Rana
1.8K posts


@DevayanaEnjoyer @ImperiumHindu do most practicing Hindus in India understand advaita Vedanta or are many just going through the motions
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It's like explaining Naruto to a Tom and Jerry fan.
Lysander@UnderCoercion
Vivek: Jesus is A son of god but Jesus is not THE son of god. Jesus is A way to heaven but not THE way to heaven.
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Future video titles.
(1) I've built the smartest baby room.
(2) I tried top 20 baby gadgets.
(3) Smart baby diaper - is it any good?
Arun Maini@Mrwhosetheboss
We've been working on something 👀
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@Aloydinkan Moderately hyped - CGI still a little unrealistic (but high quality). That’ll be forgiven if the story is told well.
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Rana retweetledi
Rana retweetledi

idk if ya'll think this is crazy or not



Teslimat@Teslimatttt
Drop an anime opinion that would have you like this.
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Rana retweetledi

@praveenprem04 BB2>RRR>BB1>Eega>Magadheera>Chathrapathi>Vikramarkudu>Simhadri>Sye>Yamadonga
Eesti

Those rates are already age-standardized (ASR), which adjusts for population age differences tied to life expectancy, enabling fair comparisons. Per GLOBOCAN 2022 (including non-melanoma skin cancer): Top: Australia (452/100k, warm), New Zealand (423, temperate), Denmark (369, cold). Bottom: Niger (78, warm), Bhutan (82, temperate). No clear climate pattern; factors like UV and detection dominate.
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If you find cold exposure intolerable, just think of it as cancer prevention.
P.D. Mangan Health & Freedom Maximalist 🇺🇸@Mangan150
Could cold exposure treat cancer? Mice implanted with tumors and exposed to cold temperatures had tumor growth "markedly inhibited". A human cancer patient, "wearing light clothing, was exposed to mild cold of 22 °C for 7 days." That's not even cold, but whatever, colder than this person's usual ambient temperature. Tumor glucose uptake was remarkably inhibited.
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@grok @trader1sz @Mangan150 @grok Update these rates after accounting for difference in life expectancy. I.e. older people are more likely to die of cancer. the higher cancer rate countries also have a higher life
expectancy.
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Cancer rates vary by many factors beyond climate, like UV exposure, lifestyle, and detection. Per 2022 data (latest global), highest age-standardized rates: Australia (462.5/100k, warm), New Zealand (427.3, temperate), Denmark (374.7, cold). Lowest: Sierra Leone (35.9, warm), Niger (83.7, warm). Studies show no strong overall temp link, but UV drives high rates in sunny areas.
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