I mean, it looks more like a Jeep or a Bronco if you ask me.
millie
Yeah, maybe. I hope so. I feel like they could just have rat races, throw it on youtube, and make a bit of money for more funding if they really wanted to. I'd watch.
Interesting article! A bit weird that they felt the need to plug the ugliest vehicle ever created, but the findings are certainly interesting! It's hard not to read enthusiasm into that little rat scooting along in its rat car!
It's disheartening to think that at the end of the experiment they'll just kill the poor thing, though. Like, I get not wanting to use the same rats from study to study so that you have a proper control, but there has to be a less heartless way of doing that.
Don't drag the rest of us into her shit. Being trans has nothing to do with why she's a shitty person. We're not here to beg for your approval before we get to be who we are, and we don't need it. Pick another hill.
As much as I'd love for more progressive states to be able to bring our ideals and innovations to the rest of the country, at the end of the day I'd much rather we do our thing and they do theirs than they dictate to us that we have to move backward. I can think of much worse things than Massachusetts getting to be Massachusetts and Texas getting to be Texas. Maybe we could even stop giving so much money to red payee states that drag us down collectively with their authoritarian reactionary bullshit.
Well if a professional condescending hate-monger says it, it must be true!
Oh fuck off, Sam.
404 demanding my private information to access their article about how I shouldn't give my private information to companies.
How about we start with a third party that's actually serious about being a third party rather than just showing up every 4 years to syphon votes? Like, you know, a party that actually runs at the local level and participates in Democracy. One of the big differences between our "third parties" and minority political parties in Europe, for instance, is that theirs actually participate in government. They work at smaller levels of government rather than just expecting to somehow get a prime minister. They build coalitions. They foster voter confidence by actually doing something.
The closest thing we have to that is literally just Bernie Sanders on his own. One guy does a better job at being something resembling a third party than any existing third party in the United States. That's impressive for Bernie and absolutely pathetic for "third parties".
Second? Once those third parties build up some actual participation in government and develop coalitions, use that growing power to give themselves a mathematical chance of actually winning.
Third? Don't run a candidate until the first two are done. Because anything short of that is literally just enabling the Republicans to push both parties further and further to the right.
Do that and actually run on a platform I'd like to see more than Democratic neoliberalism and I'll put them in the first slot in my runoff or ranked choice or whatever vote. Until then? Not a chance in the world. I don't care how many times the DNC shoots themselves in the foot. Until the math is there and a party shows they're actually willing to participate in all levels of government I'm not interested in propping up one of two egotists and their "party".
I'd vote for Bernie in a ranked choice election in a second, though. I don't care if he's literally 100 years old.
Good to hear! Thanks!
Good riddance. I hope they succeed.
Sometimes it's hard to know whether it'd be better, as a blueberry bush, to be relocated from harm's way or to hold out hope that the path of destructive changes will be routed around the ground they grow in. Those making the changes to the soil probably won't prioritize them, even if those who are stewards of their particular patch of soil do.
Transplanting can be a shock, and it's hard to know what the situation is beneath the surface before it's time to put down roots and see how they grow. It's probably a good strategy for many of these plants, but it leaves uncertainty for each individual patch.
It's definitely a lot to think about. For blueberries.