KevonLooney

@KevonLooney@lemm.ee

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

KevonLooney,

It most certainly did not cost him $2000 per semester in the early 70s. It cost about $2000 for a full year at a private university. Around $500 if he went to a public school.

nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d07/…/dt07_320.asp

And that’s in 2007 money! $500 in 2007 converted to the early 70s is $90 to $100. Minimum wage was $1.60 per hour, so he would have to work 2 weeks at minimum wage to afford public school. 7 weeks for private school.

What a burden! He might have to give up part of his summer!

KevonLooney,

Indian society is nuts:

She has been ostracised by neighbours in the community she has lived in for 40 years.

“As of today, I have no friends. It’s just me I guess,” she says with a sad chuckle.

Some of her family still don’t speak to her. And she constantly wonders whether the men she works with are picturing her naked.

A picture of your head photoshopped on some chick’s body? Why is that embarrassing for anyone over the age of 13? I would just assume they were hacked. It’s embarrassing for whoever sent it.

KevonLooney,

That’s exactly what it was originally meant for.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_jelly

Native Americans discovered the use of petroleum jelly for protecting and healing skin.[4] Sophisticated oil pits had been built as early as 1415–1450 in Western Pennsylvania.[5] In 1859, workers operating the United States’s first oil rigs noticed a paraffin-like material forming on rigs in the course of investigating malfunctions. Believing the substance hastened healing, the workers used the jelly on cuts and burns.

KevonLooney,

An observer is not required for something to exist. You are misunderstanding. In quantum physics observers affect the thing they observe. That’s it.

KevonLooney,

If you don’t see why it’s impossible, then you don’t understand it. You can’t just lump together all the “quantum” ideas because they sound cool.

Notice that the particles in your article were “super-chilled”. That’s the exact opposite of the early universe.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #