Best video you'll ever see on the topic imo (and very short)
Sasha
The huge caveat here is assuming gravity is quantised in the same way as the other forces, gravitons don't need to exist for gravity to exist. This is just the beauty argument of string theory with a new name, it's cool and I love this type of stuff because it's amazingly satisfying, but that's not enough to make it reality.
Don't get me wrong, this is still useful work but I kinda hate the way quanta reports on a lot of physics...
Corporations have absolutely no incentive to change, consumers need to vote with their wallets if they want something to happen. But no, everytime someone points out this blindingly obvious fact we get the "uhm actually corporations need to change, it's not my fault they're feeding off my unsustainable habits."
We have to work together, we only have power to effect change when we work together, solidarity is our strength.
There's a podcast I used to listen to that ends the intro with "and there is no welcome mat" and in one episode they immediately welcomed a guest named Matt.
Why does this kinda look like Doug Walker?
Okay but loser mode sounds pretty good ngl
If Fender uses bone, they're probably a whole lot more selective about it. My nut only splintered because it was a dodgy part, I don't think it's the norm. Sigma makes relatively cheap guitars, so I wouldn't hold Fender to the same standard.
https://www.colemansmusic.com.au/products/sigma-000mc-15e-mahogany-auditorium
Under the features section here they're listed as bone. I hadn't actually looked it up as I own one and bone is pretty different from plastic, especially when it splinters like mine did.
Considering all the failures we see with water distributors just faking tests, I fully expect that this would just lead to someone dumping a bunch of live virus in the water supply lol
Guitar maker sigma uses bone for it's nuts and probably bridges too. I'm not sure about Epiphone, they used a plastic nut on my LP but for all I know the inlays are some sort of shellfish.
It's also highly highly likely that a lot of guitars use shellac which is produce by an insect, especially likely for accoustic and classical guitars.
It's lean, gamey and has a much richer taste than beef. I've been veggo for a while now so my memory isn't super trustworthy, but I grew up on the stuff.
As a sausage (kanga banga) it's fairly dry, going for the mince and having it in a sauce is the best way to serve it imo.
Thanks for this, that's a fantastic way to phrase it.