GoblinCampFollower
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2018
- Messages
- 5,203
- SL Rez
- 2007
Yeah..... Her estimate was obviously very low... my guess is one SMALL fart is over 25ml. 5ml for a whole day was obviously very low.
Say, what? No amusing tale about slipping in the shower and, "I guess the potato just kinda ...?"
If only Diogenes could be here to see this.
OMG. Took me over a month-and-a-half to get this.Don't be a cynic.
I hope you've not been returning to it day after day the past 6 weeks to figure it out.OMG. Took me over a month-and-a-half to get this.![]()

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has delayed the release of a report showing that the Covid-19 vaccine cut hospitalizations and emergency room visits for healthy adults by half last winter.
The Washington Post reports that acting CDC director Jay Bhattacharya made the decision because he was purportedly concerned about the report’s methodology, even though it has been used by the agency for years to examine vaccine effectiveness for other respiratory viruses like the flu.
In fact, the agency published a similar report about the flu vaccine with the same methodology on March 12 in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The Covid-19 vaccine report had cleared the CDC’s scientific review process, and was scheduled to be published in the MMWR before Bhattacharya’s decision.
I do not understand how these people can be so maliciously stupid.
//Putting on my tinfoil hat here but ...I do not understand how these people can be so maliciously stupid.
This is a scary read: Trump's talk of 'bad genes' is rooted in eugenics. Experts explain why it's making a comebackMany people were shocked to read allegations last year by Donald Trump’s nephew, Fred Trump III, about his uncle: Fred, whose son William has intellectual and developmental disabilities, reported that the elder Trump said during his first presidential term that people like William should “just die.”
That is shocking—but it’s not surprising. The comment falls into a pattern of eugenicist and ableist views that Trump has espoused all the way back to the 1980s, when he spoke openly about the importance of having “the right genes” in an appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show.
Immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country,” he said at a rally last year.
“Many of them murdered far more than one person, and they’re now happily living in the United States,” he said earlier this month. “You know, now a murderer, I believe this, it’s in their genes. And we got a lot of bad genes in our country right now.”
The former president’s language underscores a larger trend, experts tell STAT. The eugenics movement is once again taking center stage in the U.S. — both in the immigration policies and rhetoric promoted by Trump, and through a rise in race science in academic literature.