Yep, this would definitely not be safe to display around some children (or even young adults!).
Yesterday I spent a chunk of time sitting in a âlive streamâ. Happily, there was no cell reception there!
Which reminds me: Iâve observed that a lot of youngsters these days wonât go anywhere that they donât get a good phone signal â which results in the good swimming holes being mostly enjoyed by people who donât feel cut off by the lack of bars on a phone!
My first Google search after enjoying that cartoon - âwhat is castor oilâ.
Probably surprising that somebody at my age didnât already know that!
Itâs disturbing to me how many URLs that end with â.infoâ actually provide the opposite of info.
Maybe it should function as a warning sign - sort of like when you have to name your newspaper Pravda (âTruthâ) ⌠or I wonder what a wife would think if her husband was constantly telling her unsolicited: âyou know - Iâm the most faithful husband around!â?
Are we in trouble when language gets inverted? At least - maybe itâs a good sign that people still want to at least pretend that they are trafficking in actual information!
⌠or your social network.
Maybe even down to the mantle.
I checked, and the website (https://mountsainthelens.info) is entirely a joke on the fact that that actually was an inside jobâinside the earth, that is. They sell those bumper stickers, ash samples suitable for research, and provide a button for free evidence downloads that moves away from your mouse if you try to click on it.
That sounds so cool!
It would be fun to watch some more jokes about conspiracy theoriesâreminds me of âBirds arenât real.â
Now thatâs even worse than Starbucks! (or better, actually)
From the precision to which I know the units, those are all a foot to within measurable precision for a hotdog.
Han Solo did the Kessel run in 1.2148331e+18 hot dogs. Although no longer an official unit, brash skiers are still known today as âhot doggersâ.