- Little me waddled around the house when there was a party. Parents didn't look for like a minute and I found empty beer bottles and tried the last drops in them. Turns out it doesn't take a lot of beer to get a 2 year old drunk. Slept very well afterwards.
Mendas
I'm curious when other countries start getting American asylum seekers since they are in danger of human rights violations in the USA.
You could try a Persona Game (or the new Metaphor) These games are build on your relationships with the other characters. They think of you, they contact you often on their own because they want to do something with you. You just have to like to read. Those things are half JRPG, half Visual Novel.
I case of the dystopian stories like CP2077 or Shadowrun, the "coziness" comes from that the companies and the state dont care about the individual at all, in a way that they dont even try to control you directly anymore and that can be kind of freeing. If no one cares anymore if you squat in some abandoned building you are free to live your life there as you want.
I can imagine that even this feels freeing compared to nowadays where you are, as long as you dont fit in, you get actively and very directly antagonised by systems and people.
And i find it also terribly sad that i feel that way.
Yeah if i remember correctly you are right. But I can add that at 5 the gas chambers are basically gone, but right behind them, the big grey area we see, is a big memorial that has been build afterwards.
Also i believe the building on the left was some kind of workcamp where a few prisoners were "allowed" to help kill their fellow prisoners in some way.
Source: Was there 2020 right before the pandemic. One day Ausschwitz 1, one day Ausschwitz 2. Harrowing experience, but I can still only recommend visiting both.
No, this is Ausschwitz 2. You can see that most of the buildings are destroyed. Also you can make out the traintracks and the entry house where the famous photo was made. Some of the Barracks are still standing and are kept in the historical state as a museum and a memorial