“Published on 13 Jan 2024”
1h01m57s “ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine are very valid options”
sigh…
“Published on 13 Jan 2024”
1h01m57s “ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine are very valid options”
sigh…
according to Science in Poland.
A cross from the 15th century.
Was Poland not widely Christian by that time?
Same content on archive .ph
You could start a submariner company to visit famous sunk ships.
Thanks for your answers and perspective, trully. Even if none of us have changed their opinion.
I see adjectivation and categorization as parts of reasoning. I think you used a red herring in order to have a strong opinion about it. With the same cheakyness, I’ll quote yourself
I can’t say whether this is an important issue, because I don’t have any experience in this area.
I take issue
You feel free to use expressions and terms as “rub me the wrong way”, “buzzwords”, and “clickbait”. In those cases you are okay with the listener/reader interpreting the implicit meaning over their explicit wording. Why is “forever chemicals” different? Specially in an informal communication setting.
What would you consider as okay to mention as ‘forever chemicals’?
Original sketches for the drinking scene on the Predator movie.