It’s a urinal, I would hope it doesn’t have access to any poop to analyze.
they/them
It’s a urinal, I would hope it doesn’t have access to any poop to analyze.
Mine goes: open the image,
I love the implicit idea that celebrities are region-locked like video games lol
The word theory is used differently in science to how it is in common speech. In science, a “theory” represents humanity’s best possible explanation for something given everything we know. For example, the theory of gravity gives a reason for why things are attracted to each other, namely the bending of spacetime.
Theories don’t become laws, either. Laws in science describe what happens, and theories describe how. To go back to gravity, the law of gravity is an equation that can tell you exactly how much two objects will be attracted to each other, but it can’t explain how that happens. That’s what the theory is for.
Hope this helps!
I’ll give it a shot anyways, to play devil’s advocate.
I only buy a vanishingly small percentage of the amount of meat produced by factory farms every year. So I feel the same percentage responsible for perpetuating that system, which isn’t nearly enough to keep me up at night.
🙋 I’ve hunted deer, gutted and skinned them myself too. The tenderloins are great sauteed, and the rest of the meat is good ground (just don’t cook it as long as hamburger, it’s more lean).
Having been to Paris myself not too long ago, their rudeness is far overhyped. They were actually quite pleasant to us for the most part, only a handful of interactions that I would consider rude, mostly from street scammers. Maybe I just got lucky or missed some social cues, but I’m not sure where this idea of the openly contemptuous average Parisian comes from.
I am cursed with this relevant and more accurate image, so now you are as well 😔
It’s called an extended-stay hotel, they exist but unfortunately they’re not that common.
They actually did that with birds!
https://americanornithology.org/american-ornithological-society-will-change-the-english-names-of-bird-species-named-after-people/