ButtBidet

joined 4 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago

Find that new product.... and you can give up on your normal job forever!

I'm betting on cat pee.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

The cool thing is that the pH for hydronium is 0. The lower the pH, the better.

Most people on Hexbear are drinking up to a pH of 7?!?!?

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I really wish all the hydrogen deprived comrades would stop hydrogen shaming the hydrogen infused. There needs to be something added to the Code of Conduct.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I can't help it. All the hydrogen ions in my bloodstream just make my brain synapses go blue belt in factorio.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Last time I checked, you had to put in an email address to read them. And they still grouped a bunch of takedown requests together so it was hard to find exactly the video you're looking for. I remember a long time ago it was much easier.

God I just tried right now and even the links on the bottom aren't showing up.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 weeks ago

Now to be clear I am a firm opponent of pedigree dog breeding or dog breeding in general on the grounds of consent and animal exploitation, but Pit Bulls are not even much of a breed in that regard. Their classification is relatively new (as in less than a hundred or so years).

Ya this is likely the correct take to have on all this.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

I've seen discourse on how "pitbulls are inhumane to breed", but to be fully honest, I just don't know about this issue to form an opinion either way, if that's OK.

Ya I'm sure much of the news about pitbulls is racist.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 2 weeks ago (17 children)

The entirety of Bay Area lib news is obsessing over the dangers of the homeless. It's sickening.

God this is maybe slop but I don't care.

[–] [email protected] 22 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I think it's fine to say nice things about your kids, food, game, or toy you bought. People do that.

[–] [email protected] 20 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

Ya when I was to find a piracy streaming site, Yandex is the best. Fuck Google.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 18 points 2 weeks ago

May I add that, since the war with Russia started, all of the "social democracy" countries have shifted far to the right. All the war rhetoric has upped nationalism, which has brought an increase in racism and attacks against immigrants.

I'm painting with a broad brush, but there's been a slow shift towards a US style economy in Europe, with more military spending, less social services, and more austerity. I hope that someone can tell me a counter example in Europe, but it seems like it's across the continent.

 

It's been my mantra these past few years. When I meet a professional (or a capitalist), I just assume that they're gonna have bad opinions. And if I meet someone doing actual prole world, and possibly having some other life disadvantage, I just assume that they're probably decent and have an OK world view.

I notice myself bringing this philosophy into convos with the younger comrades, telling them to be careful of the beautiful posh people that pop into their lives. Also with organising, I'm trying to include and/or involve more poor people and exclude more useless professionals. It's not easy, and I'm not gonna brag and say that I found an easy way to do this, but it's a pretty main focus.

I get that Friedrich Engels rich boy types do exist, I'm not closed to the possibility of someone having comfort yet being decent. I'm sure that there are a few shitty poor people out there as well, but I assume that on average, the proles are gonna way kinder.

Sorry if this is poorly thought out or badly typed. I'm really burnt out from work atm.

 
 
 

My comment: the count for deaths from COVID is at 35+ million, and long COVID is 400 million.

Article text:

It’s been five years, and more than 20 million deaths globally. The first official case was in December 2019. The World Health Organization designated Covid-19 a public health emergency at the end of January 2020, the U.S. government declared it a national emergency on March 13, and every single state ordered or recommended schools close at some point between March 16 and March 27. What followed was trauma: years of mass mortality, inescapable infection and deep disruption, even to the lives of the relatively safe.

Next week I’ll be publishing an essay reflecting on where that world-historical whirlwind eventually left us, focused less on the emergency itself than on all the ways, both obvious and subtle, an unthinkable — even unbelievable — mortality event transformed our world. But today I just want to remind us where things started, half a decade ago now.

My first hint came via Twitter on Dec. 31, 2019, when I saw the health and medicine journalist Helen Branswell warning of “unexplained pneumonias” in China. The plot beats that would follow were, in certain ways, familiar enough, Hollywood and science fiction having taught us all about global health emergencies and what might be done to stop them. But although I could easily imagine a pandemic unfolding onscreen, I couldn’t really believe we’d end up living through one, so deep were my intuitions that plagues were — at least in the wealthy world — a thing of the past. Whatever I’d heard from scientists about the risks of this or that future outbreak, I was living firmly in epidemiological denial.

Two months later, in the first days of March, I found myself having dinner with an old friend who told me that he and his father had recently made a casual bet about how many Americans would ultimately die of the disease. His father had bet the total would be under 100,000; my friend had guessed more. “What do you think?” he asked me. I grimaced a little. “I’d take the over at a million,” I said.

I was reminded of this all recently when reading about a similar bet that the writer and podcaster Sam Harris said he made with his former friend Elon Musk at the beginning of the pandemic. (It’s ugly but perhaps illuminating to realize how many responded to the scary news by gambling on it.) Musk’s intuition was that the whole thing would just go away. On March 19, 2020, he tweeted that “on current trends,” the country was headed to no new cases sometime by the end of April, and he bet Harris that the outbreak would produce fewer than 35,000 cases in total. When the official count of Covid deaths passed 35,000 in April, Harris wrote to Musk to ask, cheekily, whether this meant he’d won the bet. Musk did not respond. In fact, to read Harris’s retelling of it, that was the end of their friendship and the moment he watched his old comrade disappear into a kind of alternate reality.

Today, the official Covid death toll in the United States stands at 1.22 million. Excess mortality counts, which compare the total number of all-cause deaths with a projection of what they would have been without the pandemic, run a little higher — about 1.5 million.

In other words, the alarmists were closer to the truth than anyone else. That includes Anthony Fauci, who in March 2020 predicted 100,000 to 200,000 American deaths and was called hysterical for it. The same was true of the British scientist Neil Ferguson, whose Imperial College model suggested that the disease might ultimately infect more than 80 percent of Americans and kill 2.2 million of us. Thankfully, the country was vaccinated en masse long before 80 percent were infected, but as early as March 2020 Donald Trump and Deborah Birx (who helped run the White House’s Covid response) appeared to be referring to Ferguson’s figure to claim credit for avoiding more than two million deaths — a success they explicitly attributed to shelter-in-place guidelines, business closings and travel restrictions.

Five years later, though the world has been scarred by all that death and illness, it is considered hysterical to narrate the history of the pandemic by focusing on it. Covid minimizers and vaccine skeptics now run the country’s health agencies, but the backlash isn’t just on the right. Many states have tied the hands of public health authorities in dealing with future pandemic threats, and mask bans have been put in place in states as blue as New York. Everyone has a gripe with how the pandemic was handled, and many of them are legitimate. But our memories are so warped by denial, suppression and sublimation that Covid revisionism no longer even qualifies as news. When I come across an exchange like this one from last weekend, in which Woody Harrelson called Fauci evil on Joe Rogan’s show, or this one from last year, in which Rogan and Tony Hinchcliffe casually attributed a rise in excess and all-cause mortality to the aftereffects of vaccination, I don’t even really flinch.

To be clear, their suggestion is spurious. (Ironically, the vaccines are the reason we can even entertain such speculation.) In some countries where vaccination was closer to universal than here, such as Britain, shots effectively brought an end to the pandemic emergency. And as I wrote two years ago, total mortality through the pandemic has tracked so closely with known Covid waves — spiking when cases were also spiking, subsiding when the disease was also in retreat — it was disingenuous to pretend the “unexplained” death was driven primarily by something other than the disease itself. American contrarians have often pointed to Sweden to suggest a lighter-touch alternative was possible, but even the architect of that policy, who owes his global stature to the story of Swedish exceptionalism, has spent the fifth anniversary emphasizing, among other lessons, how similar his country’s approach was to the rest of the world.

The pandemic response wasn’t perfect. But the pandemic itself was real, and punishing. Above all, it revealed our vulnerability — biological, social and political. And in the aftermath of the emergency, Americans have largely looked away, choosing to see the experience less in terms of death and illness than in terms of social hysteria and even public health overreach. For many, the main lesson was that in the world of humans, as in the world of microbes, it’s dog eat dog out there.

But the consequences and aftershocks were also more subtle and diffuse: It wasn’t easy to live in isolation and in fear, often largely online and surrounded by exceptional illness and mortality, as we watched aspects of the world and our own lives we’d long taken for granted be withdrawn or torn apart. And it isn’t easy to get over all that, however eager we thought we were to return to normal. We lived through as many deaths as some of the worst-case scenarios predicted, and without an initial spasm of inspiring solidarity and miraculous biomedical intervention, it could have been worse. But when we came out the other side — 1.5 million fewer of us — we were, as a country, exhausted, resentful, deluded and distrustful. A huge amount of the world in which we now reside was formed in that crucible. I will write more about that next week.****

 

They're volunteers with jobs of their own here trying to make this cool space for all of us.

We don't have the benefit of the right, where there are idle rich with all their time on their hands.

 

The no hentai rule only applies to Hexbear.

Oh​ ​shit, that's some good hentai

Like that hentai? See below for more hentai.

 

Someone that did all the work

Honestly it's far too fucking late

 

I don't know how upset I should be because I'm not sure if this can actually play out. I'm actually unsure what the health and labour rules are here. I'm looking into getting a doctor's note and talking to lawyers friends. I'm just fuming upset now. Why the fuck do you care that I mask?

 

Don't forget, no allowed words below

Personal pronouns: "," "y__," "h," "s__," "i_," "w_," and "t__y."

Possessive pronouns: "m_," "y__r," "h_s," "h_r," "i_s," "o__," and "t___r."

Demonstrative pronouns: "th_s," "th_t," "the_e," and "tho_e."

Interrogative pronouns: "wh_," "wh_m," "wh__h," "wh_t," and "wh_se."

Indefinite pronouns: "a__," "a_y," "e_ch," "ev__y," "no o_e," "n_ne," "s_me," "anyb_dy," "any_ne," and "anyth__g."

Today ButtBidet go to hospital to get treatment. When ButtBidet go to pharmacy queue, ButtBidet see two workers, but only one queue of people. ButtBidet go to back of queue. But then a random guy decided to just queue in front of one of the workers, ignoring existing queue. So now ButtBidet see two queues. Fuck, ButtBidet is now in the long queue. What the fuck, ButtBidet was waiting longer than other people meeting the worker now. ButtBidet hates when similar thing happen but ButtBidet too nice to complain.

 

Highlights

•    Cognitive engagement induced distinct prefrontal haemodynamic patterns post COVID-19.
•    40% of the undergraduate students reported brain fog due to COVID-19.
•    37 % of the undergraduates exhibited impaired cognition up to 17 months post-infection.
•    Brain fog appeared to affect the distinct prefrontal haemodynamic patterns.

Abstract

To date, 770 million people worldwide have contracted COVID-19, with many reporting long-term “brain fog”. Concerningly, young adults are both overrepresented in COVID-19 infection rates and may be especially vulnerable to prolonged cognitive impairments following infection. This calls for focused research on this population to better understand the mechanisms underlying cognitive impairment post-COVID-19. Addressing gaps in the literature, the current study investigated differences in neuropsychological performance and cerebral haemodynamic activity following COVID-19 infection in undergraduate students. 94 undergraduates (age in years: M = 20.58, SD = 3.33, range = 18 to 46; 89 % female) at the University of Otago reported their COVID-19 infection history before completing a neuropsychological battery while wearing a multichannel near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) device to record prefrontal haemodynamics. We observed that 40 % retrospectively self-reported cognitive impairment (brain fog) due to COVID-19 and 37 % exhibited objective evidence of cognitive impairment (assessed via computerised testing), with some suggestion that executive functioning may have been particularly affected; however, group-level analyses indicated preserved cognitive performance post COVID-19, which may in part reflect varying compensatory abilities. The NIRS data revealed novel evidence that previously infected students exhibited distinct prefrontal haemodynamic patterns during cognitive engagement, reminiscent of those observed in adults four decades older, and this appeared to be especially true if they reported experiencing brain fog due to COVID-19. These results provide new insights into the potential neuropathogenic mechanisms influencing cognitive impairment following COVID-19.

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