Incoming "this is fine actually" in 3...2...You know, this is supposed to be a thread on DeSantis, so I got something for that.
Incoming "this is fine actually" in 3...2...You know, this is supposed to be a thread on DeSantis, so I got something for that.
An ironic response when you didn't manage to read what Phoenix said. Let's try again: "the bill literally says nothing about what kids can and cannot say." It applies only to classroom instruction and course materials.You are, as always, a terrible reader.
That isn't fine as written, I just don't believe her. This is the woman who was tasked to manage a GIS interface with covid data, who refused to comply when the actual health experts told her what to show on the map. She wanted to do things like show positive antibody tests as new cases, which could be useful if you're trying to gauge the scale of the pandemic retrospectively, but isn't at all useful if you're trying to represent current trends. She was told not to post the data that way. Then she was fired. Then after being fired, she hijacked Florida's emergency alert system from her house, which is super illegal. She filed for wrongful termination and was given whistleblower status until the courts determined her allegations of wrongdoing were totally unsubstantiated. In response to that, she photoshopped a letter she received from the State to try and make it look like they validated her claims.Incoming "this is fine actually" in 3...2...
For reference, this is the bill mentioned in that tweet: https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2023/1421/BillText/c2/PDFThis is what "eradicating transgenderism" looks like. Any **** who wants to pretend that this isn't genocide can get fucked.
These are threats of violence and need to be met with the same.
I get chills and light-headedness when it gets low, in particular. Except for that one time where I don't really know because I'm missing a couple of hours during which I drove about 15 miles, plowed into a parking lot, tore the front end out of my car and where my memory starts being coherent again I'm in the back of an ambulance with a glucose IV already in, an EMT on one side squeezing a tube of glucose gel into my face and an EMT on the other side testing my glucose and it coming up 43. According to their notes it was too low to measure when they first got to me. Only been remotely that low once in 30 years of being a type I diabetic.you're likely to feel like shit occasionally because of the effects of low glucose on brain function. So, I think I'll pass.
This guy's got 43 glucoses! Put another glucose in him, stat! Did no one tell him breakfast is the most least bad important meal of the day?!an EMT on the other side testing my glucose and it coming up 43.
An ironic response when you didn't manage to read what Phoenix said. Let's try again: "the bill literally says nothing about what kids can and cannot say." It applies only to classroom instruction and course materials.
Nobody cares what you have to say, you're a clown.During a subcommittee hearing in the Florida House on Wednesday, Republican state Rep. Stan McClain said his bill would include restrictions on girls talking about their menstrual cycles. The legislation doesn't specifically mention periods or menstruation but McClain told a subcommittee hearing that it would include restrictions on conversations about girls' menstrual cycles.
You still haven't comprehended the statement you're responding to.Nobody cares what you have to say, you're a clown.
He could have said the bill was printed on white paper and it would have been equally as important to the point of the bill.You still haven't comprehended the statement you're responding to.
Bills affect things beyond the words used in them.You still haven't comprehended the statement you're responding to.
Well, yes. Diabetes (especially Type 1) is a pretty touch condition to live with, you have my sympathies. Why give yourself some similar symptoms from diet voluntarily? I cannot help but feel that such symptoms are probably an indication that the diet is maybe not the best idea.I get chills and light-headedness when it gets low, in particular. Except for that one time where I don't really know because I'm missing a couple of hours during which I drove about 15 miles, plowed into a parking lot, tore the front end out of my car and where my memory starts being coherent again I'm in the back of an ambulance with a glucose IV already in, an EMT on one side squeezing a tube of glucose gel into my face and an EMT on the other side testing my glucose and it coming up 43. According to their notes it was too low to measure when they first got to me. Only been remotely that low once in 30 years of being a type I diabetic.
A friend of a friend is using Ozempic and apparently it really works, in much the same way that massively starving yourself generally will lead to weight loss. From the little I've read about it, most people who come off Ozempic (and the new NHS treatment is limited to 2 years) regain the weight because it doesn't instill better dietary choices, you just aren't hungry: nothing about your perception of or relationship with food has changed. Not that you're limited to the NHS treatment, you can just buy it on the internet and cause a shortage for people who really need it.I would suggest the main value of a particular diet is that the person dieting finds it sufficiently satisfying or motivating to keep to it, because sticking to diets can be relatively hard.
Yeah, that sounds about right. Ozempic is semaglutide, which was originally a med for type II diabetes to boost the body's insulin production, but is also an appetite suppressant. It's not that common for T2 diabetes treatment though - to give some idea, the first line treatment is metformin, which is used by well over twenty times as many people. The other main diet drug I know of is orlistat, which reduces absorbtion of fats in the gut (and thus can cause very unpleasant, greasy stools).A friend of a friend is using Ozempic and apparently it really works, in much the same way that massively starving yourself generally will lead to weight loss. From the little I've read about it, most people who come off Ozempic (and the new NHS treatment is limited to 2 years) regain the weight because it doesn't instill better dietary choices, you just aren't hungry: nothing about your perception of or relationship with food has changed. Not that you're limited to the NHS treatment, you can just buy it on the internet and cause a shortage for people who really need it.
Developing better eating and activity habits foremost will lead to weightloss. No diet plan will work for everyone. You have tofind a way you want to eat for the rest of your life. Amd people respond differently to different diets. In one study it was found that skipping breakfast can actually lead to weight gain when calories are the same because it can lead to feeling sluggish in the morning which can reduce non exercise activity meaning sometimes that reduction in expenditure is greater than the reduction in intake.Well, yes. Diabetes (especially Type 1) is a pretty touch condition to live with, you have my sympathies. Why give yourself some similar symptoms from diet voluntarily? I cannot help but feel that such symptoms are probably an indication that the diet is maybe not the best idea.
More calories used than consumed over a protracted period of time is going to reduce to weight. That's the way it is, the only way it can be. How a person does that precisely - what diet, and the balance of diet and exercise - is I suspect much less important. I would suggest the main value of a particular diet is that the person dieting finds it sufficiently satisfying or motivating to keep to it, because sticking to diets can be relatively hard.
That is literally how you treat it, yes. Or another sugar that can be readily transformed into glucose. I mean I left off the unit (mg/dL) if you prefer mmol/L 43 would be something closer to maple syrup?This guy's got 43 glucoses! Put another glucose in him, stat!
Most days I eat two meals a day (typically one ~9AM and the other ~6PM, both often a bit later on weekends), with the occasional snack if my blood sugar starts to drop (since the accident I wear a CGM, my wife insists). What really throws me is a very high protein/fat meal that's relatively low carb (say Brazilian steakhouse), as they tend to have little blood sugar impact up front and then a rise several hours later that levels off higher than it should be and then refuses to budge for a while. I also have what they call "dawn phenomenon", where I wake up and my blood sugar starts spontaneously climbing, but not every day.Did no one tell him breakfast is the most least bad important meal of the day?!
I used to be vegetarian. The fact that my girlfriend at the time lived with me when I was consuming 160g of protein a day mostly of eggs and dairy is either proof that she did love me or it was the beginning of the end.My high-protein diet means the pathetic dog will never win this fart competition, I just have too much power.
Wouldn't have happened if they had more guns.Florida just passed a Constitutional Carry law
Somehow, the *first* person to open fire isn't getting charged because of Stand Your Ground laws. Bizarre
Correction, wouldn't have happened if the kids had more guns. They presumably had none, and thus no way to protect themselves from guns.Wouldn't have happened if they had more guns.
If everyone is shooting then no one is a bystander.Correction, wouldn't have happened if the kids had more guns. They presumably had none, and thus no way to protect themselves from guns.