Mildly interesting
-
wrote 22 days ago last edited by
The dead ones still earned more than the women.
-
wrote 22 days ago last edited by
The patriarchy was so terrible men even thought they were more worthy of freezing to death than women.
-
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
73% of all women from every class survived the sinking of the Titanic.
Only 19% of men survived.
Speaking of paleolithic emotions and medieval institutions. It's no wonder why young men might be looking around and wondering about these sorts of attitudes.
wrote 22 days ago last edited by@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
73% of all women from every class survived the sinking of the Titanic.
Only 19% of men survived.
Speaking of paleolithic emotions and medieval institutions. It's no wonder why young men might be looking around and wondering about these sorts of attitudes.
Especially when we are harangued about being sexists and patriarchs.
Swim, bitch, swim.
-
wrote 18 days ago last edited by
-
wrote 18 days ago last edited by
-
wrote 18 days ago last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
Marin County I get. But the Tetons and parts of western Colorado? An artifact due to low population density I suppose.
-
wrote 18 days ago last edited by
-
wrote 17 days ago last edited by
-
wrote 17 days ago last edited by
Well, it isn't the Visible V8, but still pretty cool.
-
wrote 17 days ago last edited by jon-nyc
-
wrote 17 days ago last edited by
Captain Cook's Endeavour found
-
wrote 17 days ago last edited by
Cool
-
wrote 17 days ago last edited by
Seems an ignominious end for such a notable ship.
-
wrote 17 days ago last edited by
-
wrote 16 days ago last edited by
And it burns burns burns..the ring of fire
-
wrote 16 days ago last edited by
... both spacecraft recorded temperatures between 30,000 and 50,000 kelvin (54,000 to 90,000 degrees Fahrenheit) in this area, ...
Quite surprised that the two spacecrafts could survive such high heat!
-
wrote 16 days ago last edited by
They most definitely did not. They would have measured it from a safe distance.
-
wrote 16 days ago last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
They most definitely did not. They would have measured it from a safe distance.
That’s not what the article stated. It said that both craft have passed through the heliosphere. It’s not anything unexpected. It’s been more than theorized, the question was really just how far out it was located. I admit to being surprised that have traveled that far.
-
wrote 15 days ago last edited by
-
wrote 15 days ago last edited by jon-nyc
Wyoming has the highest ratio but only ~half a million people. So two billionaires.
One is Lukas Walton, a grandson of Sam Walton of Walmart, the other is a Swiss guy named Hansjörg Wyss.