oujii
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;-)

Most cities are actually “The City,” in the common parlance of the surrounding metro region. To people in Grosse Point, Detroit is The City. To people in Aurora, Chicago is The City. To people in New Jersey, New York is obviously The City. To people in Cambridge, Boston is The City. To people in the Bay Area, SF is

You’re free to have your opinion, of course— I wouldn’t argue otherwise. I’m simply saying that there’s no documented correlation between known meldonium use and “known for fitness,” because 1) while there certainly is a widely-held belief that meldonium use was common, prior to the ban there were no publicly

No, neither I, nor any commentators I follow, have noticed any significant drop-offs in fitness among the top players; nor am I aware of any info on which, if any, were using meldonium prior to the ban, apart from those who tested positively during the post-ban latency period, before it cleared their systems.

Legally, it is.

Those are multiple different generations, though. You named some of the best known players out of the last 4 decades of tennis, all but one of whom were number 1 at some point— which isn’t exactly disproving the point.

Yeah, “most successful player still active on tour” is the way to express that I think.

While I actually like Maria, “the most successful on-court woman not named Williams” is debatable at best.

Heh

Exactly this. Legal states all require labeling, and you can buy edibles with 5 or 10 mg doses, and portion out. And you can buy flowers with different strengths and effects depending on what you want to achieve. Stronger pot is available if you want it, but you don’t have to buy it.

I’d think an indica with a high CBD content would be appropriate for some 0f those symptoms.

What’s happened imho is that growers have gotten much better at producing consistently high-THC strains, so while high-potency strains were available 20 or 30 years ago, you had no guarantee that you’d be able to regularly obtain them. What’s really changed is quality control. However, in states with legalization

THC has never been shown to stop breathing, or cause any other potentially fatal complications, absent other combining drugs or medications. It could have an additive effect which is dangerous, but on its own, has never been demonstrated to have these effects.

Never fatal. There are no fatalities.

Yes, Colorado reported up at least half: from single digits to barely double digits. When you’re saying: “it’s a giant increase” it’s important to assess what that increase is *from.* I.e. the base matters. The base was tiny in this case. It almost never happens.

Percentage-wise, it’s true that there was a “huge uptick” in Colorado, the only state for which this has been reported (to my knowledge). However, the actual change was from 8 kids in 2014, pre-legalization, to 16 in 2015— which, yes, is huge in *percentage* terms, but tiny in numeric terms, and remains a tiny and

I think the argument that Federer faced tougher competition, taking the whole of his career into account, is a strong one. However, it’s an argument that really only starts with Nadal, and then the advent of the Big 4 era. Federer spent a lot of time in his early and mid career beating up on the Juan Carlos Ferreros,

Graf above Navratilova is deeply silly... however, Fed and Serena are certainly the top two, the only debate being over which is first.

While I’m sure it would be easier for Aaron James to decide all of these cases via Kinja, we give some of them to judges just so you’re not overwhelmed by caseload.