rodgerscbone
Rodgers Collarbone
rodgerscbone

Oh interesting, I read something in The Guardian that it could be referring to a stone gate where a camel could get through if it were unloaded, the metaphor being that someone must unload material possessions.

It also says that it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the Kingdom of God. And that you shouldn’t blend fabrics. They don’t actually care what it says.

Yep. I think the studies that have actually quantified it used pain in their surveys, but I imagine something like “shortness of breath” descriptions would suffer the same bias.

Well that’s ng. Can anyone approved pull you out or does it have to be an author?

Why are you gray?

Know where your water shutoff valves are (both for appliances and the whole house), and make sure they actually work. I had a pipe break leading to a sink, and then discovered that the shutoff valves were broken. Had to shut water to the whole house until those valves and the broken pipe could be fixed.

These articles made me learn how to play spades online. The site I found calls them tricks. Penning a complaint to the developers now.

Yep, very good point.

Insert “This” gif here

Gotcha, so that UPS guy def needs some gloves.

Is there official guidance on how long it survives on paper (or cardboard) surfaces? The doc I heard interviewed yesterday said it wasn’t clear. Gloves and a mask sound smart regardless.

The task now is to keep enough pressure on Mnuchin

At first it seemed like there could be the upside that “at least they’re outing themselves,” but it hasn’t seemed to matter at all.

When the plastic bag taxes and bans were first coming out years ago, I remember suggestions that reusable bag use could add to disease spread (when there wasn’t a pandemic occurring). 

I know it’s been going on for a long time, but it’s still unreal to me how open they are about it these days. Like they traded whistles for air horns.

know

Even if you mean limiting to respiratory problems brought on by covid, I think it’s still quite strange not to want it.

Probably not if you’d rather die than ever be intubated.

Intubation is a very common procedure, I think you’re still confusing terms.