Betteridge's law in shambles
what zero pussy does to a mf
It's really appreciated, modifier; thanks! But honestly, the community members are well-behaved enough that they make it easy for me to do right by them. When times are this shitty, I want them to feel like they have somewhere decent left to go.
I don't at all understand why the second law of thermodynamics is being invoked. Nonetheless, capillary condensation is already a well-studied phenomenon. As the scientific article itself notes, the innovation here over traditional capillary condensation would be the ability to easily remove the water once it's condensed.
Re: Entropy:
- Entropy is a statistical phenomenon that tends to increase over time averaged across the entire body, i.e. the Universe. Not literally every part of the Universe needs to increase its entropy as long as on average it is increasing. You're evidence of that: your body is a machine that takes entropy and pushes it somewhere else.
- Water vapor is a high-energy state compared to liquid water. What you're saying therefore is the opposite of how the second law works: water vapor's energy tends to spread out over time until it eventually cools back to a liquid. Liquid water is a higher entropy state than water vapor.
When I took over this community, I dissolved the senate, stripped them of their powers, and fucked their moms.
"It was terrible. He would spend hours telling me about how NFTs are the future and I need to get in on the ground floor."
What you've presented is a deeply biased opinion piece, and it wears this immense bias on its sleeve. It fearmongers that thinking about cats as killing wildlife could cause "extremism" (it then cites as its lone example a man who suggested banning cats in New Zealand; soooo scary). It cites some organization called "Alley Cat Allies" who call it extremely biased with ostensibly zero credentials. They cite lobbyist and serial sexual harasser Wayne Pacelle formerly of the Humane Society who questions the methodology but even concedes: "We don't quarrel with the conclusion that the impact is big." And lastly, King herself does her own analysis on this meta-analysis' methodology despite being – I emphasize – a professor of anthropology with no background in this field.
So your article has no one familiar with this field who could challenge if these statistical assumptions are actually reasonable. And here, given the authors are experts (and absent some published literature rebutting this in the 12 years since), I have no reason to believe their methodology would be so off as to meaningfully change the idea that "outdoor cats" are severely problematic.
We're going through the biggest disinformation crisis in human history thanks exclusively to the Internet's profound ability to change minds by spreading and normalizing bullshit, but "it's just not gonna work" when it's something you specifically don't want to hear.
Edit: ironically, my mind was changed after hearing someone bring this up on the Internet and then reading the scientific literature.
- I don't think most people's backyard is some kind of wildlife exclusion zone, and the problem isn't specifically that cats are killing animals in other backyards that the neighbors called "dibs" on first.
- The cat obviously isn't being attended to while it's outside.
- The owners clearly imply that their other two cats have done the same thing and brought them dead animals before.
"Outdoor cats" are an invasive species that kill billions of animals every year, are a significant contributor to dozens of species' extinction, and live shorter lives than cats properly cared for (i.e. kept indoors) including nearly 3x the risk for infections.
It's a plague. We can't keep normalizing this.
The judge also said the officers were entitled under the circumstances to qualified immunity — special legal protections that prevent people from suing over claims that police or government workers violated their constitutional rights.
And there it fucking is.
TheTechnician27
0 post score0 comment score
>no source
>"it was thought"? cool weasel wording; who thought it?
>tiny snippet offering zero context
>and then people parrot it uncritically
This is why I hate "le epic trivia!!"-style accounts; even when they're right (and they're often not), they're intellectual junk food designed for mindlessly consuming rather than learning.