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@Dead_Inside_079 That it was really Saturday morning not Sunday so my weekend wasn’t over 😩😩
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@sciencegirl Yes, but that’s because mankind is awesome and sometimes courage and belief is all you need to change the world 🤷♀️🤷♀️
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@EmilySm43 Why, that is assuming all other factors are 100% identical which they never are 🤷♀️🤷♀️🤷♀️
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@amna49854 I’d assume cause no one was in their car when they got there, and they wanted to eat dinner… it’s not rocket science 🤔🤔
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@Ravenismeee I feel this but I got nothing 🤷♀️🤷♀️ so I guess it’s just called life 🙄🙄
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@mrmikeMTL Stay calm, say this is what I heard you say (repeated back exactly) then ask how they wanted me to respond to a comment like that, proceed from there, but you’ve stolen their thunder now 🤷♀️🤷♀️
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@EllSimonds I suppose to each their own, but that kind of mate is not for me 🤷♀️🤷♀️
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The ruling could have sweeping consequences for minority representation in government and the balance of power in Congress.
time.com/article/2026/0…
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@Rainmaker1973 I love this idea, harnessing the body’s power to heal itself, brilliant, does anyone know why specifically they chose pig tissue as the replacement?
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In a groundbreaking development, researchers have engineered a novel therapy that tricks the immune system into treating tumors as incompatible pig tissue, triggering a powerful and immediate rejection response.
A team at Guangxi Medical University has pioneered a “tumor-to-pork” approach that reprograms the body’s defenses against advanced cancers. The technique employs a modified Newcastle disease virus, harmless to humans, that has been engineered to express pig genes. When this virus enters the tumor, it coats the cancerous cells with pig-like markers. The immune system then perceives the malignancy as a foreign organ transplant and mounts an aggressive attack to destroy it.
Early clinical results have been striking. In a study involving 23 patients with advanced, treatment-resistant cancers — including liver, lung, and ovarian tumors — the therapy achieved a remarkable 90% success rate. Patients received weekly infusions, leading to substantial tumor shrinkage and, in some cases, complete remission, with minimal side effects reported.
As the treatment advances into larger Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials, this innovative strategy represents a promising new frontier in oncology. By harnessing the body’s natural rejection mechanisms, it offers renewed hope for patients battling aggressive and hard-to-treat cancers.
[Zhao, Y., et al. (2024). Induction of Xenogeneic Rejection-like Response for Cancer Therapy. Cell]

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@Kekius_Sage Nothing is 100% we still don’t know what we don’t know/haven’t learned
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@Oldtimers365 If it doesn’t kill you it’ll make you stronger… let’s just say I am a proud graduate of life’s school of Hard Knocks 🤣🤣
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@saniyafatma1278 Depends do u want to be a freeloading mooch or a decent human being… I’d much rather drive in peace than ride with someone who lived 5 ft from my house so think about that
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@2footgiraffe @soydantaylor They must’ve never seen that movie supersize 🤔🤔
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@LensScientific I would say absolutely… who else would have created all the laws of the universe. God uses /designed/organized scientific laws principles, he doesn’t have a magic wand he has a greater understanding of laws of nature then any of us 🤷♀️🤷♀️
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