#35.9
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subhra-kidtv · 2 years ago
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thethingything · 2 years ago
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are... are you supposed to get medical advice if your temperature is 35.9°C (96.6°F)? because I feel like that's not normal...
edit: so apprently that's still within normal range if you're taking your temperature by mouth, but it's like, right at the lower end of normal
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oncanvas · 7 days ago
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Under the Moonbeams, John Atkinson Grimshaw, 1887
Oil on board 18 x 14 ⅛ in. (46 x 35.9 cm)
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thunderstruck9 · 10 days ago
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Christopher Hartmann (German, 1993), Daydreaming (all over now), 2024. Oil on linen, 48 × 35.9 cm.
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doyoulikethissong-poll · 6 months ago
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Coldplay - Hymn for the Weekend 2016
"Hymn for the Weekend" is a single by the British rockband Coldplay from their seventh studio album A Head Full of Dreams, featuring uncredited vocals from American singer Beyoncé. It was written by the band's members, while the production was handled by Rik Simpson, Avicii, Digital Divide, and Stargate.
"Hymn for the Weekend" reached number six on the UK Singles Chart and also reached the top twenty in countries such as Switzerland, Ireland, France, Sweden, Austria, Belgium, Italy and Spain. In the US, with the Seeb remix, the song reached number 25 on the US Billboard Hot 100.
The music video was shot at various Indian cities including Worli Village, Mumbai, and Kolkata. The fort showcased at the start and in between is Fort Vasai in Vasai, Mumbai. Scenes were also shot at the Maratha Mandir theatre, which is known for showcasing a single film, Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, for over 22 consecutive years. The video is themed on the Indian festival of Holi and was filmed by Ben Mor. It features Beyoncé and Indian actress Sonam Kapoor. With 2 billion views on Youtube as of January 2024, "Hymn for the Weekend" is Coldplay's most-viewed video. Luminate Data reported the song "had the most total combined audio and video streams globally in 2022", with 35.9 million views coming from Canada, and 434.5 million from the US.
"Hymn for the Weekend" received a total of 57,6% yes votes!
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melefim · 4 months ago
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Swearing in Dead Boy Detectives: Crystal Palace Surname-Von Hoverkraft
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Overview:
115 curses total, 12 different words said in 8 episodes.
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Episode 1: 2 Fuck, 2 Shit, 1 Ass, 4 God, 3 Jesus, 2 Screw
Episode 2: 6 Shit, 6 God, 1 Jesus
Episode 3: 4 Fuck, 6 Shit, 1 Bitch, 1 Ass, 2 Damn, 2 Hell, 3 God, 1 Jesus
Episode 4: 2 Fuck, 1 Shit, 1 Ass, 2 Hell, 1 God, 1 Jesus
Episode 5: 1 Fuck, 4 Shit, 4 God, 1 Pussy, 1 Dick, 2 Screw
Episode 6: 4 Fuck, 2 Shit, 1 Ass, 2 Hell, 3 God
Episode 7: 2 Fuck, 6 Shit, 1 Ass, 4 God, 1 Jesus, 1 Screw
Episode 8: 5 Fuck, 5 Shit, 2 Bitch, 7 God, 1 Jesus, 1 Prick
Curses Per Episode:
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Episode 1: 14
Episode 2: 13
Episode 3: 20
Episode 4: 8
Episode 5: 13
Episode 6: 12
Episode 7: 15
Episode 8: 21
Uses Per Word:
Crystal’s favorite curse words are Shit and God, which she says 32 times each! In third place is Fuck, which she says 20 times.
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Shit: 32
God: 32
Fuck: 20
Jesus: 8
Hell: 6
Ass: 5
Screw: 5
Bitch: 3
Damn: 2
Pussy: 1
Dick: 1
Prick: 1
Unique words:
Crystal and the Cat King are the only characters who say Pussy.
Crystal and Charles are the only characters who say Prick.
Crystal, Jenny, and Esther are the only characters who say Screw.
Crystal, the Cat King, and Twitchy Richie are the only characters who say Dick.
Percent of Total:
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Crystal swears 115 times throughout the season, which is 35.9% of all cursing in the show.
Rankings:
Who Swears the Most: Crystal is in 1st place, with 116 times.
Most Curses in an Episode: Crystal holds 7 spots on the top 10 ‘Curses per Character per Episode’ list:
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Curse Word Variety: Crystal comes in 2nd for swearing variety, with 12 different words used throughout the show.
Individual Words: She holds the top spots for usages of seven different words: Fuck (20), Shit (32), God (32), Jesus (8), Hell (6), Ass (4) and Screw (5). She is also tied for first for her unique word usages of Pussy (with the Cat King), Dick (with the Cat King and Twitchy Richie), and Prick (with Charles) one use of each.
Lines:
Episode 1: Oh my god, why can't I remember?
Episode 1: It's just a stupid fucking name.
Episode 1: Jesus, where did he go?
Episode 1: Oh, Jesus. I'm gonna wait in the bathroom until they leave.
Episode 1: Holy shit, did you take some of my memories? I don't have some screwed-up amnesia, you took them.
Episode 1: God! I just need a second, okay?
Episode 1: So maybe he's our fucking demon now!
Episode 1: God, I just want to take their heads and just crush them together, I am so mad!
Episode 1: Jesus, I am such an idiot.
Episode 1: Oh my god, I never even thought about the fact that they could still be alive.
Episode 1: Which was totally my bad and very screwed up and I should have told you everything.
Episode 1: Holy shit. (Edwin tells her about girl turned into small piece of plastic)
Episode 1: He's still a stalker, still an asshole. But I am going to get my memories back.
Episode 2: Ok, props for the like, Herculean-level effort, but vandalizing my shit isn't getting us anywhere.
Episode 2: Oh, shit. Sorry. (Almost runs into Niko)
Episode 2: Oh my god, holy shit! (Niko collapses)
Episode 2: God, I feel lonely too.
Episode 2: Jesus, you guys are like a dead married couple on acid.
Episode 2: Oh my God! Holy shit, how does today keep getting more disgusting?
Episode 2: God (After Edwin asks 'And were there any graves or decaying bodies near her in the woods?')
Episode 2: Oh my god, Charles back me up.
Episode 2: Oh, shit, uh... (Sees sprite-controlled Niko in butcher shop)
Episode 2: Oh my god, Niko! (Niko starts seizing)
Episode 2: Niko? Holy shit, your hair!
Episode 3: Holy shit, who knew this town was such a Mecca for troubled ghosts?
Episode 3: I just heard some people talking about it in the um, God, it was the… malt shop and it sounded super crazy.
Episode 3: What the actual fuck?
Episode 3: Jesus, I can't watch this again.
Episode 3: Just what the fuck is it?
Episode 3: So ok, if we figure out what sent that piece of shit dad over the edge, we can what? Free the family?
Episode 3: Good luck finding it now, asshole.
Episode 3: Where the hell did he go?
Episode 3: Thank god, there he is.
Episode 3: His dad was bad, Edwin. Royally fucked-up bad.
Episode 3: And if I have to hear that goddamn song one more time, I am gonna lose my shit.
Episode 3: Oh shit, yes.
Episode 3: Oh my god. Son of a bitch owned an electronics store.
Episode 3: Damn it, I know you choose the worst times to show up on purpose.
Episode 3: Go to hell.
Episode 3: I am done wasting my energy on your fuck-boy bullshit.
Episode 3: (Crystal we did it) Holy shit, we actually did.
Episode 4: Sorry, I've just been dealing with some shitty stuff with my ex.
Episode 4: God, it's driving me crazy.
Episode 4: What in the hell was that?
Episode 4: Jesus, she thought about it too, like she definitely knew something and then it was just riddle.
Episode 4: You fucked with my head, I'm gonna fuck with yours.
Episode 4: Niko- thanks for like, saving my ass today.
Episode 4: And I am tired of riddles and spirits and demons and not being any closer to finding out who the hell I am.
Episode 5: Holy shit! (Waking up from nightmare)
Episode 5: Oh god. Cash and condoms. Thanks.
Episode 5: Oh, no it's porn, it's all just porn. Oh my god.
Episode 5: Deep down, guys that make gay jokes are always the biggest pussies.
Episode 5: Because all nice guys give their girlfriends date rape drugs to screw with their future.
Episode 5: You walk around acting like the sun always shines, and then you lost your shit while beating the Night Nurse. Edwin and I are walking on eggshells around you instead of just saying 'what the actual fuck?'
Episode 5: I am really not sorry the world is short two toxic dickheads.
Episode 5: It's a really shitty thing to have in common.
Episode 5: Hey Jenny? Hey, what's with the fl- Holy shit.
Episode 5: No boy is screwing my life up.
Episode 5: I can't keep him out of my head. God, he just keeps coming, I don't… I don't know how to stop him. God, what if I can't?
Episode 6: What the hell? I have to pay my rent. I can't be a homeless person with a heart-shaped gem.
Episode 6: I want to keep this demon the fuck out.
Episode 6: God, I just want to be normal.
Episode 6: God, I feel totally useless.
Episode 6: So no, I didn't read the stupid tree! … Shit.
Episode 6: It's like he's fucking haunting me.
Episode 6: What the hell just happened?
Episode 6: I gave up my powers, OK? I got you out of my fucking head.
Episode 6: You can't get in anymore, asshole.
Episode 6: I am nothing special, So why don't you just leave me the fuck alone?
Episode 6: OK, enough uh, emotional bullshit.
Episode 6: Oh my God, are you guys OK?
Episode 7: Holy shit, you're still alive?
Episode 7: What kind of bullshit is that?
Episode 7: Jesus. You have never been to hell, stop acting like an expert. Look, when I got possessed, when I nearly ran off a cliff, when I screwed up and lost my powers, you both helped me.
Episode 7: God, Edwin is my friend too, whether he likes it or not.
Episode 7: God, if you really won't let me go, then I'll find my own way to Hell.
Episode 7: Fucking bullshit, like I can't help.
Episode 7: God, that's fucking insane.
Episode 7: Holy shit, Jenny. You shouldn't be here!
Episode 7: Just cut this shit!
Episode 7: These are mine, asshole.
Episode 7: Oh, bullshit. A good detective does what he has to in order to close the case.
Episode 7: God, I gotta figure out what I'm going to tell her.
Episode 8: Am I ever wrong about this shit?
Episode 8: My parents won't say shit, they don't even--
Episode 8: Jesus Christ! You guys scared me!
Episode 8: God, it's like being punched in the face and the stomach.
Episode 8: Yeah, well blame my parents. Holy shit!
Episode 8: Mom? Oh my God. Mom is that--
Episode 8: Maybe karma is just a bitch.
Episode 8: Oh, my God. Oh, I'm a fucking awful person. Oh, God, I'm the worst.
Episode 8: God, I was a bad person before him.
Episode 8: Because if you did, God, you'd hate me.
Episode 8: Oh my God, Jenny are you OK?
Episode 8: Shit! (digging Niko out of rubble)
Episode 8: Fuck! (Esther has the boys)
Episode 8: Because whatever fucked-up little thing you have going on with Edwin, you must care about him a little.
Episode 8: She probably put a, like, kill-you-instantly spell or some witchy shit on the door.
Episode 8: I am so sorry he was a colossal prick.
Episode 8: Hubris is a bitch, am I right?
Episode 8: I don't have to give up my new fucked-up life while I'm trying to sort out my old fucked-up life.
Notes:
Not Included:
Crystal flips Edwin off in the malt shop in episode 1.
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Updated:
Added in top spots for usages of a couple words I missed.
Added in Twitchy Richie for unique usages of the word dick.
Added in a god I missed in episode 2.
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More Dead Boy Detectives Swearing Posts:
Masterlist
Swearing by Episode
Swearing by Character
Swearing by Word
All Swearing Posts
And if you like lists of things like I do, you can check out my other Dead Boy Detectives ones here!
When Charles’ Shirt Colors Change
George Rextrew’s Edwin comic inspo board
Full soundtrack with timestamps
Moves, Incidents, and Cases Masterlist
First pass at finding where the songs in the score are used- full post with timestamps in progress
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huariqueje · 1 year ago
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The Narrow Cove -   Charles H. Woodbury  , 1906.
American 1864-1940
Oil on canvasboard, 91.4 x 73.7 cm 29 x 35.9 in.
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womblegrinch · 6 months ago
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Philipp Franck (1860-1944) - Auf dem wasser
Oil on canvas. Painted in 1906.
31.9 x 35.9 inches, 81 x 91 cm. Estimate: €15,000-20,000.
Sold Grisebach, Berlin, 31 May 2024 for €19,050 incl B.P.
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ruiard · 6 months ago
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Carol Bove - The Bicycle
Stainless steel, found steel and urethane paint, 35.9 × 222.9 × 129.5 cm, 2016
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covid-safer-hotties · 1 month ago
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Also preserved on our archive
By Rob Wallace
From summer into fall, SARS-CoV-2, the COVID-19 virus, ran up another epidemiological spike just as the feds sunset their pandemic control program.
While the virus continues along a loop of boom and bust repeatedly reset by its capacity for evolutionary escape, putting people in the hospital and out of work at a steady clip, U.S. officials and well-connected epidemiologists have abandoned public health in both practice and concept.
Alongside entrapping millions of Americans in a Long COVID vortex, such dereliction of duty places the U.S. in danger should other diseases arise, including, but not limited to, an avian influenza strain that even now is moving beyond cow herds and poultry flocks and beginning to spread in humans.
The COVID-19 pandemic that some of our most august epidemiologists pretend is over portends a broader decline in the very notion of the public commons upon which any functional society depends.
The State of the COVID Nation What’s the present state of the U.S.’s COVID-19 outbreak?
The National Wastewater Surveillance System (NWSS) reports a large majority of its data set of viral load in sewage plants tracked from September 9 to 23 to be in the orange and red zone of 60 percent or more of all the samples taken nationally since December 2021. That is, all those hot points on the NWSS map tell us the viral load in populations across the U.S. is now as high (and widespread) as any previous COVID peak.
On the other hand, the more acute NWSS measure of changes in SARS-2 sewage loads over the 15 days leading up to September 23 shows a mosaic of declines and increases, indicating differences at the sewershed level we still don’t understand.
NWSS tracks only 1,479 of the 16,000 publicly owned wastewater plants, which together serve at best 80 percent of the U.S. population. So, consider the NWSS map of SARS-CoV-2 loads just a snapshot.
The Walgreens COVID-19 Index of national test positivity covers both rapid tests and the more gold-standard polymerase chain reaction tests little available at this point. As of September 29, we see a decline to 21.8 percent of all tests Walgreens processes nationally from 40 percent earlier in the summer, but still as high as most points in the pandemic. The number of tests remains comparatively high, which at this late date in the pandemic may in itself serve as a measure of incidence. People are getting tested because they’re feeling sick.
There’s a geography to this. For late September, we see increases in test positivity in order of sizes of increase, in New Hampshire, Idaho, Oklahoma, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Connecticut, among other states, with New York presently hovering at 35.9 percent positive. These numbers were once available down to the county level until the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) abandoned such mapping.
Syndromic surveillance offers another view of the pandemic. We see from Epic Research hospital reports of ICD-10 codes mapped between August 25 and September 7 for COVID infections per 100,000 hospital tests, states in the South and Appalachia are getting hit relatively hard, with the national hospital positivity rate at 16 percent. Hospitals across the U.S. were once required to report in such incidences on a weekly basis. Now only a few voluntarily report.
With such reporting now blacked out, infectious disease modeler J.P. Weiland is using wastewater data from Biobot Analytics and available CDC seropositivities to project COVID cases per day in the U.S. He reports we were at over 589,000 new COVID infections for the single day of September 19.
This summer’s peak isn’t the 5 million infections a day of the first Omicron wave that Weiland estimated in late 2021, but nearly a million infections a day in early August is well within the range of nearly every other COVID peak so far. COVID isn’t tailing off one peak to the next.
Weiland hasn’t released a detailed methodology, which makes the projection’s validity unconfirmed, although the general gestalt of his time series is probably on point. If these estimates are anywhere close to reality, much more forgiving global and U.S. data should now be rated “junk” and the pandemic considered still at strength — especially, as we previously described, as the virus has been given the public health green light to continue to explore its evolutionary possibilities.
Indeed, we see the outbreak stateside continuing to evolve, with a broad mix of 22 sublineages in play, and, as projected September 28, varieties of global variant of concern KP.3 and LB.1 leading the way.
Molecular biologist Raj Rajnarayanan’s 30-day mosaic shows all the genetic sequences of detected sublineages in the U.S. as of September 27, including their geographic origins. We see the near entirety of the country hosting variant JN and its infectious FLiRT offspring, the LBs and KPs 1, 2 and 3. We see the arrival of yet another new lineage, the highly transmissible XEC.
The Real Damage of Long COVID Remains A pandemic’s outcome is a matter of pathogen and host alike. So, while we see the SARS-CoV-2 virus still chugging along, the host population it infects has largely chosen to drop out of the pandemic fight.
While COVID death rates aren’t approaching those of 2020, we are nowhere near a 2019 world as the near entirety of the U.S. establishment pretends. The Swiss Re Institute reports U.S. and U.K. excess mortality rates still at 3 percent and 2.5 percent above pre-pandemic levels.
But here we have both U.S. political parties — and both presidential candidates — placing the ongoing pandemic behind us for good, save for scoring electoral points. The feds are sunsetting bridge funding for COVID antivirals and vaccines, the latter suddenly costing $200 for the uninsured. No wonder, as Science Communications Director Lucky Tran posts, half the Americans in a recent Ipsos poll incredibly expect never to get infected again.
The mass leap away from the reality of a still deadly infection is more from a push from a government that ostensibly holds the monopoly on national health intervention. The U.S. population would likely respond otherwise if signaled so from its elected leadership. Tran reminds us that a 2022 CDC report showed people are more likely to mask when alerted about local outbreaks by public health authorities. Without alerts, on the other hand, Americans are erring on the side of little to no masking.
The resulting health toll continues to beat up the population. Health analyst Mike Hoerger of the Pandemic Mitigation Collaborative — whose models for daily COVID incidences typically run hotter than Weiland’s at 669,000 as of September 30 — projects 1 million to 4 million new Long COVID cases coming out of infections this past month alone.
Previous work showed and estimated that between 5 percent and 30 percent of people infected enter the whirlpool of a Long COVID syndrome for which few tests are available for diagnosis, and there are few prophylaxes available or in development to treat current patients.
A Patient-Led Collaborative Group preprint reporting the results of a survey of 3,300 participants found that increasing the number of SARS-CoV-2 infections a person gets increases the risks of Long COVID, worse Long COVID symptoms and greater overall impairment. Reinfections also appear to diminish the protective effects that vaccination may offer against Long COVID. Few of the surveyed reported Long COVID remission.
The damage extends beyond bodily health. The Wall Street Journal, focusing on the professional-managerial class, ran a story headlined “Long Covid Knocked a Million Americans Off Their Career Paths.”
Understandably, the article was widely retweeted by professionals who lamented their previous 60-hour work weeks and personal bests and marked how far they had fallen. Their work ethic proved no prevention against Long COVID’s siege of microclots, brain damage, cognitive collapse and post-exertional malaise that made some unable to get out of bed for weeks.
Long COVID also impacts many on the other end of the socioeconomic spectrum. A new survey of 7,000-plus adults found low-income Long COVID patients suffered greater food insecurity, especially those who didn’t participate in public food assistance programs.
It isn’t just adults suffering. New research out of the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) RECOVER program found similar but distinguishable differences in symptoms between children and adolescents among the 5,300 youth it studied, leading RECOVER to declare Long COVID “a public health crisis” for a population some epidemiologists expediently presented as little affected by the infection.
Acknowledging Failures to Keep Them Going Noting that recent COVID deaths in the U.S. were double those of last spring, this New York Times piece from August took a meta view of the failure to see, observing that we no longer observe: “We Have Largely Moved on From Covid, but Covid Isn’t Done With Us” reads the print edition.
But such a gesture at the gap in reality that the newspaper itself helped condition offers the ruling class that effectively ended the COVID campaign permission to continue to ignore the duly noted failure.
The Times interviewed epidemiologists at the highest professional levels about the gap:
"Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, said the newfound complacency can as much be attributed to confusion as to fatigue. The virus remains remarkably unpredictable: Covid variants are still evolving much faster than influenza variants, and officials who want to “pigeonhole” Covid into having a well-defined seasonality will be unnerved to discover that the 10 surges in the United States so far have been evenly distributed throughout all four seasons, he said. Those factors, combined with waning immunity, point to a virus that still evades our collective understanding — in the context of a collective psychology that is ready to move on. Even at a meeting of 200 infectious disease experts in Washington earlier this month — a number of whom were over 65 and had not been vaccinated in four to six months — hardly anybody donned a mask."
And how did officials and the public arrive at such a confusion? After all, other scientists and practitioners standing outside the establishment’s umbrella of respectability debunked the notion that all was well and repeatedly alerted the world to the broader system’s complicit silence.
I wrote in August 2022 that Osterholm himself helped inculcate the confusion:
"Mike Osterholm, who the Times failed to identify as part of the administration’s COVID Advisory Board, converged on this courageous line: “I think [the CDC] are attempting to meet up with the reality that everyone in the public is pretty much done with this pandemic.” A reality the administration worked hard to help manufacture by deft incompetence."
The Times also interviewed epidemiologist Bill Hanage to the effect scientists were themselves confused and that allowed him the freedom of an argument by ex falso quodlibet, a principle from which any proposition can be derived from a contradiction:
"Epidemiologists have long predicted that Covid would eventually become an endemic disease, rather than a pandemic. “If you ask six epidemiologists what ‘endemic’ means, exactly, you’ll probably get about 12 answers,” said Bill Hanage, associate director of the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics at Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health. “But it certainly has a sort of social definition – a virus that’s around us all the time – and if you want to take that one, then we’re definitely there.”"
Ugly sophistry. In actuality, the time series of COVID outbreaks stateside in no way represent the kind of evolutionarily predictable seasonal variants we find in endemic influenza.
And the “socially defined” endemicity to which Hanage alludes was in part of his own making. In one CNN report, we find Hanage alongside Osterholm providing Biden’s CDC cover for dropping recommendations for quarantining at home and testing people without symptoms, brandishing another fallacy:
"Bill Hanage, an epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, agrees that the new guidance shows that the CDC is trying to meet people where they are. “I think that this is a point where you actually have to sort of get real and start giving people tools they can use to do something or not. Because otherwise, people will just not take you seriously,” Hanage said."
An appeal to popularity is no epidemiological principle on which to base a response to a pandemic that’s killed anywhere from 1.2 to 1.5 million Americans.
Public Health Rebellion From Below In other words, Osterholm and Hanage and others aren’t the neutral observers they pretend to be, along with the Times.
Rather, they track disease only up to the point the political class can bear, helping bury the problem when it’s inconvenient. Liberals who are upset that science is met with public distrust might ask whether anyone concerned about outbreaks would listen to these brilliant scientists without suspicions they’re catering to other (well-funded) objectives.
How many times will these “men who stare at vaccines” ask us to run into our epidemiological walls — to reference the George Clooney movie about the Pentagon’s First Earth Battalion — as if our reductionist atoms can just pass through those of SARS-CoV-2, avian influenza, mpox, and the queue of other pathogens emerging out of an alienated nature and expropriated circuits of global production?
Vaccines are always only a part of any public health campaign, and their successful deployment depends on the very nonpharmaceutical interventions and structural changes the feds have insisted we abandon.
Figures of authority across local jurisdictions have similarly blanched. Political leaders — turning now to punishing people who continue to mask — are feeding their own health into the COVID maw held agape by establishment epidemiologists.
The best way to contact the dead in the data, these scientist “seancists” signal, is to help usher a public of biased optimists they’ve cultivated to their graves. The CDC continue to invite Americans “just this way, please,” once again adjusting down its color code scheme for its maps to imply we’re in less danger than we are.
Bipartisan rounds of strategic obfuscation follow each new COVID wave as if set as an algorithm. At this end of the U.S. cycle of accumulation, when capital cashes out and disinvests from the public commons, it’s only such manipulation that’s now endemic.
As the Pandemic ThinkTank described early in the pandemic, abandoned by the feds, we need to pursue a revolt from below. Community groups and local public health departments need to work together to reconstruct our public commons to handle the diseases and other disasters already here or on their way.
This article is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), and you are free to share and republish under the terms of the license.
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woof359 · 1 year ago
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Doug is the host and Cutter is obviously the evil station management but what does everyone else do?
Radio show au anyone???
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I find these polls so interesting! There are some really obscure (to me!) artists/bands. I saw someone ask which was the least known artist/band? Has anyone asked which is the most known? If so could you repost it? If not, I’d super curious! Thanks!
We haven't answered this question before! In artists/bands, we can only really look at this through the lens of our albums, but here's some of the artists with the highest average album rankings:
* Did not majorly break containment (more reliable data, polls with <=700 votes) † Multiple album submissions
Artists by Highest Average of Albums At Least Heard Of
AC/DC - 98.8% * (Highway to Hell)
Wham! - 96.1% (Make It Big)
The Killers - 95.6% (Hot Fuss)
Lil Nas X - 95.5% * (Montero)
Nirvana - 94.1% †
Ke$ha - 94% (Animal + Cannibal [Deluxe Edition])
Prince and the Revolution - 93.8% (Purple Rain)
Smash Mouth - 93.3% (Astro Lounge)
Arctic Monkeys - 93.3% (AM)
One Direction - 92.8% (Up All Night)
Green Day - 92.7% †
Eurythmics - 91.7% * (Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This))
Marina and the Diamonds - 91.4% †
Owl City - 91% †
Lady Gaga - 90.6% †
The Beatles - 90.3% †
High School Musical 2 Cast - 89.7% * (High School Musical 2 (Original Soundtrack))
Elton John - 89.5% †
Fleetwood Mac - 89.4% †
Kelly Clarkson - 89.2% * (Breakaway)
More below the cut, but we'll be following up this with additions!
Artists by Highest Average of Albums Listened to in Part or in Whole
AC/DC - 93.6% * (Highway to Hell)
Wham! - 92.2% (Make It Big)
The Killers - 92% (Hot Fuss)
Ke$ha - 91.2% (Animal + Cannibal [Deluxe Edition])
Eurythmics - 89% * (Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This))
Smash Mouth - 87.2% (Astro Lounge)
Nirvana - 86.1% †
Kelly Clarkson - 85.5% * (Breakaway)
Owl City - 85.5% †
Arctic Monkeys - 85.4% (AM)
Cascada - 85% (Everytime We Touch)
Green Day - 84.5% †
Gwen Stefani - 83.8% (Love. Angel. Music. Baby.)
One Direction - 83.1% (Up All Night)
Marina and the Diamonds - 82.9% †
Elton John - 82.7% †
Lil Nas X - 82% * (Montero)
Lady Gaga - 81.8% †
The Beatles - 79.9% †
Fleetwood Mac - 79.8% †
Artists by Highest Average of Albums Listened to All the Way Through
My Chemical Romance - 58.3% †
Panic at the Disco - 53.4% (Pretty. Odd.)
Fall Out Boy - 51.4% †
Gerard Way - 46.3% (Hesitant Alien)
High School Musical 2 Cast - 43.8% * (High School Musical 2 (Original Soundtrack))
Marina and the Diamonds - 42.6% †
Hozier - 39.6% †
Nirvana - 38.3% †
Arctic Monkeys - 36.5% (AM)
The Beatles - 36% †
Frank Iero and The Future Violents - 35.9% (Barriers)
Green Day - 35.5% †
Pink Floyd - 35.5% †
toby fox - 35.4% *†
Lorde - 35.4% †
Patrick Stump - 35.2% (Soul Punk [Deluxe Version])
Louis Tomlinson - 34.7% †
One Direction - 34.2% (Up All Night)
The Killers - 34.1% (Hot Fuss)
Paramore - 32.6% †
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panda-wearing-pants · 3 months ago
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Each team ranked by how well the members did in their previous season
The scores are the average of each team members score the previous season (score is the percent of other players they did better than)
People that were not in any previous season were given a score of 50
LL:
Magical Mountain (57.69)
Southlands (56.15)
Fairy Fort/Shadow Alliance (47.12)
BEST (46.15)
Scottage (40.38)
Actual:
Scottage (90.63)
Magical Mountain (62.5)
Fairy Fort (54.69)
BEST (37.5)
Southlands (35)
DL:
Martyn (87.5)
Pearl (81.25)
Scott & Cleo (78.13)
Joel & Etho (71.88)
BigB & Ren (68.75)
Scar & Grian (56.25)
Impulse & Bdubs (25)
Tango & Jimmy (18.75)
The actual scores are in yhe same order as their placements, except Martyn's score and Scott+Cleo's scores were both 84.62
LimL:
Mean Gills (88.46)
Nosey Neighbors (61.54)
Clockers (58.97)
TIES (33.89)
Bad Boys (28.21)
Actual:
Mean Gills (92.31)
Nosey Neighbors (65.38)
TIES (50)
Clockers (35.9)
Bad Boys (25.64)
SL:
Gem & the Scotts (75.64) (Includes a score of 50 for Gem)
Roomies (58.97)
Big Dogs (50)
Scar (38.46)
Heart Foundation (30.77)
Mounders (30.41)
Lizzie (25)
Actual:
Scar (100)
Gem & The Scotts (77.08)
Mounders (62.5)
Roomies (45.83)
Heart Foundation (29.17)
Big Dogs (21.88)
Lizzie (0)
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pozartaa · 5 months ago
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13.06.24 UTRZYMANIE WAG1 dzień 469. Limit +/- 2100 kc@l.
Wybrane posiłki:
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Wczoraj wieczorem zaczęło mnie drapać w gardle.
Nooo nieeee, nie mogę być chora na to cholerne wesele! Wzięłam leki na noc i liczę na mój organizm.
Rano trochę mi spływało z nosa. No i generalnie czuję się taka lekko podziębiona. Nie mam temperatury... Mam mniej niż powinien mieć podręcznikowy żywy człowiek... 36° -35.9°. Ale to trochę taka właściwość mojego organizmu. Dlatego nawet niewielkie stany podgorączkowe odczuwam jakbym zaraz miała umrzeć.
Ciekawostka - z chorowitego dziecka wyrosłam na dość nie-chorowitego dorosłego, a te dwa ostatnie lata po mojej "przemianie" - schvdnięciu i zmianie sposobu żywienia - odczułam ogólną poprawę. Lepsza cera, zdrowe włosy i już tak łatwo nic mnie nie rozkłada. Oczywiście - jak widzicie - przeziębiam się, owszem, ale te przeziębienia zwykle nie eskalują.
My God...zaklinam rzeczywistość pisząc to zdanie i mam nadzieję, że teraz też tak będzie 🤞🤞🤞.
***
Dziś na noc do pracy. Rano zrobiłam odrosty henną (strasznie rozwodniłam niechcący i farbowanie to było wyzwanie). Później 2 godziny w turbanie. Jeszcze później lunch i drzemka przed pracą.
Położyłam się wcześniej niż zwykle bo chciałam by mój organizm maksymalnie się regenerował. Nic tak nie leczy jak łóżko, ale niestety nie mam na to tyle czasu ile bym chciała. Poza tym byłam dziś wyjątkowo głodna...
Może moje wirusy są tez głodne!? 😆
***
Jutro mój S. wziął wolne. Jak się prześpię, to trochę posprzątamy w domu i spakujemy się na ten wyjazd. Wyjeżdżamy w sobotę rano i wracamy w poniedziałek. Mamy jeden dzień dla siebie w naszym rodzinnym Białymstoku.
***
Na te wyjazdowe 3 dni zaplanowałam kolejne czerwcowe DBLK (Dni Bez Liczenia Kalor1i). Bez przesady - nie mam zamiaru wozić ze sobą wagi kuchennej 🤣... a i tak bywało...
Raczej nie planuje żarcia ponad stan. Tego weselnego jedzenia też się za bardzo nie boje - po prostu zjem sobie główne danie, kawałek tortu, trochę jakiejś sałatki i potańczę. Kiedy człowiek się nie gł0dzi, to taki pełen żarcia stół przestaje budzić emocje... A jedzenie ...cóż jak pół życia zmagasz się z €D to i tak bez wyrzutów sumienia się nie obejdzie.
Czy dopuszczam wzrost na wadze? - yes... Czy się tym martwię -not really...Co "zepsuję", to w ciągu następnego tygodnia naprawię. Tak to działa.
Marzy mi się niedzielny obiad w Barze Słonecznym ...Ciekawe czy będzie otwarty 🤔.
***
A poza tym dawno nie było kotospamu, więc dziś parę fotek naszych "włochatych dzieci"
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Dobrej nocy wam życzę i tradycyjnie pozdrawiam wszystkich nocnych stróżów i nocną zmianę na Tmblerze 🌙🌛🌝
No i zapraszam na mojego bloga o Magic The Gathering. Dziś jest nowy post 😉
@pozartamtg
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oncanvas · 2 years ago
Photo
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Crosstown Bus, Richard Estes, 2018
Oil on panel 19 ¾ x 14 ⅛ in. (50.2 x 35.9 cm)
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animalcrossingshowdown · 2 years ago
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I wasn't planing to do results for the species polls to keep it ~casual~ but whatever here they are anyway
Goat 🐐 93% / Gorilla 🦍 7%
Cat 🐈 87.7% / Bovine 🐄 12.3%
Rabbit 🐇 83.4% / Rhino 🦏 16.6%
Cub 🧸 81.2% / Chicken 🐓 18.8%
Wolf 🐺 79.6% / Tiger 🐅 20.4%
Octopus 🐙 75.8% / Ostrich 🦩 24.2%
Mouse 🐁 73% / Monkey 🐒 27%
Penguin 🐧 69.3% / Pig 🐖 30.7%
Hamster 🐹 69.2% / Hippo 🦛 30.8%
Bear 🐻 67.1% / Bird 🐦‍⬛ 32.9%
Koala 🐨 66% / Lion 🦁 34%
Duck 🦆 65% / Eagle 🦅 35%
Frog 🐸 64.1% / Elephant 🐘 35.9%
Deer 🦌 63.2% / Dog 🐕 36.8%
Horse 🐎 62.3% / Kangaroo 🦘 37.7%
Sheep 🐑 55.3% / Squirrel 🐿️ 44.7%
Alligator 🐊 52.3% / Anteater 🐜 47.7%
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