Q.E.D
Tru
It is the material on the pans, but the only case where the companies making the stuff were successfully sued was when they were caught for dumping intermediates of the chemical in to a tributary of Ohio river.
It’s hard to pin down how impactful the coatings on the pans are because of how many other sources of these kinds of fluorocarbons are in house hold items, and in the environment due to large companies disposing of them recklessly. We know for a fact that basically everyone has some level of these compounds in them due to their ubiquity.
The pans are just one potential source and a particularly notable one because they’re in contact with food.
Oh dats a good reaction image, yoink.
Inside the plutonium nugget.
Nah hear me out, the time line where Perot wins is worse.
Like, he’s a funny little foot note now, and a quick glance at what he ran on seems pretty innocuous, if a bit eccentric. But the more you dig in to what he actually believed and how he behaved, the more you realize he probably would have been worse than Regan.
As I understand it, any browser on iPhone has to be built on WebKit, so even if you install fire fox or chrome, it’s running on a totally different web engine than the desktop version. Making them more safari re-skins in the same way that stuff like brave or opera are just chrome reskins.
No answer just curious as well, I’d love a good text to speech function. There are so many books I want to “read” but don’t have audiobooks for them, I have a hard time focusing on text for very long, so it hard to get through longer things.
Honestly, the general consensus seems to not me “don’t enjoy the game” it seems more to be “do not pay for the game.”
Cats, it’s just… there as so many “take a shot if…” games you can do with it, all of which risk alcohol poisoning by the end.
And every time you see it… you understand it less some how. Not just understand it less as in plot, but as in how it came to be, why it was made, as if it is some kind of singularity of absurdity in the movie industry that becomes harder to observe the further we move away from it.
So, thing is USDA guarantees a minimum price for stuff like corn and dairy, paying the difference between the actual market price and the minimum price to farmers. So the market price for them will drop but production won’t, and chances are, most of the stuff will end up getting thrown out or used in utterly absurd way. Closing USAID just removes a potential useful outlet for the surplus. Rather than corn getting used for subsidizing food costs in other countries, it’ll be up getting used to make potting soil, gasoline and dry wall. Not because it makes economic sense to do so, but because the government will pay the economic losses that are inherent in such wasteful use cases.