Good question. I don’t know.
Previous Account: @FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
Good question. I don’t know.


Always has been.
Come on lets not be a cynical arsehole chamber like Reddit. Let weird people be weird as long as no one’s getting hurt :)
I hope this dude don’t have asthma cuz that amount of teargas with no mask can be deadlyz


The OC per capita is actually pretty big here on lemmy.


You can also get runny nose from exercise through Post-Exertional Malaise


It’s just so ableist logic as well.
Like oh well anyone with a pre-existing condition is disposable apparently.


deleted by creator


Same as Economist and Financial Times
Removed by mod


Khepri (Egyptian: ḫprj, also transliterated Khepera, Kheper, Khepra, Chepri) is a scarab-faced god in ancient Egyptian religion who represents the rising or morning sun. By extension, he can also represent creation and the renewal of life.


Fun fact, fandom is made by the same guy who made wikipedia. He’s a bit of a capitalist brain.
😂😂. Same place they take Rivella, and turn it in bizarre flavours.
Looks like the red is to symbolise how they’ve got blood on their hands vis à vis Gaza


this would be a reason for the government to reason.
No need, they already cut disability insurance in a plan their own statistics said would send hundreds of thousands into poverty. This plan will surely kill people.
Oh also they classified a peaceful protest group against Israeli genocide as a terrorist group and you’ll go to jail for saying you support them.
So many reasons for them to resign.


Excellent meme but I think this is the wrong community.
A report from the Pew Charitable Trust found that 78 percent of ocean microplastics are from synthetic tire rubber. These toxic particles often end up ingested by marine animals, where they can cause neurological effects, behavioral changes, and abnormal growth.
Meanwhile, British firm Emissions Analytics spent three years studying tires. The group found that a single car’s four tires collectively release 1 trillion “ultrafine” particles for every single kilometer (0.6 miles) driven. These particles, under 100 nanometers in size, are so tiny that they can pass directly through the lungs and into the blood. They can even cross the body’s blood-brain barrier. The Imperial College London has also studied the issue, noting that “There is emerging evidence that tire wear particles and other particulate matter may contribute to a range of negative health impacts including heart, lung, developmental, reproductive, and cancer outcomes.”
Lovely