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General Discussion

A place to talk about whatever you want

37.9k Topics 342.7k Posts
  • What changed?

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    HoraceH
    It is difficult to overestimate how dumb the masses are, when it comes to how they formulate their political opinions. Narratives that bind tribes together are almost everything.
  • I didn’t appreciate Legos enough

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    bachophileB
    [image: 1727609358072-img_5410.jpeg]
  • The Horseman

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    Aqua LetiferA
    @Jolly said in The Horseman: Well, he was a poet... Yeah, I figured it was appropriate.
  • Alcohol Consumption by State

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    MikM
    A lot of LDS folks in LV.
  • Packing Peanuts, Penn and Teller

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    HoraceH
    I don't know. The assistant had an angle to look into the box while the peanut was alone on the sheet at 3:45. Then, it doesn't seem simple to retrieve the peanut after jumping onto the sheet? That part was unexplained. I wouldn't be too surprised if the explanation was just another deception.
  • The local grocery store is running some specials for Rosh Hashanah!

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    MikM
    Then I'm an honorary Italian. And French too. Maybe a little Thai.
  • AquaFence - keeps Aqua out

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  • SPaceX Launch Now!

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  • Secret Service under fire

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    George KG
    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1838967620931891568.html?utm_campaign=topunroll
  • Why covid vax gives such short term immunity

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  • Death of a Dealer

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    JollyJ
    It's pretty observant...It's well-known that intellectuals tend to be liberals. It should come as no surprise that many become ardent Leftists, with many Marxist beliefs. In this column, it's shown how one of the primary purveyors of socialistic silliness in academe plied his trade to influence generations of college professors with a soothing balm of Marxist thought.
  • 747,000

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  • Lockdowns? Meh. I'm going to a sex party!

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    JollyJ
    I think the government's trust wad on public health is definitely shot for at least a generation.
  • The latest internet rumor...

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    JollyJ
    Surface to Air Missiles?
  • Adulting is hard

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    89th8
    Ha. At least he's trying. When I was a bachelor I pretty much made hot dogs or brought home take-out, each night. Speaking of which, how often do you use the cleaning function of your oven? I think I've done it once in like 20 years.
  • Meta stored 600 million Facebook and Instagram passwords in plain text.

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  • Another one bites the dust?

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    George KG
    Yah, but was he austere? A scholar? [image: 1727487977300-gyhoijbw0aajivm.jpeg]
  • Made In The USA

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    George KG
    Let's ask those same economists if Harris's plan to "lower prices" will work.
  • Florida Surgeon Tuesday

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    George KG
    License suspended. https://lawandcrime.com/lawsuit/surgeon-who-fired-a-stapling-device-blindly-into-patient-and-removed-the-wrong-organ-killing-him-loses-license/ After multiple wrong-site surgeries that resulted in permanent harm or death — including a procedure in which a patient’s liver was removed instead of his spleen — a surgeon’s license has been suspended in Florida. The Sunshine State’s Department of Health and Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo ordered an emergency suspension of Dr. Thomas Shaknovsky’s license to practice osteopathic medicine Tuesday. The 21-page order detailed the troubling circumstances surrounding two botched surgeries — and Shaknovsky’s apparent attempts to cover up his own errors. The order first described the case of a patient identified as “G.D.” — a 58-year-old man scheduled for surgery to remove his left adrenal gland at Ascension Sacred Heart Emerald Coast hospital. During the procedure, Shaknovsky did not remove the man’s adrenal gland at all, but rather, removed a portion of the man’s pancreas. The order noted the stark anatomical differences between the two organs: adrenal glands are small triangular glands located on the top of each kidney while the pancreas is a large gland located behind the stomach and surrounded by the gallbladder, liver, and spleen. When Shaknovsky was alerted to the error, he claimed the adrenal gland had “migrated” to a different part of the patient’s body. The patient suffered permanent harm as a result of the surgical error. The suspension order next detailed the case of 70-year-old William Bryan, identified in the order as W.B.,” an Alabama man who came to Ascension Sacred Heart Emerald Coast hospital for tests to assess an abnormal spleen. After medical staff advised Bryan that immediate surgery was required to prevent serious spleen-related complications, Bryan reluctantly agreed to an emergency laparoscopic splenectomy. The operation was scheduled for 4 p.m., and per the order, “staff were concerned with it being done so late in the day because they only had a skeleton crew.” Further, said the order, “OR staff knew splenectomies were complicated procedures that could quickly deteriorate and were not regularly performed at Ascension.” Perhaps most damning, the order said, “OR staff had concerns that Dr. Shaknovsky did not have the skill level to safely perform this procedure.” Ultimately, according to the order, Shaknovsky arrived at the surgery an hour late, and opted to change course for the surgery, converting a laparoscopic procedure to an open one to mitigate difficulties in visibility. The order went on to note that Shaknovsky first reported that he was able to control a ruptured aneurysm during the procedure, but later said that he had never been able to control the aneurysm. It also said that Shaknovksy “fired a stapling device blindly” into Bryan’s abdomen, removed an organ that he “believed” was the spleen, but was so affected by the “shock and chaos of the situation” that he was unable to properly identify the organ that he actually removed.
  • Duane Allman on practice

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    RenaudaR
    Rachmaninov practising: “Arriving at the designated hour of twelve,” he wrote, “I heard an occasional piano sound as I approached the cottage. I stood outside the door, unable to believe my ears. Rachmaninov was practising Chopin’s Étude in thirds, but at such a snail’s pace that it took me a while to recognise it because so much time elapsed between each finger stroke at the next.” Chasins was so fascinated by the slow speed that he looked at his watch to clock what he was hearing. He reported that “twenty seconds per bar was his pace for almost an hour”. Chasins described himself as “rivetted to the spot, quite unable to ring the bell”. Full article: https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/music/the-rachmaninov-method-practise-like-a-snail-play-like-a-gazelle-1.4012834