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I’m almost afraid to ask but, you have first hand experience with ‘deep lacerations from being tied up with rope’?
I’m almost afraid to ask but, you have first hand experience with ‘deep lacerations from being tied up with rope’?
Way to go people of NASA! 🙌🏼 🍾
Keep defending the truth!
Oh wow! Thanks for the recommendation. This game does look like a tone of fun (although I suspect a steep learning curve).
The 25 vs 25 video really impressed me!
I will definitely give it a try. 👍🏻
Edit: thanks for all the reassuring feedback. I’m looking forward to putting at least a few hours learning!😁
And might have been timed to be in the news cycle at this exact (ish) point in time during this presidential election year. 🤔
Or not… 🤷
In the case the court rejected without comment, the Chicago-based 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an order granting transgender boys access to the boys’ bathroom.
So, meanwhile, transgender individuals win. At least that’s something. 👍🏻
With any luck, this will hold untill the rest of the nation follows suit.
When red blood cells degrade after their six-month lifespan, a bright orange pigment called bilirubin is produced as a byproduct. Bilirubin is typically secreted into the gut, where it is destined for excretion but can also be partially reabsorbed. Excess reabsorption can lead to a buildup of bilirubin in the blood and can cause jaundice—a condition that leads to the yellowing of the skin and eyes. Once in the gut, the resident flora can convert bilirubin into other molecules.
“Gut microbes encode the enzyme bilirubin reductase that converts bilirubin into a colorless byproduct called urobilinogen,” explained Hall, who has a joint appointment in the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies. “Urobilinogen then spontaneously degrades into a molecule called urobilin, which is responsible for the yellow color we are all familiar with.”
Urobilin has long been linked to urine’s yellow hue, but the research team’s discovery of the enzyme responsible answers a question that has eluded scientists for over a century.
…but it’s a start. And it will have a bigger impact than if there was no penalty at all. 🤷
This is what the last paragraph is referring to.
Edit: sorry, I meant to reply to OP, but “oh well”, is also my response then!
Something similar happened in Canada a few decades ago. I came across a survivor of that episode a few years ago. He was still mad about it (understandably).
Me too (😉) and I also appreciate the opportunity to learn to correct these little mistakes. I don’t know how long and in front of how many anglophones I’ve said “mooses” until someone finally pointed out that the plural of moose is moose! Lol 😂
*cue
(Please don’t hit me!)
Also, he ended up with a bullet in the head. 😶