Mildly interesting
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@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
We have a less picturesque version of that, burning since you were in middle school.
Have you been there?
I have.
Probably the closest you can get to what Hell smells like.
When I was there, there was a decent layer of snow on the ground. ...Except for the patches where the sulfur was heating up the ground, which was about half the town. That was bare.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Mildly interesting:
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
We have a less picturesque version of that, burning since you were in middle school.
Have you been there?
I have.
Probably the closest you can get to what Hell smells like.
You should try visiting Widnes.
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Idiot, imbecile, and moron were, not so long ago, used in a psychological classification system, and each one was assigned to a fairly specific range of abilities.
Idiots. —Those so defective that the mental development never exceeds that or a normal child of about two years.
Imbeciles. —Those whose development is higher than that of an idiot, but whose intelligence does not exceed that of a normal child of about seven years.
Morons. —Those whose mental development is above that of an imbecile, but does not exceed that of a normal child of about twelve years.
— Edmund Burke Huey, Backward and Feeble-Minded Children, 1912@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
Idiot, imbecile, and moron were, not so long ago, used in a psychological classification system, and each one was assigned to a fairly specific range of abilities.
Idiots. —Those so defective that the mental development never exceeds that or a normal child of about two years.
Imbeciles. —Those whose development is higher than that of an idiot, but whose intelligence does not exceed that of a normal child of about seven years.
Morons. —Those whose mental development is above that of an imbecile, but does not exceed that of a normal child of about twelve years.
— Edmund Burke Huey, Backward and Feeble-Minded Children, 1912If only Larry were alive to make a comment about liberals...
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After the Big Bang there were all these hydrogen atoms everywhere and 13.8 billion years later some of them are majestic nebulas and others have turned into Cheez-Its.
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After the Big Bang there were all these hydrogen atoms everywhere and 13.8 billion years later some of them are majestic nebulas and others have turned into Cheez-Its.
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
After the Big Bang there were all these hydrogen atoms everywhere and 13.8 billion years later some of them are majestic nebulas and others have turned into Cheez-Its.
If you don't think Cheez-Its are magnificent then I can't help you with anything.
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Elusive glass octopus spotted in the remote Pacific Ocean
Only its eyes, optic nerve and digestive tract are opaque.
This rarely seen glass octopus bared all recently — even a view of its innards — when an underwater robot filmed it gracefully soaring through the deep waters of the Central Pacific Ocean.
More details/photos https://bit.ly/3C0rFdc
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Elusive glass octopus spotted in the remote Pacific Ocean
Only its eyes, optic nerve and digestive tract are opaque.
This rarely seen glass octopus bared all recently — even a view of its innards — when an underwater robot filmed it gracefully soaring through the deep waters of the Central Pacific Ocean.
More details/photos https://bit.ly/3C0rFdc
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@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
After the Big Bang there were all these hydrogen atoms everywhere and 13.8 billion years later some of them are majestic nebulas and others have turned into Cheez-Its.
If you don't think Cheez-Its are magnificent then I can't help you with anything.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Mildly interesting:
If you don't think Cheez-Its are magnificent then I can't help you with anything.
And to prove that Cheez-Its have elusive mystical power over all of us that defies understanding, at the very moment I was reading Jon's post, I was eating -- yes! Cheez-Its.
From a box I'd only opened when I opened this thread.
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How a 680,000-pound rock was moved from Riverside to Los Angeles to form the sculpture Levitated Mass

Full story: https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-michael-heizers-herculean-effort-move-340-ton-boulder-la (One overpass the boulder later passed under in Chino left a clearance of barely six inches.)
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@jon-nyc
Michael Heizer is an American land artist specializing in large-scale and site-specific sculptures. Working largely outside the confines of the traditional art spaces of galleries and museums, Heizer has redefined sculpture in terms of size, mass, gesture, and process. Wikipedia -
@jon-nyc
Michael Heizer is an American land artist specializing in large-scale and site-specific sculptures. Working largely outside the confines of the traditional art spaces of galleries and museums, Heizer has redefined sculpture in terms of size, mass, gesture, and process. Wikipedia -
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