes the "Neoplatonists" (246) Macrobius and Symmachus, illustrating the "macrostructural level" unity (253) yielded by Neoplatonic metaphysics and numerology in works that appear "fragmentary and episodic" (245). Joshua Hartman and Jacob Levernier apply computational analysis to the texts contained in Musisque deoque to show that the count of enumerative lines distributed over time corroborates Robert's "hypothesis" that "single-word enumerations"
are
"more common in late antique poetry" (84).
The book's fourth chapter, Frances Foster's essay addressing how the jeweled style was learned, provides a suitable coda. She suggests that Servius's Vergilian commentary imparts a sense of how students learned poetry and reminds us that Ausonius and the professores he commemorated transmitted the rudiments of poetic composition in this mode to their elite students, which in Ausonius's case included the influential senator turned monastic impresario and Christian poet Paulinus of Nola. The long-term impact of this instruction, practiced in schools throughout the late imperial west, canonized the poetics of the jeweled style, ensuring its persistence for generations to come. In short, this volume confirms the security of the pathways Roberts plotted and points to new ones leading in the same direction: a deeper appreciation of late antique poetry. For scholars of early and late ancient Christianity such an …

[204.144.212.78] Project MUSE (2025-10-06 13:09 GMT) The University of lowa BOOK REVIEWS 493 "metaphor squared," defined as "merging or grafting one upon another" several dulled classical metaphors to restore their luster (131). Ennodius, Merobaudes, and Arator provide the evidence. Helen Kaufmann employs "constructed unity" to counter charges that long-form poetry lacked the "organic unity" idealized by Romantic criticism. She focuses on the allegedly disruptive "descriptive digression, which she repositions as examples of variatio that impart unity (115). Andreas Abel analyzes the "Neoplatonists" (246) Macrobius and Symmachus, illustrating the "macrostructural level" unity (253) yielded by Neoplatonic metaphysics and numerology in works that appear "fragmentary and episodic" (245). Joshua Hartman and Jacob Levernier apply computational analysis to the texts contained in Musisque deoque to show that the count of enumerative lines distributed over time corroborates Robert's "hypothesis" that "single-word enumerations" are "more common in late antique poetry" (84). The book's fourth chapter, Frances Foster's essay addressing how the jeweled style was learned, provides a suitable coda. She suggests that Servius's Vergilian commentary imparts a sense of how students learned poetry and reminds us that Ausonius and the professores he commemorated transmitted the rudiments of poetic composition in this mode to their elite students, which in Ausonius's case included the influential senator turned monastic impresario and Christian poet Paulinus of Nola. The long-term impact of this instruction, practiced in schools throughout the late imperial west, canonized the poetics of the jeweled style, ensuring its persistence for generations to come. In short, this volume confirms the security of the pathways Roberts plotted and points to new ones leading in the same direction: a deeper appreciation of late antique poetry. For scholars of early and late ancient Christianity such an …

494 JOURNAL OF EARLY CHRISTIAN STUDIES
torical summaries for students to read. They can even serve as aids to the course design process. However, all anthologies and sourcebooks are prone to criticisms regarding what to include or exclude, what should be emphasized or elided, who should be allowed space, and why. Regardless of these debates, sourcebooks in translation can help reveal the ancient world to new groups of students that may not otherwise be able to read texts in the original Greek, Latin, Coptic, Syriac, or many other ancient languages. As such, the publication of Medicine, Health, and Healing in the Ancient Mediterranean (500 BCE-600 CE): A Sourcebook (hereafter MHHAM) provides many compelling tools for instructors focused on the history of medicine and science in the ancient Mediterranean, particularly in its ability to speak to those entering into the fields of public health, the history of medicine, and the study of Science, Technology, and Society (STS).
The authors of this review used the sourcebook in two variant ways for two different courses. One used it as one of two textbooks assigned in a course focused on ancient medicine, a "Historical Perspectives" general education course taught as a large lecture class through a Classics Department at a state research university.
The other reviewer used portions in a survey course focused on Roman History within a History Department at the same institution. We found that the wide variety of primary sources in accessible translation presented the biggest benefit in both courses. The source material used to study ancient medicine is a major challenge at the undergraduate level, especially in a general education curriculum.
Medical texts, while increasingly available thanks to the work of projects like the Cambridge Galen Translations, are often not available in modern language translation. Even texts that are translated are not reliably available for free online; many Hippocratic texts are only available i…

494 JOURNAL OF EARLY CHRISTIAN STUDIES torical summaries for students to read. They can even serve as aids to the course design process. However, all anthologies and sourcebooks are prone to criticisms regarding what to include or exclude, what should be emphasized or elided, who should be allowed space, and why. Regardless of these debates, sourcebooks in translation can help reveal the ancient world to new groups of students that may not otherwise be able to read texts in the original Greek, Latin, Coptic, Syriac, or many other ancient languages. As such, the publication of Medicine, Health, and Healing in the Ancient Mediterranean (500 BCE-600 CE): A Sourcebook (hereafter MHHAM) provides many compelling tools for instructors focused on the history of medicine and science in the ancient Mediterranean, particularly in its ability to speak to those entering into the fields of public health, the history of medicine, and the study of Science, Technology, and Society (STS). The authors of this review used the sourcebook in two variant ways for two different courses. One used it as one of two textbooks assigned in a course focused on ancient medicine, a "Historical Perspectives" general education course taught as a large lecture class through a Classics Department at a state research university. The other reviewer used portions in a survey course focused on Roman History within a History Department at the same institution. We found that the wide variety of primary sources in accessible translation presented the biggest benefit in both courses. The source material used to study ancient medicine is a major challenge at the undergraduate level, especially in a general education curriculum. Medical texts, while increasingly available thanks to the work of projects like the Cambridge Galen Translations, are often not available in modern language translation. Even texts that are translated are not reliably available for free online; many Hippocratic texts are only available i…

BOOK REVIEWS 495
The MHHAM is useful to both novices and experts of the world of ancient medicine. The variety of excerpted sources makes it a good choice for any instructor whose research background might not be in Greco-Roman medicine.
In addition to the medical writings typically used in ancient medicine courses like case histories, therapeutic texts, and recipe books, MHHAM includes epistles (Fronto and Seneca), philosophy (Plato), ancient science (Theophrastus), historical writings (Thucydides and Procopius), and agronomy (Cato). It can be easy to maintain a narrow focus that leaves students without a robust understanding of the context in which medicine was practiced. The MHHAM provides opportunities for learning about the ancient world more broadly from a variety of perspectives, including patients and thinkers who theorized about the universe, the body, or medical materials. For those who have strong preferences about texts which are not included in this volume, it's simple to supplement with certain time periods, authors, or categories. To help better represent the diversity of thought in the Hippocratic corpus, we added the text of the Anonymous Londinensis papyrus from first-century c.e. Egypt, On the Heart, and Breaths. From Galen's corpus, we added The Best Doctor is also a Philosopher, which provides a kind of professional standard for doctors and allows students to contextualize the lack of credentialing processes in imperial Rome. For those wishing to add even more Galen, P.N. Singer's 2025 Galen anthology makes such modifications easier than
ever.
The organization of the MHHAM is topical rather than chronological, an approach that has both strengths and weaknesses. Two brief introductory chapters cover the rationale for the textbook, the current evidence base, and a brief chronological overview from early Greek natural philosophers to late antiquity.
The rest of the text is organized thematically (e.g., "Diagnosis," "Case Histories,
"Ethics and Prof…

BOOK REVIEWS 495 The MHHAM is useful to both novices and experts of the world of ancient medicine. The variety of excerpted sources makes it a good choice for any instructor whose research background might not be in Greco-Roman medicine. In addition to the medical writings typically used in ancient medicine courses like case histories, therapeutic texts, and recipe books, MHHAM includes epistles (Fronto and Seneca), philosophy (Plato), ancient science (Theophrastus), historical writings (Thucydides and Procopius), and agronomy (Cato). It can be easy to maintain a narrow focus that leaves students without a robust understanding of the context in which medicine was practiced. The MHHAM provides opportunities for learning about the ancient world more broadly from a variety of perspectives, including patients and thinkers who theorized about the universe, the body, or medical materials. For those who have strong preferences about texts which are not included in this volume, it's simple to supplement with certain time periods, authors, or categories. To help better represent the diversity of thought in the Hippocratic corpus, we added the text of the Anonymous Londinensis papyrus from first-century c.e. Egypt, On the Heart, and Breaths. From Galen's corpus, we added The Best Doctor is also a Philosopher, which provides a kind of professional standard for doctors and allows students to contextualize the lack of credentialing processes in imperial Rome. For those wishing to add even more Galen, P.N. Singer's 2025 Galen anthology makes such modifications easier than ever. The organization of the MHHAM is topical rather than chronological, an approach that has both strengths and weaknesses. Two brief introductory chapters cover the rationale for the textbook, the current evidence base, and a brief chronological overview from early Greek natural philosophers to late antiquity. The rest of the text is organized thematically (e.g., "Diagnosis," "Case Histories, "Ethics and Prof…

496 JOURNAL OF EARLY CHRISTIAN STUDIES
Each chapter's introductory synthesis was generally useful for students, especially in elucidating the relationships between the thinkers quoted in the chapter. Pre-med students within our courses engaged with the introduction to the physicians in Chapter Eleven and enjoyed learning about variant types of medical training alongside the Latin and Greek epigraphic evidence for medical professionals that followed. It was revelatory to see young women connecting with Naevia Clara, a freedwoman and physician (306), after previously believing that only Roman men could serve as physicians. At times, the chapter introductions can be reductive in synthesizing the material thereafter. For example, in the section "Women's Illnesses," the authors write,
"Because women were colder,
medical writers reasoned, they lacked the innate heat to digest their food as completely as men..." (133). However, in the first primary text offered in the same chapter, Diseases of Women I, the ancient author describes how women's suffusion with blood makes their bodies warmer than those of men. One of the most difficult things to impart sufficiently to undergraduates studying ancient medical practices is the great diversity and cultural variation of ideas regarding health and the body. Even within the Hippocratic Corpus, instructors must take care to clarify the nuance of the views that fit under the broad "Hippocratic" umbrella. Because students use the introductory synthesis to contextualize the ancient sources in each chapter, that nuance is especially important to include from the start.
The MHHAM effectively presents the material evidence (often with photos of the objects, inscriptions, or medical tools) for ancient medicine alongside textual evidence. The translations are accessible, geographically diverse, and extremely valuable for students without any prior training in ancient languages. It also underscores emerging tactics for recovering the life and…

496 JOURNAL OF EARLY CHRISTIAN STUDIES Each chapter's introductory synthesis was generally useful for students, especially in elucidating the relationships between the thinkers quoted in the chapter. Pre-med students within our courses engaged with the introduction to the physicians in Chapter Eleven and enjoyed learning about variant types of medical training alongside the Latin and Greek epigraphic evidence for medical professionals that followed. It was revelatory to see young women connecting with Naevia Clara, a freedwoman and physician (306), after previously believing that only Roman men could serve as physicians. At times, the chapter introductions can be reductive in synthesizing the material thereafter. For example, in the section "Women's Illnesses," the authors write, "Because women were colder, medical writers reasoned, they lacked the innate heat to digest their food as completely as men..." (133). However, in the first primary text offered in the same chapter, Diseases of Women I, the ancient author describes how women's suffusion with blood makes their bodies warmer than those of men. One of the most difficult things to impart sufficiently to undergraduates studying ancient medical practices is the great diversity and cultural variation of ideas regarding health and the body. Even within the Hippocratic Corpus, instructors must take care to clarify the nuance of the views that fit under the broad "Hippocratic" umbrella. Because students use the introductory synthesis to contextualize the ancient sources in each chapter, that nuance is especially important to include from the start. The MHHAM effectively presents the material evidence (often with photos of the objects, inscriptions, or medical tools) for ancient medicine alongside textual evidence. The translations are accessible, geographically diverse, and extremely valuable for students without any prior training in ancient languages. It also underscores emerging tactics for recovering the life and…

In the new issue of the Journal of Early Christian Studies (JECS), ancient med scholar Katherine Beydler & I have a new review of _Medicine, Health, and Healing in the Ancient Mediterranean 500 BCE–600 CE: A Sourcebook_ by Kristi Upson-Saia, Heidi Marx, & Jared Secord muse.jhu.edu/search?actio...

06.10.2025 12:15 — 👍 23    🔁 4    💬 1    📌 0
Conference on the Ezekiel Papyrus The recording of a recent conference on the famous Chester Beatty Ezekiel Papyrus (Ra 967) has been uploaded here . They have lots of intere...

Conference on the Ezekiel Papyrus oldtestamenttextualcriticism.blogspot.com/2025/09/conf...

05.10.2025 01:00 — 👍 0    🔁 2    💬 0    📌 0
Public Domain Loeb Volumes The public domain Loeb library volumes are now all available here . I think they had all been previously available elsewhere, but this is a ...

Public Domain Loeb Volumes oldtestamenttextualcriticism.blogspot.com/2025/09/publ...

05.10.2025 03:00 — 👍 0    🔁 2    💬 0    📌 0
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Im Ö1 Journal zu Gast Ausführliche Interviews zu aktuellen Anlässen aus den Ö1 Journalen.

Doron Rabinovici Im Journal zu Gast: diese Verbindung von Vernunft und tiefer Menschlichkeit ist das, was die Welt bräuchte. Schöns Gespräch.

04.10.2025 10:43 — 👍 75    🔁 23    💬 4    📌 1
Poster promoting the October 18 protests against the Trump/MAGA coup. Image: a crossed-out crown. Caption: “We have friends everywhere. No Kings. October 18.”

Poster promoting the October 18 protests against the Trump/MAGA coup. Image: a crossed-out crown. Caption: “We have friends everywhere. No Kings. October 18.”

That is more than true, and I long for the day when this madness is over.

04.10.2025 06:30 — 👍 5    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0
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NEW OPEN CALLS 2026-27 | Humanities Fellowships - bsr.ac.uk The British School at Rome is pleased to invite applications for the 2026-2027 academic year for the following award competitions, all with a deadline of 14 November 2025.  References will be due on…

2026-27 Humanities Fellowships, British School at Rome, Italy. Fixed term: 3 or 9 months. "Any aspect of the social, religious, political, & economic cultures of the Italian peninsula", etc. Deadline 14 November. nt4ox.link/bsr-fell26

03.10.2025 08:01 — 👍 2    🔁 3    💬 0    📌 0
Event-Sujet. Rechts oben ist eine Grafik mit der USA-Flagge, daneben eine Landkarte von Europa.

UPV: Österreichischer Universitätsprofessor/innenverband
Universität Wien
Science under Pressure - Europe and Austria in the Wake of Project 2025
Panel Discussion with:
- Christoph Gattringer, President, Austrian Science Fund
- Florian Krammer, Professor of Vaccinologiy (online)
- Carole Mancel-Blanchard, Head of Unit for International Cooperation, EU Commission (online)
- Sebastian Schütze, Rector, University of Vienna
- Barbara Weitgruber, Director General, Austrian BMFWF
- Sibylle Wentker, Director for International Relations, Austrian Academy of Sciences

Program:
Welcome
Eva-Maria Holzleitner, BMFWF (Video)
Barbara Schober, UPV Uni Wien
Video Statement by Florian Krammer
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Ignaz Semmelweise Institute
National and European Science Policy Statements
Barbara Weitgruber, Austrian BMFWF 
Carole Mancel-Blanchard, EU Commission
Outlook
Michael Wagner, UPV Uni Wien

Moderation
Sylvia Kritzinger, UPV Uni Wien

Event-Sujet. Rechts oben ist eine Grafik mit der USA-Flagge, daneben eine Landkarte von Europa. UPV: Österreichischer Universitätsprofessor/innenverband Universität Wien Science under Pressure - Europe and Austria in the Wake of Project 2025 Panel Discussion with: - Christoph Gattringer, President, Austrian Science Fund - Florian Krammer, Professor of Vaccinologiy (online) - Carole Mancel-Blanchard, Head of Unit for International Cooperation, EU Commission (online) - Sebastian Schütze, Rector, University of Vienna - Barbara Weitgruber, Director General, Austrian BMFWF - Sibylle Wentker, Director for International Relations, Austrian Academy of Sciences Program: Welcome Eva-Maria Holzleitner, BMFWF (Video) Barbara Schober, UPV Uni Wien Video Statement by Florian Krammer Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Ignaz Semmelweise Institute National and European Science Policy Statements Barbara Weitgruber, Austrian BMFWF Carole Mancel-Blanchard, EU Commission Outlook Michael Wagner, UPV Uni Wien Moderation Sylvia Kritzinger, UPV Uni Wien

📢 Panel Discussion "Science under Pressure – Europe and Austria in the Wake of Project 2025" at #univie
🗓️ Tuesday, 14 October 2025, 18:00 - 20:00 at Kleiner Festsaal, Universitätsring 1, 1010 Vienna
Register online until 7 October 👉 www.upv.ac.at/registration...

03.10.2025 10:56 — 👍 8    🔁 5    💬 0    📌 0
ie Grafik des VCÖ zeigt die Entwicklung der Treibhausgasemissinen des Flugverkehrs in Österreich, jeweils im 1. Halbjahr 2019 bis 2025.   
1. Halbjahr 2025	1,50 Millionen Tonnen Treibhausgase
1. Halbjahr 2024	1,38
1. Halbjahr 2023	1,25
1. Halbjahr 2022	0,90
1.Halbjahr  2021	0,37
1. Halbjahr 2020	0,62
1. Halbjahr 2019 	1,46
Quelle: BMWET, BMK, UBA, VCÖ 2025

ie Grafik des VCÖ zeigt die Entwicklung der Treibhausgasemissinen des Flugverkehrs in Österreich, jeweils im 1. Halbjahr 2019 bis 2025. 1. Halbjahr 2025 1,50 Millionen Tonnen Treibhausgase 1. Halbjahr 2024 1,38 1. Halbjahr 2023 1,25 1. Halbjahr 2022 0,90 1.Halbjahr 2021 0,37 1. Halbjahr 2020 0,62 1. Halbjahr 2019 1,46 Quelle: BMWET, BMK, UBA, VCÖ 2025

#badnews Die klimaschädlichen Emissionen des Flugverkehrs in Österreich sind auf neuen Halbjahres-Höchstwert gestiegen. Fehlende #Kerosinsteuer förderte den Flugverkehr im 1. Halbjahr mit rund 290 Millionen Euro. Die EU braucht eine Kerosinsteuer und mehr #Bahn. vcoe.at/presse/press... 1/2

03.10.2025 05:38 — 👍 34    🔁 15    💬 2    📌 1
Post image Post image

Was die AUA auf ihre Flugzeuge schreibt und wie aktuell tatsächlich aussieht…. Mehr hier: orf.at/stories/3407...

03.10.2025 06:06 — 👍 140    🔁 38    💬 12    📌 2
Preview
Emissionen im Flugverkehr in Österreich auf neuem Höchstwert Der Verkehrsclub Österreich macht die fehlende Kerosinsteuer für den Anstieg verantwortlich

Und das alles steuerfrei!

Emissionen im Flugverkehr in Österreich auf neuem Höchstwert
www.derstandard.at/story/300000...

03.10.2025 05:03 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
Preview
Texas Megachurch Pastor Pleads Guilty to Child Sex Abuse Robert Morris, the founder of Gateway Church, which has one of the nation’s largest congregations, admitted to sexually abusing a child in the 1980s.

Robert Morris, the founder of a Texas megachurch with one of the nation’s largest congregations, pleaded guilty on Thursday to sexually abusing a girl in the 1980s, according to court documents.

03.10.2025 02:00 — 👍 334    🔁 113    💬 64    📌 38
Front cover of The Tablet, 4th October 2025.

Front cover of The Tablet, 4th October 2025.

Leading article in the latest edition of The Tablet, 'Welcome, brother Grief' by our Duns Scotus Chair in Franciscan Studies, Dr. William Crozier. A profoundly moving account of wrestling with grief, and the model of St Francis of Assisi amidst the pain.

www.thetablet.co.uk/features/wel...

02.10.2025 16:30 — 👍 3    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0

Das Telefon klingelt, TU-Professor Getzner ist dran. Er hat das Interview mit Verkehrsminister Peter Hanke (SPÖ) im STANDARD über den Lobautunnel gelesen.

Getzner ist verärgert. Er sagt: "Hanke argumentiert faktenfremd". Ein Interview zum Interview.

www.derstandard.at/story/300000...

02.10.2025 17:44 — 👍 130    🔁 54    💬 4    📌 8
For our scientists
YouTube video by Elle Cordova For our scientists

Beautiful.

💚 @ellecordova.bsky.social

youtube.com/shorts/AYm9w...

02.10.2025 15:48 — 👍 9    🔁 4    💬 1    📌 0
Preview
Die Tragödie der amerikanischen Demokratie Die USA versinken in atemberaubender Rasanz in die Tyrannei. Dieses Verhängnis sollte uns eine Warnung sein.

Die Tragödie der amerikanischen Demokratie.

Share, verbreite, unterstütze meine Steady-Site. Vielen Dank!

steady.page/de/vernunft-...

02.10.2025 10:14 — 👍 66    🔁 24    💬 2    📌 9
Post image

Über die Schwierigkeit, Israel und den Gaza-Krieg zu diskutieren. Samt einem zweckdienlichen Veranstaltungshinweis.
Seuchenkolumne 1696
buff.ly/uWSRexW

02.10.2025 04:00 — 👍 25    🔁 7    💬 5    📌 0

There's artificial intelligence, and there's actual intelligence. 🎯

01.10.2025 15:35 — 👍 23    🔁 6    💬 0    📌 0

Heute gibt es ein Musikhighlight: Svavar Knutur im Haus der Musik @svavarknutur.com

01.10.2025 17:31 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
Video thumbnail

(solemnly) You've had mail.

30.09.2025 19:43 — 👍 6901    🔁 2887    💬 114    📌 408
Post image

Gratulation an Maja Sandu & die demokratischen Kräfte in Moldau zum klaren Wahlsieg – trotz schwierigster Bedingungen, hybrider Angriffe aus Russland & einem politischen Mitbewerber, der sich als Putins Marionette erwiesen hat. 1/2

29.09.2025 12:36 — 👍 66    🔁 14    💬 1    📌 0
Video thumbnail

ICE attempted
and failed to disappear a food delivery guy.
It needed to be scored.

29.09.2025 03:10 — 👍 27347    🔁 6969    💬 2382    📌 1911
Preview
ÖBB-Nachtzug zwischen Wien und Paris wird eingestellt Der Nightjet nach Paris fährt nur noch bis Mitte Dezember. Frankreich hat die Finanzhilfen für die Verbindung gestrichen. Die Strecke nach Brüssel bleibt

Rückschritt: Künftig kein #Nachtzug zwischen #Wien und #Paris. Höchste Zeit, die Steuerbefreiung von Flugtreibstoff EU-weit zu beenden und die Einnahmen aus der #Kerosinsteuer für mehr internationale Bahnverbindungen zu verwenden. Europa braucht mehr #Bahn! www.derstandard.at/story/300000...

29.09.2025 15:43 — 👍 85    🔁 22    💬 3    📌 3
Energy Dept. adds ‘climate change’ and ‘emissions’ to banned words list
It is the latest in a series of Trump administration efforts to dispute, silence or downplay climate change.

Energy Dept. adds ‘climate change’ and ‘emissions’ to banned words list It is the latest in a series of Trump administration efforts to dispute, silence or downplay climate change.

Not April 1st, not @theonion.com. Just another Monday in Trump land

www.politico.com/news/2025/09...

30.09.2025 01:06 — 👍 64    🔁 24    💬 0    📌 1
Preview
Welche Fakten gegen den Lobautunnel sprechen Die Regierung will die S1-Umfahrung nun umsetzen, obwohl das Projekt als veraltet gilt und für mehr Verkehr sorgt, statt zu entlasten, wie Wissenschafter betonen

Autoverkehr mit Autobahnen reduzieren ist wie abnehmen mit Schnitzel, Schmalzbrot und Sachertorte. „Es gibt keine neue Straße,die das Verkehrssystem vom Straßenverkehr entlastet", betont Getzner „Das Gegenteil ist der Fall, jede neue Straße zieht neuen Verkehr an." www.derstandard.de/story/300000...

26.09.2025 16:04 — 👍 88    🔁 39    💬 0    📌 1

@markusoehler is following 20 prominent accounts