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cuck is a meme because a bunch of really racist people use it really racistly even if the original isolated usage of the term might not have been if you're out sporting a swastika i'mma assume you're a fuckin nazi no matter how many times you tell me it's actually a hindu good luck symbol or whatever the gently caress dipshit
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:07 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 03:55 |
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If I had the choice honestly I'd rather the UK used its immigration capacity specifically to take in and settle refugees but that's obviously politically untenable so I guess we'll have to settle for just letting europeans in lest the gammons see a black person and get the vapours.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:08 |
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Teeth chat. Thankfully my wisdom teeth came out fine. But I had a tooth nerve die when I was 17, a front incisor, and it rotted and created an abscess up into my skull. As it was an incisor, they could only drill in from the back, to drain the pus and rotting meat that used to be me. They couldn't get a suction tube into it, so had to ask me to suck out the pus with my tongue. The taste was unbelievable, what I expect rotting meat would taste like. The pressure pain from the skull abcess was really painful and a weird pain. You don't usually feel pressure from your upper cheeks outwards, I still today can not describe it. Edit: Vietnam flashback! I remember pulling out stringy bits out of the tooth, and feeling it from the inside of my gums. happyhippy fucked around with this message at 00:13 on Nov 12, 2019 |
# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:09 |
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Rarity posted:Vitamin P is also the dude with 'legitimate concerns' about grooming gangs there was a mobile dog groomer parked outside my house when i got home today, i had no idea it was such a thing
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:11 |
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minema posted:thank you for listening to my rant That really sucks pal, we’re you On any sort of cloud or office 365 and might be able to pull an auto save from one Drive? It’s the only reason I have 365 or use google drive for this precise reason.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:16 |
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minema posted:Hey, I actually found one and it is a semi-recent version of the stuff I lost!! but all the words are mixed up, is there any way to recover this to a proper document or should I use my time rewriting? Two things you could try: But first: COPY it twice, one copy so you keep it safe and the other copy so you can play with it. First try: Take the second copy and rename as a docx file (assuming you're using word) and see what it looks like in word. Second try: rename as a .txt file, open in word, see what it looks like, put a big dotted line across the page then paragraph by paragraph retype what you had there (by which I mean copy and paste paragraph above the dotted line, rewrite. Then delete the redone para and copy the next one up. though as I suggested earlier, you might find a complete rewrite produces a better essay. You decide. I destroyed my PhD thesis (about 80k words) several times along the way and restarted from scratch - but it's not really scratch because all the time you have been organising your thoughts and so forth consciously or not! - producing a much better piece of work.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:18 |
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real question: can anyone name a year in British history after 1832 that wasn't poo poo?
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:20 |
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jabby posted:Yeah, I know about the differences in codeine metabolism. They mention it at med school, don't know how many doctors pay attention though.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:22 |
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https://twitter.com/Otto_English/status/1194032499556532225?s=20
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:22 |
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Instead of cuck , just use the term Chukald (That brand new, fresh party gonna steal your Umunna) Diet Crack fucked around with this message at 00:26 on Nov 12, 2019 |
# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:23 |
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Guavanaut posted:Little white cuck ball. I completely forgot about that and seeing it here out of nowhere sent me into paralyzing peals of laughter that scared the cat e; and of course racists ruin everything. i just want cuck porn but finding it WITHOUT a racial element is nigh impossible
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:23 |
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Chuka Umana posted:real question: can anyone name a year in British history after 1832 that wasn't poo poo? 1922. Oh sorry did you mean for the British.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:23 |
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His face looks like something that would come up when you press randomise on Fallout's character creator
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:24 |
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Ms Adequate posted:I completely forgot about that and seeing it here out of nowhere sent me into paralyzing peals of laughter that scared the cat I'm fairly sure it's going to be what I say on my deathbed. E: I'm the tent with built in chandelier.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:24 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:Two things you could try: I haven't managed to get back an actual usable version of my essay but the slightly nonsensical version is still helpful because it reminds me exactly what I wanted to say for everything so it'll definitely save me some time, thanks! And yeah, so far what I've written is definitely much better, just as long as I actually finish it. thanks again for the help
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:25 |
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minema posted:I haven't managed to get back an actual usable version of my essay but the slightly nonsensical version is still helpful because it reminds me exactly what I wanted to say for everything so it'll definitely save me some time, thanks! Great. And now be sure to backup! Email it to yourself every page or whatever. And then check out your version of Word how to auto save a backup copy!
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:29 |
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happyhippy posted:Teeth chat. Thankfully my wisdom teeth came out fine. Well, that's tonight's nightmare sorted. As if I don't already have enough dental related anxiety dreams. E: I was actually chatting to my dentist on Saturday after a checkup, he was talking about how things were 40 odd years ago when he started. At that point the majority of adults essentially didn't have any teeth left after all the extractions and he was doing 7-8 sets of dentures a week. Now with modern techniques it's down to one every couple of months. Would be interesting to see an in-depth 10,000 word twisto post on that. RockyB fucked around with this message at 00:41 on Nov 12, 2019 |
# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:30 |
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All this talk of losing words reminded me I still had this beauty about 90% complete, so may as well post a bit of it now to provoke me into writing the rest. London council housing - a not-very-brief history This one really got away from me if I’m honest so to save your scroll wheels I’ll split it into four posts (yes, more than the original post that this is meant to be a quick appendix to). In this first one, we’ll talk about council housing up until World War 2. In the second, the industrialisation of house building in the 1960s, the third will talk about the massive flaws with that industrialisation, and the last about the end of mass house-building and the rebirth (or not) of the buildings of that era. Part One: Why World War 2 saved us from tin baths. Prehistory - Rookeries and Model Dwellings Before government got involved with housing, London’s poor could only dream of their own house. Most lived in “rookeries”, converted old townhouses and terraces (”Converted” in this sense meant “wood partitions thrown up to subdivide rooms”), with a family or sometimes two or three sharing a single room (and often bed). Plumbing was nonexistent, heating, light and cooking were all provided by a single fireplace - in almost every way they were worse off than medieval peasants. Rents per square foot were higher on Dorset Street, the worst of the rookeries (and home to two of Jack The Ripper’s victims) than they were in Mayfair. Now with voracious landlords hoovering up every spare penny from the very poorest and leaving them in abject squalor, you might be tempted to draw a parallel here with the modern world. You’d be wrong though, because at least one rich Victorian gave a poo poo about the poor, in stark contrast to the present day. George Peabody wasn’t the first Victorian banker to salve his conscience with charity and philanthropy, but he was arguably the most effective - while others built libraries and concert halls, Peabody built houses. Not just small terraces, his “Model Dwellings” were designed to give families a proper home, of a higher standard than the majority of existing homes, and in massive numbers. The picture above is of the largest of his developments, on Drury Lane - at the time considered one of the worst slums in London. These houses, for possibly the first time in history, gave the poorest in society an actual home of their own. Of course they’re now worth millions and inhabited by cunts but let’s not get bitter quite so early. Peabody wasn’t alone - dozens of charities built similar buildings all across the country - but he cast an extremely long shadow. Year Zero - Boundary Estate The Boundary Estate *isn’t* the first council estate in the UK despite what people tell you - several developments as far afield as Glasgow have better claims to the title. However it was the first to use the word “estate” for a large-scale housing development for the poor, so it’s probably the best point for our baseline. Also if we wanna get really technical, the local authorities in those cases were “corporations”, but Boundary was built by the London County *Council*. So there. It’s here both to represent the beginning of the timeline for council housing, and to show just how much influence Peabody had over the social housing arena for almost 50 years. These are brick-built mid-rise buildings, pretty much at the cutting edge of the technology at the time - the walls are almost a foot thick at the bottom to support the weight of the floors above, but only two courses thick at the top. Fun fact - they were the first social housing built with indoor plumbing from the start. This wasn’t an altruistic flurry by the architects though - it was based on hard-won experience from the Model Dwellings movement. Turns out if you give someone on the sixth floor an outside toilet, in times of, erm, urgency they won’t bother with the stairs and will just poo poo out of the window. One quick note on terminology that often confuses people. “Low-rise” is a building with less than 4 storeys (or where the highest entrance to a dwelling is on the third floor/fourth storey). “Mid-rise” is between 5 and 8 storeys, and everything above that is a “high-rise”. The definitions come from the post-war building regulations and the reason for them is things like fire protection, provision of lifts (optional for low-rise, mandatory for mid-rise, two lifts mandatory for high-rise), as well as plumbing and other utility designs. Obviously pre-war mid-rises don’t have lifts although some have had them retrofitted. The other lesson learned from Peabody is if you make a large number of buildings that are basically identical - particularly in a grid pattern - people coming home at night, in those gaslit times, could end up hopelessly lost trying to find their own place - made all the worse by the fact that of course in those days many poor people would have been illiterate, or close to. This is why the estate was laid out with the entrance of each building visually unique, although the last part was hosed up by post-war “improvements” to the estate that duplicated the brick patterns on two of the buildings facing the central park for some reason. Between those features, and the fact that they put schools and a church on the estate too, you can definitely make a case that this estate, over a century old, somehow managed to avoid all of the pitfalls of later ones. To prove the Victorians weren’t perfect though, another “community facility” they included was a workhouse. And to prove what utter shits they were, the wages of the workhouse were set such that even if both husband and wife were working there, they would not be able to afford the rent on the estate, which was deliberately set to ensure that none of the inhabitants of the slums that once stood there could live there. Thus Boundary Estate manages not only to set the template for council housing for the 20th century, it also provided a template for deliberate social cleansing and forced gentrification for the 21st. Similar - albeit smaller-scale - developments sprung up around the edge of the City in the late Victorian and early Edwardian eras, the buildings along Tooley Street on the south side of Tower Bridge being particularly fine examples. Mansions As mentioned, the LCC estates like Boundary were not open to the poorest in society, and housing for them still fell to the charities, who couldn’t possibly keep up with demand. After WWI, and accelerating into the 1920s, the London County Council started to build large amounts of new low- and mid-rise buildings, demolishing rookeries and other slums and replacing them with a new style of housing - lower density than the Model Dwellings, with open space and even some parks and other greenery. They stuck to standard plans, which is why you can end up with a weird sense of deja vu in the inner city. You *have* seen that building before, except it was in Southwark, or Limehouse, or Fulham, or anywhere else with slums bad enough for the LCC to step in. “Mansion flats” had been the name applied to the large blocks built in the West End for the Victorian landed gentry to stay in when they were up in town, and this name was applied to these new blocks first sarcastically and then with some pride as the working classes moved into them - and the name has stuck for this particular period of council housing. Incidentally a quick note on terminology here - “flat” originally referred to the fact that many of these buildings had flat roofs, an architectural touch not really seen in the UK before. They became known as “flatblocks”, and then the English language did its thing and they became known as “blocks of flats”, with the dwellings within thus becoming “flats”, which then spread to any single-family dwelling in a larger block. Here are three blocks representing the beginning, middle and end of this period, and also neatly show the way the designs and building methods evolved over time. These flats just off Brick Lane were among the first built - they retain the interior staircases and doors of the earlier tenements, but the houses themselves are larger and in smaller blocks to allow more windows. The Juliet balconies (and half-arsed stucco on the closest block) are later additions. They also have pointed roofs, just to make me out to be a liar - flat roofs are more expensive to build but cheaper to maintain, which is why most of these older blocks keep the traditional roof design. Another spotters guide thing - sometimes you’ll see blocks like this but with dormers (windows) in the roof - these are the (fairly rare) blocks still being built by charities and other private entities. The LCC specifically rejected dormers in their blocks because the dwellings were standardised and roof-level dwellings couldn’t meet those standards, and also because traditionally dormers were servant quarters - if the roof leaked nobody gave a poo poo if the servants clothes got ruined - and the LCC were deliberately rejecting this particular bit of historical classism. Bonus things to tick off - the black glazed-brick house name signs are your guarantee of an early LCC building: And pram sheds are a quintessential between-wars feature: These little (normally 6”x6”x4”) lockups were a godsend in the days when prams were built like HMS Hood and you had nowhere to keep them even if you could get them up the narrow staircase to your flat. Most people either didn’t know, or pretended not to know, that they started life in the tenements and Model Dwellings as outside toilets, finding a new life when these buildings finally got indoor plumbing that was so useful that the feature was built into these new estates even though they came with a toilet and even - shockingly - a bath. No hot water though, that wouldn’t be standard until the 1960s. You did get a “copper” - a big but lightweight copper cauldron - to heat up water for washing though, so that was nice. Heating was still by coal, and lighting by gas - many of them not receiving electricity until the 1950s. For the middle period, from around 1925 to 1935, we have these beauties just off Whitechapel Road: The blocks are much larger but reflect the fact that nobody really wants to climb much above the fourth floor - it’s almost unheard of for LCC buildings to get taller than this until after the war. Architecturally there’s an obvious Art Deco influence, but most interesting is the construction. Notice that those balconies don’t have pillars supporting them - they’re a single reinforced concrete slab which actually makes up the entire floor. The pillars are internal (which makes for some awkwardly-shaped rooms) and the bricks outside are non-structural, supporting only their own weight. Some of these blocks had an extremely clever design that used the chimneys (still coal heating of course!) as their internal pillars, which pretty much doomed them because - to prevent the concrete being damaged by the heat - they were lined with asbestos. Finally, the immediate pre-war years saw a few buildings like this one, on Vallance Road: This is sort of a synthesis of the two styles. People liked having balconies but disliked having to share them, so they’re once more internal staircases but now with private balconies at the rear of the house. Those internal staircases were also the load-bearing structure for the concrete slab floors, solving the awkward room shapes, and allowing the flats to be laid out extremely efficiently. Fun fact - this building originally had a twin on the other side of the road, but it was demolished by one of the first V2s dropped on London - I wasn’t kidding when I said these buildings were solid, because the damage to this one was minimal despite the obliteration of the building opposite by almost a ton of explosives. Were it not for World War 2 it’s likely that this would be the most common type of housing in London. Frankly we dodged a bullet there. The extremely efficient use of space of this design made retrofitting modern necessities like lifts and central heating extremely difficult, and the rooms are actually smaller than those earlier buildings. Some of the very last also had heating from gas instead of coal, which sounds like an improvement (especially to the poor bugger humping a hundredweight of coal up 5 flights of stairs) but as we were still using Town Gas - the extravagantly dangerous cocktail of carbon monoxide, hydrogen, sulphur dioxide and all the other nasties given off by the production of coke from coal - it was a mixed blessing, to say the least. Town Gas was of course used for lighting and cooking (and stained the poo poo out of everything it touched), but the gas fireplaces were a whole new level of unpleasantness and danger - able to fill a room to lethal concentrations of gas in minutes if they went out, something that might happen without being noticed, unlike a light or cooking flame. Right, that's it for now. Next post we'll talk about the massive importance of holes.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:34 |
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https://twitter.com/DailyMirror/status/1193966874192728065
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:39 |
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Those low rise mini blocks genuinely look lovely and I wish I could live in one. Though I must protest at the amount of bollards they're hoarding, you could restrict access to a small island nation with that many. OwlFancier fucked around with this message at 00:49 on Nov 12, 2019 |
# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:47 |
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Solidarity, comrade
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:49 |
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caps on caps on caps posted:Just have them operated out like everyone else? have you read the other wisdom teeth posts itt my friend?
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:53 |
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Ms Adequate posted:I completely forgot about that and seeing it here out of nowhere sent me into paralyzing peals of laughter that scared the cat goddamnedtwisto posted:London council housing - a not-very-brief history Was London town gas really that bad? Most town gas in the 50s at least was supposed to (on paper) run it over trays of rust to draw out sulfates.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:54 |
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Freeing those falsely imprisoned is no crime.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:56 |
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An expression which screams "what the gently caress did I do?"
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:56 |
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https://twitter.com/artboypolitico/status/1194014128056094720 Make a good t shirt.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 00:59 |
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Podcasting is Praxis Episode 14 - Campaigning & You is now out! This episode featuring Mehall, Namesake, Necrothatcher and (our first non goon participant) his friend Alicia! Enjoy, there’ll be another out on Friday!
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:01 |
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Sanitary Naptime posted:
Oh man I'm 6 episodes behind now! ed: man as in 1960s 'hey man'.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:05 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:Oh man I'm 6 episodes behind now! It’s only gonna get worse because we’re probably ramping up to two episodes a week for the majority of the election period! Also, Quilty is a loving comrade. E: also also While we’re talking pain relief, what the gently caress is actually good for sciatica, because I’ve been barely able to walk the past two days and lmao if you think I can get a doctors appointment for a sore back (leg, whatever, all I know is I can feel spine pain as far down as my loving knee)
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:07 |
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https://twitter.com/tristandross/status/1194040112646111232?s=20
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:07 |
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https://metro.co.uk/2019/11/11/nigel-farage-offered-peerage-48-hours-election-u-turn-11081071 Farage offered peerage turned it down. quote:Nigel Farage says he was offered a peerage, 48 hours before his decision to withdraw hundreds of Brexit Party candidates in seats won by the Conservative Party. Mr Farage handed a major boost today to Boris Johnson’s election hopes, after declaring that he would pull candidates from 317 Tory seats. It comes after Leave campaigners expressed fears over a split Brexit vote between the Tories and the Brexit party, allowing Labour or the Lib Dems to win. Mr Farage was offered the peerage on Friday night, according to the Mirror. However, he denied the possibility of a peerage was behind his decision, saying he thought the idea was ‘ridiculous’ and that he ‘did not want to know’. He told Mirror: ‘Ridiculous – the thought they can buy me, a high-paid job; but I’m not interested, I don’t want to know.’
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:08 |
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Coups in Bolivia, political feline prisoners, not the best day e; quote:After an online campaign was launched to #FreeQuilty, the shelter said that his review with the parole board had failed but he 'released himself' anyway, before being returned to solitary. quote:He even escaped solitary to crash a staff meeting Quilty is an extremely powerful catte Ms Adequate fucked around with this message at 01:12 on Nov 12, 2019 |
# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:10 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:https://metro.co.uk/2019/11/11/nigel-farage-offered-peerage-48-hours-election-u-turn-11081071 I would not say that's "turned it down" necessarily. More like postponed for election reasons.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:12 |
https://skwawkbox.org/2019/11/11/labour-6-years-free-adult-education-to-retrain-for-new-career/Labour are loving awesome posted:- SIX years free undergraduate university tuition e: Sharing from Discord because NinpoEspiritoSanto fucked around with this message at 01:17 on Nov 12, 2019 |
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:15 |
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My name is Morales and I'm here to say, I got kicked out by the US of A Wouldn't mind seeing that version of Hamilton
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:22 |
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Ms Adequate posted:e; and of course racists ruin everything. i just want cuck porn but finding it WITHOUT a racial element is nigh impossible Uh... to keep it on topic, I guess with cuck as an alt right meme, it still being used seems like it depends on the site I guess. On 4chan where they get bored of everything after a week anyway I doubt you'd find anyone using it unironically, but you'd probably find a fair few people using it on twitter comments and infowars stuff.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:24 |
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Sanitary Naptime posted:It’s only gonna get worse because we’re probably ramping up to two episodes a week for the majority of the election period! Have a think about getting deep/soft tissue massage therapy. Unfortunately not available on the NHS. I was barely able to walk in 2017 without being in agony, all hip, lower back, thigh (MRI scans I had done abroad showed it was muscular not needing a hip replacement and slight misalignment of hip joint. Apparently tight muscles can do this.) Managed to get 3 physio sessions on the NHS after waiting months, meanwhile I had a few chiropractic sessions which put the joint right, and then had several sessions of massage therapy - every couple of weeks for a while - all the muscles were like clenched tight - felt like rocks in my leg - and needed intense work. Made a huge difference. Now I have a session every few weeks as the muscles in one side still have a tendency to go really tight if I use my right side too much. I've got a lot better at understanding what sets it off, eg sitting at 90degrees in an upright wooden chair absolutely KILLS me. I have to slouch. If I'm doing any standing work, I have to organise things so my work surface is raised right up (a plank of chipboard balancing on two crates on a table top).
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:25 |
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I don't necessarily mind if Ms A's Kink Korner becomes a thread feature. Hell put it on the podcast.
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:25 |
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Sanitary Naptime posted:While we’re talking pain relief, what the gently caress is actually good for sciatica, because I’ve been barely able to walk the past two days and lmao if you think I can get a doctors appointment for a sore back (leg, whatever, all I know is I can feel spine pain as far down as my loving knee)
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:27 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 03:55 |
Is there an ever growing larger ? Because This needs an ever growing larger Screencapped as I suspect it may suddenly be reconsidered, actual link for more context (and no it doesn't help any): https://twitter.com/Miss_Snuffy/status/1193506377014091778
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# ? Nov 12, 2019 01:28 |