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You should try reading. From your link:

Did you read those statistics? Did you read my post? Those numbers completely affirm what I just said.

I disagree with your basic logic principle as those people are also human. And Transgerder issues go far beyond biological abnormality.

Maybe not philosophically, but biologically and taxonomically, they are.

Thank you.

Yeah, I’m not sure if you understand word empirically. At any rate, it is true there’s been past problems that outweighed current problems (e.g., slavery). But there seems to be an uptick of racially based crimes recently. Possibly it’s because they’re more reported on, and possibly it’s because they seem more

Good to know, and thanks for posting it. I’m a US citizen, living abroad, and I’m making a trip back in the summer. There are some important concerns about data from my research work if I bring my computer back with me.

your name stands for Jokes of Mass Destruction, yes?

I’m taking this question at surface value:

Living in Germany. Here they eat burgers with a knife and fork. They serve them in an unwieldly bun arrangement, and overload the fixings, so you kind of need the knife and fork. They think it’s American food, so it has to be huge and overflowing. I’ve been tryinig to explain these things aren’t burgers, but

Been there. Wait. The game will be better, the system and the system will work better too.

So I actually teach methods in public research via surveys. I did not find one question on the whole survey that was clear, unbiased, and just overall in the general ballpark of scientific polling standards.

Hey, I love Harrison as much as anyone, but if the man at 70+ wants to kill himself by airplane, that’s his body, his choice. Let’s all just find a nice stretch of uninhabited land for him to do it on. Maybe somewhere in Wyoming?

And the straw man award goes to...

I think we’re talking cross-purposes. I only meant he made no points saying it was capitalist, but that it was monetized. You were stressing how it was not a capitalist one. We’re also agreeing with each other that it was an advanced economy. I also didn’t say it was free, but it had some elements of a free market

My favorite part of this story? The suggested link to a 5 year old article about urban development and the sinking of Venice. I’m thinking of naming my 1st born Urban. Not because I’m an OSU fan (although I am), but just to confuse the shit out of some more algorithms.

This is interesting. A while back, I heard that the masks were not to keep you from getting sick, but to keep you from being contagious when you are already sick.

Yeah, I’m working on an advanced degree in Education research, and I get what you’re saying. In our field, we’re taught to direct to potentailly 2 different audiences: Educators and researchers. The work we produce can vary dramatically depending on the the target audience of that given work. But I still think there’s

Just wanted to say, keep up the good work. I doscovered your podcasts with the last release, and you do a great job at addressing a complex topic in an engaging way.

I listened to the podcast earlier this week. He clearly argues that it is a monetized society and a complex agrarian economy. And while maybe nto a true “Free-Market Capitalist” economy, it had elements of free markets, coupled with social welfare and support systems that we have in today’s economic systems. A