AnsaCervicalis
489 posts


@CaryKelly11 Business is booming for oncologist in Illinois and Ohio
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Umm, isn't this a human rights violation? The government is failing its duty to protect citizens from involuntary exposure to harmful substances.


Alex Clark@yoalexrapz
To piggyback off of yesterday’s bombshell glyphosate hearing in Florida—here is my recent lab work showing how much glyphosate is in my body as someone who eats ALL ORGANIC. This is a neurotoxin that American’s cannot escape from in our soil and water. It doesn’t wash off produce. It’s a known carcinogen.
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@romanhelmetguy Reward the efforts of the hard work again and let America flourish
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I just want everyone to understand that America has not been trying. We bully our smart kids. We spend 1000 times more on special education than gifted and talented programs. We eliminated honors classes in the name of equality. We even came up with a replacement for phonics so stupid that half our kids can’t read. Then we take the smartest kids that survive this system, and we racially and sexually discriminate against them for entry into college. Then we do that again when they apply for their first job. And again for every job after that. Then we undercut them in favor of foreign labor that’ll do worse work for cheaper. Most kids see this and just say “fuck it” and focus on sports, or trying to be an influencer, or just give up on trying altogether. Meanwhile in places like China every kid spends 16 hours a day studying trig tables or gets the belt. Yet America is still number one. In everything. There is so much latent potential in the American people. We have tried before. We crossed a continent and carved this country out of clay. We recrossed the oceans and conquered the world by accident as a favor to our friends. One day (hopefully soon), we are going to start trying again. America will wake up. Don’t be on the wrong side when it does.
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2 years sober.
Sobriety didn't magically fix me, it just gave me the opportunity to fix myself.
Alcohol, weed, stims, nic, food, porn, scrolling- it's all the same shit. Coping mechanisms to help us avoid the demons. Being sober these past few years allowed me to finally conquer mine.
/end_thread
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@jenfassino you can always go to a different clinic in the US and get it done for half. Also if you leave the US to get it done and something happens then it will cost to get it fixed by clinician wherever you went.
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The US is a scam- $5200-$7500 for a root canal and crown! My back tooth broke randomly and I have a short time to figure out next steps because the pain is unbearable
I can fly anywhere out of the US for way cheaper and get dental work done at a fraction of the cost. Give me recommendations because this is insane!
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@honestpollster Only if they have the merit to back it up. We import the genius and not the poop finger
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@SanDiegoKnight It’s class divide. Shareholders pressure the execs and the board to generate profits. Profits can only increase with value generation or cost cutting. Cost cutting is easier than generating more value so it’s chosen more often.
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The real H-1B fight isn’t left vs right.
It’s inside MAGA itself.
Politico breaks it down this way:
• Trump is framing H-1Bs more softly, talking about factories, training, and long-term competitiveness.
• Vance-aligned populists are pushing a hard crackdown: fraud, OPT abuse, wage suppression, outsourcing, and stricter limits on corporate use.
• It’s framed as a generational divide inside MAGA … older voices leaning business-friendly, younger populists demanding real enforcement and worker-first reforms.
The movement agrees on protecting American workers, but not on how aggressive the visa policy and messaging should be.
politico.com/newsletters/po…

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@Uziel212121 @AvdullahYousef Not every needs it taken out. But there are justifiable reasons for those that do need them extracted.
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@AvdullahYousef Sometimes I feel weird that mine have never given me any issues-
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Yeah bros don’t let Big Dental lie to you

Balázs Doryphoros 🌴@PannonianMantis
Never, and I mean NEVER under any circumstance get your wisdom teeth removed
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@LordGhost____ Business class flight is easily 9k for one person…. Get 2 tickets for a loved one and you’ve burned almost 20k.
60k is the new 30k.
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Linn's Leverage #892 is out: (Link in tweet below)
@ether_fi
@boros_fi
@pendle_fi
@aarnasays
@maplefinance
@Mantle_Official
@GearboxProtocol
@GammaSwapLabs
Like/Repost to support:

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@theNOBSdentist @PGC1a_RB Do you find coq10 helpful for saliva generation?
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It happened again this morning, and it’s sadly becoming a joke at this point.
I walked into Starbucks, and the shelf that just a couple of days ago was full of holiday merchandise for the new season was completely empty.
Again.
When I asked the barista, they confirmed it: someone walked in, calmly cleared the shelves, and walked out without a care.
They of course aren’t allowed to stop them - that would be nonsensical.
The barista told me that even if they call the police, it takes hours for them to arrive, and nothing happens anyway. This is just the new normal.
The folks at Target told me the same thing when I watched a guy fill two entire bags and just calmly walk out with a smile on his face as he was surrounded by security that could do nothing to stop him.
Some might say, "So what? Starbucks or Target are massive companies, and a few missing holiday items don’t matter."
But it does matter. It makes order meaningless. It erodes the social fabric—the part of society that values integrity and accountability.
What do kids think when they see this? What does it mean to the person who saves up to buy a special Starbucks mug as a gift for their uncle? It sends the message that stealing is fine, that rules don’t apply, and that no one cares.
I don’t know what to do, but shrugging this off feels like a massive failure. Starbucks will restock the shelves, and they’ll just be cleared again. There are no consequences, so the thieves will keep coming back. And where does that leave us?
A seemingly minor crime like this has far-reaching implications. It’s not just about stolen mugs—it’s about the creeping normalization of lawlessness.
Years ago, New York City adopted a policy to address graffiti immediately. Graffiti may seem like a small crime, but tackling it sent a big message: small acts of disorder would not be tolerated. Crime rates dropped because the city prioritized order.
Now, I find myself dreading the day I have to explain to my son why some people can just walk in and take what they want, or why we pay for the subway while others effortlessly jump the turnstile. These small acts of defiance aren’t harmless—they chip away at our society, slowly at first and then all at once.
We need to bring back the lessons learned from the graffiti-removal days. This can’t go unchecked—it needs to stop, no matter if the resources it would take are great. The short-term expense is worth it.
The costs of not doing something now is too high.
It's not too late.

StripMallGuy@realEstateTrent
Starbucks this morning, Upper East Side, New York City. Guy walks in, calmly clears the place of merchandise, and walks out.
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