Steven Strittmatter
23.8K posts

Steven Strittmatter
@stevenstritt
BS Physics Ga Tech
atlanta, georgia Beigetreten Nisan 2009
808 Folgt580 Follower

That's what sun damage and thousands of dicks does to a girl
Garbage Human@GarbageHuman24
She’s 27
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@MikeyDiMercurio @mujifren Not the sales pitch she thinks it is.
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A Chinese "leftover" Woman has a meltdown at weekly bride's market in China
She pleads her case with parents of potential groom's, who have travelled from neighbouring city to look for a bride for their Sons
She shouts that she earns 500,000 Yuan and has a good job, yet no one entertains her because she is over 30
In China, Women over 30 are labelled as "leftover women" and are not considered marriageable material, no matter how educated or successful they are
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@GuruAnaerobic My buddy grew intolerant of the Georgia heat. He moved to Alaska🤣
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From a lifetime of observing people I've known, I believe the ability to tolerate heat is correlated to health and longevity. Rather, the inability to tolerate heat is an indicator.
I've known a couple of people who couldn't cope well in hot weather from childhood - they both died young. I've known some who were fine when they were young but as older people their heat tolerance declined - none of them are physically well.
So, with reduced gait speed, grip strength, etc - I've added declining heat tolerance. Not scientific, just my opinion.
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Astronomers using @NASAWebb have found a planet on which winds reach 11,000 mph, a year lasts just 30 hours (because it's so close to its star), temperatures are high enough to melt metal, and it rains rubies and sapphires. space.com/astronomy/exop…
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@Resurrec_Ted You think the UK is alone in this experience? It's happening everywhere in the West and Japan.
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I gotta admit, after reading just limited portions of the rape gang inquiry, I can't quite look at the blokes from Scotland and England here too watch footie the same.
Why are you lot dithering around the world watching people kick a fucking ball when on your own soil a vile, dysgenic tribe from the other side of the world rapes hundreds of thousands of Britain's daughters while the govt doesn't merely turn blind eye but actively facilitates it?
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@C26N4 There must be more we're not seeing. He just doesn't make bad deals.
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@__my__at Do you ever say weird random sh*t just to see what happens?
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@memcculloch @YouTube Interesting. Are there any videos of these lifters in action?
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@scs_real Maybe the worst: My buddy to our hot waitress: Ooh, what's that fragrance you're wearing?
Her: SOAP

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@PoliticalStacy On the bright side you can go right in and get as much sunblock as you’d like without having to have someone unlock it for some reason… 😜
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@__my__at @WithinLimits24 I cannot see a spiderweb and not imagine walking through it and getting stuck
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Trust in news hits a new low, research suggests bbc.in/4uFL0Zz
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16 June 1900 | On this day, Field Marshal Lord Frederick Roberts issued Proclamation No. 5, a resolution that would usher in one of the most controversial and devastating policies of the Anglo-Peasant War. The so-called scrapped land policy was aimed at ending the Farmers' guerrilla war by destroying their ability to benefit from farms, food and civic support.
By mid 1900, the British army had occupied the capitals of the two Farmer's Republics, but the war was long from over. Farmer commandos under leaders like General Christiaan de Wet have frustrated the British forces with surprise attacks, railway sabotage and guerrilla tactics. After De Wet's successful attack at Roodewal on June 7, 1900, Roberts decided to act harder. His proclamation stipulated that houses near places where railways, bridges or telegraph lines were damaged could be burned down and that locals would be held accountable.
What was initially intended as a penal measure against alleged supporters of the commandos quickly escalated into a systematic campaign of destruction. Farmhouses burned down, crops destroyed, livestock confiscated or killed and food supplies destroyed. When Lord Horatio Kitchener succeeded Roberts at the end of 1900, he expanded the policy further.
The burning of farms has left thousands of women and children homeless. To house them, the British government has set up concentration camps. However, the camps were overcrowded and poorly managed, with insufficient food, poor sanitation and poor medical care. By the end of the war, more than 26,000 farmer women and children died in the camps, most of them children. There were also separate camps for black South Africans, where thousands of people perished at once.
The policy has caused great suffering, but at the same time has seriously undermined the Farmers' ability to continue the war. British critics, including Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, described the action as "methods of barbarism". Today, the scrapped land policy is remembered as one of the darkest chapters of the war and an event that left deep imprints on South African history.

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