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My mother (83) is making my sister's head explode. She's just not taking the lockdowns seriously. Yesterday she was in church with 40 people, mixed with two different households, turned up at my sister's (just walked in) with one of my brothers who has also been mixing with several households. (Mum did Xmas dinner with brother). Now, she's just turned up at my niece's to bring birthday present to little kiddie - just walked in. I spoke to her last night and told her that she shouldn't and she'd be breaking the law if she did, and she swore that she would stay at the end of the garden but she didn't, she just walked into the house - wearing a mask that she took off the second she walked in. My sister's finding it really tough to deal with. page snipe: What is the significance of 153 fish in the Bible? So, not only does the 153 big fishes refer to the 153000 constructors of the first temple, it also means "a very large unknown number". This is also coherent with the first observation of one of the apostles when looking inside the net: there was a multitude of fishes. Jaeluni Asjil fucked around with this message at 13:46 on Dec 26, 2020 |
# ? Dec 26, 2020 13:41 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 05:19 |
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Happy Boxing Day thread, it was nice catching up on various meal reports and general Christmas nonsense this morning, hope you enjoy the twilight zone between Christmas and New Year with much merriment and liking the food you like and if someone else has different taste thats the way to lick the platter clean. I remember Christmas Day tv being a lot better than the wretchedness that was on yesterday, but ended up watching Normal People on iplayer which was nice but not very festive. this was festive and nerdy enough though https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lXv3Tt4x20 Jaeluni Asjil posted:My sister's finding it really tough to deal with. Sorry to hear, hope it works out. Hear a few deniers making this holiday poo poo for people involved, hope you get the chance to have a direct conversation. What happened with talking to your niece about Christmas btw?
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 13:43 |
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The last generations having no survival instinct does explain why everyone seemed so ready to join up in the wars None of them seem to give a gently caress about death. It's both admirable and deeply disturbing.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 13:44 |
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Pablo Bluth posted:All creams are garbage. Nut based chocolates are superior but I assume they're more expensive which is why Crapitalism bulks out tins with creams. Muskateer chocolate bars are meant to be close to the old old Milky way recipe although I can't remember what that used to be like Strawberry creams are garbage sweets that make every other chocolate in the tin the same flavour.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 13:50 |
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justcola posted:
Well after all the kerfuffle with the changed rules last week, it got sidelined until a couple of days ago. Then they phoned me on my phone which I have trouble hearing through (why oh why won't people use messengers, voips etc when I can use headphone/microphone headset? I digress). So my great-niece started telling me I had to do Xmas because of Baby Jesus and I said had school told her about Jewish people, Muslim people and various Christian sects that don't celebrate Christmas yet) at which point she wandered off and her mum came on and said she'd got bored now. (Though knowing the great-niece it was because there was 'new information' to digest.)
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 13:52 |
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Regarde Aduck posted:The last generations having no survival instinct does explain why everyone seemed so ready to join up in the wars I’m a firm believer that lead in petrol fumes turned an entire generation’s brains to pudding
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 13:58 |
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Noxville posted:I’m a firm believer that lead in petrol fumes turned an entire generation’s brains to pudding I'm from a generation where we still had mercury in the classroom and used mouth siphon to do various pressure experiments with mercury. We used to deliberately spill it on the bench and have fun rolling it around. And mercury (in 'amalgam') fillings were a thing until 1997.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:05 |
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Aren't fox hunts still banned or did I miss the Tories legalising bloodsports again.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:15 |
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Private Speech posted:Aren't fox hunts still banned or did I miss the Tories legalising bloodsports again. If your foxless hunt just happens to accidentally find and kill a fox that's okay
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:18 |
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horseback dogwalking
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:24 |
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Continuity NIP posted:If your foxless hunt just happens to accidentally find and kill a fox that's okay Just because the hunt can't deliberately go after foxes doesn't mean you can't casually mention that they might not want to be going down the lower fields today, it's bit muddy. You'd do better going the top way, by the hawthorn bushes over there, no not that one. And you may want to let the dogs sniff around that bit too...
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:27 |
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justcola posted:hope you enjoy the twilight zone between Christmas and New Year
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:31 |
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Jose posted:What does goose taste like? A lot like duck, it is a very nice meat if you can afford it. Very fatty and as noted it tends to basically boil in its own copious amounts of fat, leaving a delicious skin and incredibly rich meat. Basically you eat it and you feel like an angry frenchman should roll you over to the guillotine for your sins. OwlFancier fucked around with this message at 14:36 on Dec 26, 2020 |
# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:31 |
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I roast a duck for the first time and parts of it are basically just duck flavoured cream it basically owns and made me feel incredibly luxurious and now my coat is extra glossy
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:40 |
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jacksbrat posted:Who are you, Her Maj Brenda or something? Nah i just grew up near a river with a power line over it. Without any bird scarers on it. When a swan kills itself and knocks the power it when it's coming in to land you can ring Her Majesty' Swan Adjutant with its ring number and report the death - and ask if she would mind you eating it. She usually says to go ahead. Happened a couple of times before the power company eventually installed the bird scarers on the line.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:40 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:I'm from a generation where we still had mercury in the classroom and used mouth siphon to do various pressure experiments with mercury. We used to deliberately spill it on the bench and have fun rolling it around. I also remember heatproof mats being called asbestos mats but they'd take pains to point out that they weren't actually asbestos, they were just called that also they were almost certainly chrysotile, which is asbestos.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:40 |
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Noxville posted:I’m a firm believer that lead in petrol fumes turned an entire generation’s brains to pudding That and the prion diseases.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:44 |
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thespaceinvader posted:Nah i just grew up near a river with a power line over it. If you hadn't called the number they might not have done it and you could still be eating swan.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:44 |
Jaeluni Asjil posted:I'm from a generation where we still had mercury in the classroom and used mouth siphon to do various pressure experiments with mercury. We used to deliberately spill it on the bench and have fun rolling it around. Elemental mercury is (mostly) harmless in liquid form - just goes straight through you, can play with it with your hands fine if you wash them afterwards. It's gaseous or dissolved mercury that rots your brain, so you've just gotta keep it away from any source of heat. It's mostly been phased out because it's a bitch to dispose of properly without getting it in the water table more than any risk to people handling it.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:46 |
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Didn't they used to prescribe mercury as a laxative?
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:49 |
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Nothingtoseehere posted:Elemental mercury is (mostly) harmless in liquid form - just goes straight through you, can play with it with your hands fine if you wash them afterwards. It's gaseous or dissolved mercury that rots your brain, so you've just gotta keep it away from any source of heat. It's mostly been phased out because it's a bitch to dispose of properly without getting it in the water table more than any risk to people handling it. Organomercury salts are another matter entirely and gently caress all that. OwlFancier posted:Didn't they used to prescribe mercury as a laxative?
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:55 |
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Nothingtoseehere posted:Elemental mercury is (mostly) harmless in liquid form - just goes straight through you, can play with it with your hands fine if you wash them afterwards. It's gaseous or dissolved mercury that rots your brain, so you've just gotta keep it away from any source of heat. It's mostly been phased out because it's a bitch to dispose of properly without getting it in the water table more than any risk to people handling it. When we were at school, hand washing wasn't much of a thing except in cookery class. We didn't wear safety goggles in the labs, experiments were done by the whole class working in groups of 2 or 3 (eg hydrogen sulphide) instead of in a fume cupboard (or even maybe they're banned now?) Mouth-pipetting acids... 'Elf n Safety? Who he?
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 14:57 |
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Thinking back on it, I can remember the whole ruckus over asbestos mats being renamed heatproof mats to not suggest that they contained any asbestos, while all the while they did (but one of the less dangerous types), so I can sort of understand now why some Daily Mail types think that Health and Safety is some kind of pagan ritual where you just rename things to remove their power.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:00 |
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Private Speech posted:Aren't fox hunts still banned or did I miss the Tories legalising bloodsports again. https://www.thecanary.co/uk/news/2020/11/18/leaked-webinar-catches-retired-police-chief-advocating-a-smokescreen-to-help-fox-hunters/ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/hunters-with-whips-filmed-pursuing-injured-stag-across-exmoor-jdqgxngqv
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:05 |
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For all that we can laugh at Americans hunting feral pigs with AR-15s from helicopters, at least it's more humane than anything the British upper class call hunting. I've mounted a 20mm automatic cannon on a Cessna to hunt stray pigs. Witness my 16th century siege engine that flings house cats at dangerous badgers we bred on purpose in order to tear them to shreds and also the cats are on fire.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:09 |
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Guavanaut posted:For all that we can laugh at Americans hunting feral pigs with AR-15s from helicopters, at least it's more humane than anything the British upper class call hunting. Start a paintball match on the moors except with capsaicin balls.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:21 |
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Christmas is great for just doing what you feel like and not feeling loving guilty about it for once. We woke up at noon today and had Yule log for breakfast (since we were too stuffed to have any yesterday), and instead of fussing over who got the end piece we just chopped off both ends like savages 👹
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:34 |
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Elemental mercury is really hard to get in any kind of volume. We do mercury porosimitry in our chemistry department and the BBC contacted the lab a while back because they wanted to shoot some footage of something floating on mercury. We asked them politely to source the 10s of litres of mercury they'd need and get back to us. Firstly they were surprised that we didn't just have gallons of the stuff sitting around, and then they gave up when they realised the cost and time involved in amassing that much mercury.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:38 |
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Nothingtoseehere posted:Elemental mercury is (mostly) harmless in liquid form - just goes straight through you, can play with it with your hands fine if you wash them afterwards. It's gaseous or dissolved mercury that rots your brain, so you've just gotta keep it away from any source of heat. It's mostly been phased out because it's a bitch to dispose of properly without getting it in the water table more than any risk to people handling it. It’s possible to track the American explorers Lewis and Clark’s trip across the continent hundreds of years ago because one of them was taking mercury as a remedy for constipation (as it’s a heavy metal it literally goes through you). We can still detect and find their campsites because the mercury is still in the ground everywhere he took a poo poo.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:43 |
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Comrade Fakename posted:It’s possible to track the American explorers Lewis and Clark’s trip across the continent hundreds of years ago because one of them was taking mercury as a remedy for constipation (as it’s a heavy metal it literally goes through you). We can still detect and find their campsites because the mercury is still in the ground everywhere he took a poo poo. this is an amazing metaphor for america
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:44 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:I'm from a generation where we still had mercury in the classroom and used mouth siphon to do various pressure experiments with mercury. We used to deliberately spill it on the bench and have fun rolling it around. Mercury fillings are still a thing and apparently harmless, however, I am not a dentist.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:50 |
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OwlFancier posted:If you hadn't called the number they might not have done it and you could still be eating swan. Well my parents could. The convenience of a free swan is substantially outweighed by the inconvenience of it killing the power for a day when you get it.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:53 |
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Lungboy posted:Elemental mercury is really hard to get in any kind of volume. We do mercury porosimitry in our chemistry department and the BBC contacted the lab a while back because they wanted to shoot some footage of something floating on mercury. We asked them politely to source the 10s of litres of mercury they'd need and get back to us. Firstly they were surprised that we didn't just have gallons of the stuff sitting around, and then they gave up when they realised the cost and time involved in amassing that much mercury.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 15:55 |
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thespaceinvader posted:Nah i just grew up near a river with a power line over it. Absolutely top bit of trivia I found out while researching something else entirely - as a resident of Tower Hamlets I am legally permitted to eat any dead swan I find on the Thames between the Tower and the Lea (I'm not allowed to hunt or trap them because it's a protected wild bird species, but until 1981 I could have gone hog wild - not that there were any swans on that bit of the Thames or that you'd want to eat anything that lived in it at that point). Mind you I'm also supposed to be ready to turn up at the Tower, billhook in hand, to defend it in the event of invasion in order to get that right, but they were *very* uncool when I tried that when the first yuppies started to move in, a clear invasion attempt if ever I saw one.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 16:19 |
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Happy Boxing Day, UKMT. Spent most of yesterday sleeping, recovering from work, and today got around to performing some filial duties and calling my dad. Which was a mistake, because we ended up talking politics and now I feel like poo poo. Which is why I try not to ever talk politics with him, but there was only so much anecdotal Covid conspiracy talk I could handle before I interjected, and then he went, "CNN/BBC etc. are unreliable because they are taken over by the ideology of globalisation and leftism" crap, and I couldn't stop myself from pointing out that when he says "leftism", does he mean idpol, because it's certainly not anti-capitalism, and then he started on the "LGBT are interfering with and destroying people's private lives" and I just went off. To be fair it was at least somewhat satisfying to point out I'd much rather have had two dads or two mums that actually loved each other instead of a "traditional values" heterosexual family with an abusive mother and an absent father that changes families every few years after he gets bored with them, and if I'd thought orphanage or foster family was an option at that time I would've taken that in an instant too. Still a pointless convo as it's not like he'd ever change his mind about any of it though, so in the end I just made myself super upset for no reason. Guess I always had a pretty good idea of how bullshit the beliefs and views of both him and his circle are (racism, Trumpism, homophobia, you name it), seeing as there was quite a bit of prejudice I identified and found having to consciously overcome and unpack when I first started living independently, doing some soul-searching and realizing how toxic my upbringing was all those years back, but this was the first time I couldn't stop myself from going into it full-on, and actually hearing all this crap said out loud rather than just suspecting it definitely makes the difference. I think the part that killed me the most was the absolute arrogance of conviction that those lovely opinions are 100% right and if you have an opposite opinion you must be uneducated youngling, coupled with the fact that most of those issues have absolutely 0% influence on their lives. I can't believe I used to have more than a shred of respect and even looked up to him growing up. Though granted, that might've been more due to the fact that he was never around so it took me longer to figure out there is nothing to respect, whereas I've burned out on any positive feelings towards my mother much earlier as she was directly abusive. gently caress everything. Gonna have a drink and listen to some revolutionary rap now to convince myself to keep on living.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 16:40 |
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Sounds like a oval office, good for you for telling him to gently caress off. I haven't spoken to my oval office dad in nearly a decade
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 16:45 |
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It is a shame really that the same things that make them so detestable also make it so that we cannot hurt them as much as they hurt us and others. I would be much happier if I could do that. Still it's a point for your character if you can't just sit and listen to it. I'm just sorry you have to deal with all that shite. Definitely take the time to do something you enjoy rather than tending to the feelings of people who don't deserve your consideration.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 16:52 |
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I mean, it's hard b/c I still have feelings for him, and I had some hope 'cause I've seen him be capable of self-reflection previously which is more than I can say about my mother, but yeah, it's hard to want to salvage any relationship with someone you can hardly respect. Might just have to accept the fact that both of my parents are lost causes and my real family is my brother and my cousins instead, all of them thoroughly decent people. Wish they wouldn't live across the ocean/the continent though.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 16:56 |
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Perhaps a hamster posted:Happy Boxing Day, UKMT. Spent most of yesterday sleeping, recovering from work, and today got around to performing some filial duties and calling my dad. This is similar to my situation. Thing is my dad used to be a very understanding and friendly person and mostly still is. It's just everything seems to make him angry now. Lots of perceived slights to national pride, which he never really used to have. I read somewhere that outrage can be addictive. Like any other feeling, outrage is caused by chemicals in our brains and apparently you can become addicted to the precise ones responsible. I wonder if it's that simple. Got angry at something one to many times and now has to be angry all the time.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 16:57 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 05:19 |
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My father in law was "very pleased" to receive a Jordan Peterson book for Christmas I'm worried he's sliding down the boomer slope of doom, he gets very upset with our millennial takes on racism (because he considers himself totally not-racist, rather than being proudly racist, so he's higher up the slope than he could be, but still). He's not even that old, tail end boomer I think.
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# ? Dec 26, 2020 16:58 |