dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)

[personal profile] dewline 2022-06-06 02:41 pm (UTC)(link)
1. Wow. They are really fed up with him.

2. Thank you.

3. Thank you. (tears)

4. Unsurprising and disturbing.

6. Interesting to note that the Mayor of London's opinion has to be respected here.
qilora: (Juju - as Miryam)

[personal profile] qilora 2022-06-06 03:39 pm (UTC)(link)
"7. Your Personality, Explained by Your Annoying Household Habits"

thank G-d, they didn't mentioned habitual re-filtering of a pitcher of water, so now NO ONE needs to know that i do this.

calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2022-06-06 03:40 pm (UTC)(link)
1. Did you see the post below it with a briefing defending BJ? He's a proven vote-winner! Yeah, that's not too impressive an argument: so was Thatcher.

2. What interests me about this is that locutions like "people without clitorises" and "people in possession of a vulva" are actually better-directed to the point than the traditional sex labels that they're designed to avoid.

3. I'm not sure this is a good idea. I'm thinking of long satisfying conversations I had with friends whom I didn't see very often and who died unexpectedly some time later before I could see them again. I didn't know, as these ended, that I was saying goodbye forever, and I would have been considerably startled if such a light came on, and dashed if I can think of how it would have made the situation better.

5. The US ban on ivory doesn't have the exemptions of the UK ban. Our local university's music dept. bought some old pianos from Australia (why is a long story) but they had to strip the keyboards off. No ivory, no matter how old.

8. I suspect that Aristotle's beliefs about gravity derive from the fact that, if you do drop a feather and a rock simultaneously, the rock will fall faster. He's not wrong, he just had the wrong reasons.
calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2022-06-06 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
8. Here's something that comes to mind that I wonder about. If, before you drop a feather and a rock simultaneously by holding one in each hand and letting go, you tie the feather to the rock with a piece of string, would Aristotle have been surprised at the result?