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FlyingSquid

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FlyingSquid ,
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That is the weirdest clock I have ever seen.

FlyingSquid ,
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Their biscuits are made from a dry mix (probably identical to bisquick)

Where an I obtain massive quantities of this dry mix?

Asking for a friend.

FlyingSquid ,
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Red Lobster executives:

“No one could possibly eat that much shrimp.”

Later…

“I’m sorry, sir. You’ve eaten every shrimp at every Red Lobster in the entire state and it’s only been six hours. We don’t have any more shrimp for you. That will be $20.”

FlyingSquid ,
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What about- stay with me here- what about creating dark energy shrimp?

FlyingSquid ,
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Smartphones and computers are essential tools for many people. Essential tools can break beyond repair or be so old that they are risky to use or even can’t be used for what you need to use them for anymore. Suggesting just not buying technology because of Israel would basically require huge numbers of people to just end up having to quit their job one day because of it.

I honestly wish there was a way to separate Israel from the tech industry, but it’s just not possible right now. Do what you can and not buy things from companies you aren’t forced to rely on, such as Starbucks and McDonalds, that support Israel. That still hurts Israel without hurting you.

FlyingSquid ,
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Yes it does still exist. It came preinstalled with the ThinkPad I set up for my daughter yesterday. That’s why I immediately installed Firefox and made it the default browser instead.

FlyingSquid ,
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They’re showing Pistol Pete what happens if he shoots first and asks questions later.

FlyingSquid ,
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Shouldn’t the January 6th insurrectionists just have complied?

FlyingSquid ,
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It comes with paint stripper…

FlyingSquid ,
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I’m already putting my pasties on in expectation.

FlyingSquid ,
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The only smoke she’s into comes from a candle.

FlyingSquid ,
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Gun laws have always been, and always will be, racist.

Yes. Because they’re all based on the original racist law, the Second Amendment.

truthout.org/…/the-second-amendment-was-ratified-…

Trump should not face trial in Georgia if he wins 2024 election, lawyer says (www.reuters.com)

The remarks by the lawyer, Steven Sadow, came as the judge overseeing the case wrestled with how to set a trial date given Trump’s other legal entanglements and the looming campaign next year. Trump is the frontrunner for the Republican nomination to challenge Democratic President Joe Biden in the 2024 election....

FlyingSquid ,
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And he needs time to rant and rave on TruthSocial.

FlyingSquid ,
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That wreath looks like it’s made from rich Corinthian leather.

FlyingSquid ,
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Are you thinking of Ruth Bader Ginsburg? Because I’m not sure what you’re talking about otherwise.

FlyingSquid ,
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Community members in Brighton Park are suing the city to try to stop construction, saying it violates Chicago zoning laws.

You dumb fucks. It’s keeping them out of tents on the street.

FlyingSquid ,
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I wouldn’t say Moogie had no job when she was apparently far better at making money than Quark.

FlyingSquid ,
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I realize the situation in Gaza is much worse than this, but these are still people being sent to live a life under Taliban oppression and possibly die for violating one of their insane laws. I hope this isn’t buried under the Israel news. Both need to be reported.

FlyingSquid ,
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I generally don’t try to correct shitposts, but for some reason this one annoyed me because it’s only sort of true and the real truth is more interesting.

Shakespeare’s observation (from Cymbeline) explains why attempts to alleviate the pain of disease, injury or simple surgical procedures by producing unconsciousness are almost as old as civilization, although the techniques were crude. Most involved ingestion of ethanol and or herbal mixtures, but ‘knock-out’ blows to the head and bilateral carotid artery compression (carotid derives from the Greek for stupor) are also described. These methods were impossible to quantify, and the best that can be said of many is that they were harmlessly ineffective, but that is obviously not the case with head trauma or obstructing the flow of blood to the brain. Hypnotism, introduced as ‘animal magnetism’ or ‘Mesmerism’ in the latter part of the eighteenth century (depicted above), can be effective in susceptible individuals, but such people are relatively rare in developed societies.

Most of the herbal mixtures were devised in Southern Europe or the Orient where plants with active alkaloids (e.g. opium) are indigenous, but one called ‘Dwale’ appears in medieval English texts. Although a number of drugs used in modern anaesthesia have their origins in substances found in plants those early concoctions are irrelevant to the development of effective, drug-induced anaesthesia. It stems from discoveries made in Britain during the latter half of the 18th century, the time of the ‘Enlightenment’. However, di-ethyl ether, the first agent to be demonstrated successfully in public, was originally synthesized (by the action of sulphuric acid on ethanol) in the thirteenth century. There are early reports of it producing both pain relief and loss of consciousness, but such observations were not applied clinically for centuries - examples of a recurring theme: clinical use of the effect did not follow until long after its original observation.

And it isn’t even really true about using a gas as anaesthesia:

Davy’s ‘Researches, Chemical and Philosophical: Chiefly Concerning Nitrous Oxide’, published in 1799, describes two major effects of its inhalation: euphoria (he coined the term ‘laughing gas’) and analgesia (it eased the pain of his erupting wisdom tooth). Davy suggested inhalation of nitrous oxide during surgical operations, but this was not acted upon (that recurring theme again) though a slightly earlier event may indicate possible explanations. In 1784 a London surgeon, James Moore, published a description of nerve compression in producing numbness for limb surgery – most people have experienced this effect after falling asleep while lying on an arm. The method was used successfully for an amputation performed painlessly by John Hunter, the ‘father’ of modern surgery, yet there is no record of a repeat. Was it fear of complications, inconsistency of effect, or simply that minds were not yet attuned to the concept of surgery without pain?

Davy went on to work at the Royal Institution in London, giving demonstrations of nitrous oxide and other discoveries of the age. In 1813, another scientist famous in later life, Michael Faraday, joined him as assistant and studied the inhalation of ether. He published his findings, which included soporific and analgesic effects, in 1818, but one subject had taken over 24 hours to recover full consciousness. Such an observation provides another explanation for failure to implement important observations – the difficulty of quantifying and controlling their effects.

Then:

The story moves to the USA, specifically to Hartford, Connecticut on 10 December 1844, when Gardner Quincy Colton, a travelling showman, gave a demonstration of the latest discoveries, including inhalation of nitrous oxide. In the audience was Horace Wells, a local dentist who had mastered the art of using new materials to make dentures, and had sought ways of easing the pain of first removing the patient’s own rotten teeth. Here was a prepared mind, and Wells realized that he might have found a solution when a young man (one Samuel Cooley) who had inhaled the gas injured his shin without any apparent discomfort.

Discussions led to an experiment the following morning during which Wells had one of his own teeth removed by a colleague, John Riggs, after Colton had administered the gas. Wells learned how to make nitrous oxide, and used it in his practice until he felt confident enough to demonstrate the technique at the nearest major medical centre, Boston. He gave a talk to a class of the Harvard Medical School and then administered the gas to one of them who, unfortunately for Wells, cried out when a tooth was removed. Even though the student remembered nothing Wells reacted badly (he was probably a manic depressive) to being dismissed as a charlatan and, although he continued to use nitrous oxide, he faded from the scene.

However, William Morton, who had previously been both Wells’s student and later partner, had helped with the demonstration, and was made of sterner stuff, recognizing that a ‘better’ agent was required. He was by then a medical student at Harvard and consulted, among others, his chemistry teacher, Dr. Charles Jackson. What part Jackson actually played in Morton’s decision to use ether by inhalation became the subject of great controversy, but there is no doubt that it was Morton who studied it, tested it in animals and then tried it in his patients. Having been successful with these trials he offered to demonstrate his method to Dr. John Warren, surgeon at the Massachusetts General Hospital, and was invited to do so on 16 October 1846. Before a large audience, Morton administered ether vapour to Gilbert Abbott before Warren removed a tumour from Abbott’s neck without any sign of distress. A new era had dawned.

www.rcoa.ac.uk/…/history-anaesthesia

FlyingSquid ,
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According to participants, the two sides have agreed in principle that migrants claiming a credible fear of persecution in their home countries must meet a higher bar to prove their concerns are well founded. They remain at an impasse, however, over whether to change policies governing when and where people entering the United States without permission should be detained or paroled into the country until their cases can be heard by a judge.

In principle, what this means is that if you’re queer and there’s a country that you are fleeing from because they want to kill you to come to America where it is, at least, legal to be queer (for now)- fuck you. You’re going back to die.

FlyingSquid ,
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Both pasta and many pasta sauces last a very long time without refrigeration (although the latter only if you don’t take it out of the jar).

FlyingSquid ,
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I meant as opposed to pasta, which you can just leave in the open box.

FlyingSquid ,
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That doesn’t sound like the best dinner.

FlyingSquid ,
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Applebees entire menu almost starts frozen.

That’s not the greatest way to encourage someone.

FlyingSquid ,
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It’s weird. I don’t like most fish, but I really don’t have an ethical problem in general with eating fish as long as they were harvested sustainably. Unfortunately, most of the saltwater fish I have enjoyed over the years- shark and swordfish steak, cod, tuna- are not harvested sustainably, so I don’t eat them. That pretty much leaves me with farmed trout and catfish, the only two other fish I like. And I just don’t feel like it’s the same as eating a cow or a chicken. Maybe I don’t have any actual scientific basis to go on, but fish are just so different from us and so much more primitive that it just doesn’t bother me.

West Virginians Could Get Stuck Cleaning Up the Coal Industry’s Messes (www.propublica.org)

West Virginia’s fund to clean up abandoned coal mines is in such dire shape that it threatens to stick taxpayers with hundreds of millions — perhaps even billions — of dollars in cleanup costs. And yet, little is being done to turn things around....

FlyingSquid ,
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If saying what I remember when I drove through it is deceitful, I’m guilty.

FlyingSquid ,
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I’m sticking with the Chromecast 2. No remote, but also no bullshit. Just cast from your phone or computer and send whatever you want from there to your TV.

FlyingSquid OP ,
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I wish that was true for me. It just makes it hurt less.

FlyingSquid ,
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So your reason for banning TikTok is “I don’t like it?”

FlyingSquid ,
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Why should you be the arbiter of what gets banned?

FlyingSquid ,
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Yes. If you say things should be banned based on whether or not you like them, you are saying you are the arbiter of what gets banned.

FlyingSquid ,
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I have to point out that male robins do not lay eggs, so the song must be talking about Carrie Kelly.

FlyingSquid OP ,
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I’ll bear that in mind if I do decide to sit down and watch it. I was going to do it with my daughter, but she has ADHD and both can’t handle a film that long and also has an annoying habit of saying she wants to watch the rest later and never agrees to watch it when I suggest it later multiple times. I may have to watch it secretly without her.

FlyingSquid ,
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Spend so time on Risa. We’re a big ball of love! And Star Trek memes!

FlyingSquid ,
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It makes my daughter an extremist and she’s 13.

FlyingSquid ,
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Not to do ketamine anyway, which apparently is his drug of choice.

He should have stuck to weed I guess.

FlyingSquid OP ,
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Kids definitely have better options these days. There was basically a world of shit for kids older than Sesame Street age when I was growing up in the 80s. Every Saturday morning show was an extended toy commercial in between toy commercials.

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