@Tomorrow_Farewell
@hexbear.netI remember when some western 'anarchist' told me how the PRC shouldn't be allowed to lead in space breakthroughs because there were some accidents in the 90s, but also that none of NATO states should be technologically blockaded because research should be shared (as well as that NATO supposedly doesn't try to blockade anybody from scientific and technological advancement).
Now, I need to actually properly set up the OS that I installed and try both KDE and GNOME.
The official Russian stats on the matter are quite misleading/are a lie. There are people who are factually not employed and who are de jure not counted as unemployed.
Basis for the claim: I was among such people until recently. Registering as de jure unemployed would have both been much more hassle than it would be worth, and it would have forced me to prove that I was incapable of most of the offered work. No actual benefit of registering apart from a pittance.
The Soviet Union and Russia use numbers as designation for many of its projects under development
Which clandestine Soviet projects used the naming convention 'Project [n]', where n is some number?
If you are trying to imply that other states do not use numbers in the naming conventions of their projects in general, then this is silly and you can look for all your M1s, Types, etc. all across the globe.
Here’s an example of Soviet ship project numbers that follows this convention
Notably, not a naming convention for clandestine projects, but for military engineering ones.
This extends beyond military projects though. In the USSR/Russia, research institutes are designated by number
None of those names follow the naming convention of 'Project [n]'.
Also, those are not research institutes you are linking to - those are constructor bureaus.
as well as hospitals and schools etc. You don’t go to Libertyville High School, instead in Russia you go to “School 57” (Школа № 57)
As an aside, this naming happens locally, and it actually doesn't quite apply to all (primary and secondary level) schools.
Also, I don't quite see what the relation is. I'm pretty sure that I can find similar naming conventions used for schools elsewhere.
China also largely follows the same numbering conventions for military projects, institutions, hospitals and schools
Which makes the soft-implication that it's just the USSR+Russia that use that naming convention more silly.