Alan Goodman

1.9K posts

Alan Goodman

Alan Goodman

@GoodmanAlanplus

Entrou em Temmuz 2023
275 Seguindo63 Seguidores
Terrible Maps
Terrible Maps@TerribleMaps·
Why has the US not built a canal here to rival the Panama Canal?
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Scott Manley
Scott Manley@DJSnM·
@TommyYesItsMe @elonmusk There’s a breed of tech bro AI zealot who believes the communist planned economies primarily failed because the people running them were inept and prone to human emotions. And the AI is the way to successfully run such economies.
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Scott Manley
Scott Manley@DJSnM·
Great to hear @elonmusk and the audience so excited for Iain Banks vision of Fully Automated Luxury Gay Space Communism
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@SamaHoole If you look at rice packaging, white rice lasts longer than wholegrain rice. Another possibility for the preference for white rice is that it keeps longer. Another is that white rice requires less energy and time to cook.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In the late 19th century, the Japanese Navy had a problem. The problem was beriberi: a neurological disease caused by thiamine deficiency that was killing Japanese sailors at a rate that was becoming operationally significant. Beriberi caused peripheral nerve damage, cardiovascular dysfunction, and eventually death. It was widespread among the enlisted men. It was almost entirely absent among the officers. Navy surgeon Kanehiro Takaki noticed this discrepancy in 1884. He noticed that the officers ate a more varied diet: including fish, meat, and vegetables, while the enlisted men ate almost exclusively polished white rice. He ran what is considered one of the earliest controlled nutrition experiments in history: sending two ships on the same voyage, one with the usual enlisted diet of white rice, one with a modified diet including more protein and varied food. The white rice ship lost 161 men to beriberi. The modified diet ship lost none. This is taught in medical schools as the discovery of vitamin B1 deficiency. What is less prominently taught is the implicit finding: that a diet based almost entirely on polished grain, regardless of quantity consumed, was nutritionally insufficient to keep people alive. Now scale this outward. Brown rice versus white rice is currently debated as a health question in the opposite direction from what you might expect. The conventional wisdom: "whole grains are healthier, choose brown rice over white", is contradicted by a body of evidence that finds populations switching from brown to white rice experiencing, in some contexts, improved metabolic outcomes. The reason is antinutrients. Brown rice contains phytic acid, which binds to zinc, iron, magnesium, and calcium and significantly impairs their absorption. It contains lectins. It contains tannins. The bran that makes brown rice brown is a seed defence system: a coat of compounds evolved by the plant to discourage consumption and pass through the gut intact. Milling rice removes the bran. It removes the phytic acid. It removes the lectins. It removes the fibre that slows digestion. White rice, in this analysis, is not a degraded version of brown rice : it is a detoxified version of brown rice, with the antinutrient load stripped out. This is not a fringe position. It is a testable observation about plant chemistry that agrarian populations across Asia arrived at empirically over thousands of years of practical experience with their primary staple grain. They milled their rice because milled rice felt better. Because people who ate milled rice were healthier than people who ate unmilled rice, all else being equal. The nutritional establishment that tells you whole grains are healthier is working from a framework that counts fibre as an unconditional positive and has not fully grappled with the phytate problem. The farmers of East Asia who spent two millennia refining their grain processing technology were working from something more direct. They were working from observation. Observation that told them: remove the bran. The bran is fighting you.
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@hairygit I see you avoided the patronising comment before that sentence.
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@yuanyi_z Political Protestantism hasn't been important in England for several decades. It has certainly lasted longer in Scotland and Northern Ireland. I don't really know about Wales, but it possibly lasted a bit longer there as well.
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Yuan Yi Zhu
Yuan Yi Zhu@yuanyi_z·
The collapse of the Prostant/Roman divide and its replacement with undifferentiated cultural Christianity in the UK is a very obvious sign of the Americanisation of UK discourse.
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@GregBaldwinIroh Butter on the toast. A few people add a little cheese or South Asian mixed spices (Masala) to the beans, but that's not widespread.
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Greg Baldwin
Greg Baldwin@GregBaldwinIroh·
British blokes…. I’ve purchased several “tins” of Heinz (British) beans because the idea of beans on toast intrigues me. I eagerly anticipate a tasting. Other than toasting bread and heating beans… Are there any other steps/ingredients?
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Alex Noonan
Alex Noonan@AlexNoonan6·
"See that little stream — we could walk to it in two minutes. It took the British a month to walk to it — a whole empire walking very slowly, dying in front and pushing forward behind. And another empire walked very slowly backward a few inches a day, leaving the dead like a million bloody rugs. No Europeans will ever do that again in this generation.” "Why, they’ve only just quit over in Turkey,” said Abe. “And in Morocco —” “That’s different. This western-front business couldn’t be done again, not for a long time. The young men think they could do it but they couldn’t. They could fight the first Marne again but not this. This took religion and years of plenty and tremendous sureties and the exact relation that existed between the classes. The Russians and Italians weren’t any good on this front. You had to have a whole-souled sentimental equipment going back further than you could remember. You had to remember Christmas, and postcards of the Crown Prince and his fiancée, and little cafés in Valence and beer gardens in Unter den Linden and weddings at the mairie, and going to the Derby, and your grandfather’s whiskers.” “General Grant invented this kind of battle at Petersburg in sixty- five.” “No, he didn’t — he just invented mass butchery. This kind of battle was invented by Lewis Carroll and Jules Verne and whoever wrote Undine, and country deacons bowling and marraines in Marseilles and girls seduced in the back lanes of Wurtemburg and Westphalia. Why, this was a love battle — there was a century of middle-class love spent here. This was the last love battle.
The Old World Show@theoldworldshow

20% of Old Etonians, the men expected to govern Britain and trained from birth to do so, died in the war The best men of every class perished in Flanders, as it was they who rallied to the colors immediately and were chewed up for years The Great War was probably the most dysgenic conflict in history, as the weak or cowardly remained behind the lines as the strong and brave perished on a titanic scale It is such a tragedy

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Taibhse
Taibhse@ghosty1879·
@danhathersage So a stolen Irish book in England. Yeah, sounds about right.
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Daniel Hathersage
Daniel Hathersage@danhathersage·
Have you ever seen a 1,000-year-old book? The Southampton Psalter, dated to the late 10th century, contains early medieval Irish glosses.
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@finmoorhouse People always miss out the unknown knowns, the things you don't know that know. I guess they don't know that they know.
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Fin Moorhouse
Fin Moorhouse@finmoorhouse·
Thinking about the time our high school English teacher gave us a poem to analyse When we finished she told us it was Donald Rumsfeld’s WMD press conference, and that was the class
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Peter Lloyd
Peter Lloyd@Suffragent_·
£8 for a pint in London.
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@pegobry_en It is largely a social class distinction rather than an IQ distinction. IQ and class may correlate, but it will be unreliable. The more bourgeois, the more likely to be a Francophile.
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Prof Ian Pace
Prof Ian Pace@drianpace·
I’m still trying to recover my @ianpacemain account after it was hacked, but no joy yet. Could people with many of the same followers on there RT this and urge them to follow this account?
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@hairygit "There’s something nocturnal about Chopin’s music - and I don’t just means the nocturnes." Man that's profound.
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@DavidUnderwoodI @Sargon_of_Akkad @Suffragent_ I believe that might be an American expression claiming that an American pint is 16 ounces. A British pint is 20 fluid ounces. Also, it seems from online sources that one British fluid ounce is equal to 1.04 US fluid ounces. Metric is for the French. Here's to freedom units! Hoc.
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@StephenWensley @techtoby__ I got the impression from a book called "Albion's Fatal Tree" that the people who were hanged couldn't get a person of influence to use political influence to get the sentence commuted. Getting a sentence commuted improved a landowner's status with their tenants and employees.
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Stephen Wensley
Stephen Wensley@StephenWensley·
@techtoby__ Probably because America got all of the religious nutter exports and Australia the criminals (if stealing a loaf of bread because you are starving is still considered a crime)
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TechToby
TechToby@techtoby__·
US Anglos aren’t as culturally aligned to the rest of us though, are they. I can meet an Aussie and it’s just like talking with a Brit. You can’t do that with an American. I can call the Aussie a Silly Cunt. He can call me a Sick Cunt. If we call the American a cunt, it’s tears and an AR pointing at you.
PlineTheBinary@PlineTheBinary

@techtoby__ forgetting that US is literally made of europeans and esp anglos Hilarious.

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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@cianin_c @techtoby__ Australia contains multitudes and that includes descendants of prison guards and descendants of prisoners.
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Charles Martel
Charles Martel@cianin_c·
@techtoby__ Aussies really try to be American in many ways. There’s no real replication of British culture. Aussies are more like the prison guards as opposed to the prisoners. They are very uptight
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Alan Goodman
Alan Goodman@GoodmanAlanplus·
@johncosgrove405 @RhodJones2 @holland_tom @DAaronovitch Given the consequences for some teachers and children, it does need to be better written. I know something about how bureaucracies behave and their tendency to 'gold plate directives. You throw words like 'bigot' and 'bigotry' very casually.
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John Cosgrove
John Cosgrove@johncosgrove405·
Please note @holland_tom that the words in square brackets which you have included within the quote marks materially alter the original text to make it seem there's a prohibition, when there is not. That's dishonest. You should delete and apologise.
Tom Holland@holland_tom

“Respect for religious traditions should not undermine the requirement for all pupils to have a broad & balanced curriculum.” “[Students should not] reproduce images of Jesus, Prophet Mohammed or other figures considered to be prophets in Islam.” 🤔 new.calderdale.gov.uk/sites/default/…

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John Cosgrove
John Cosgrove@johncosgrove405·
@GoodmanAlanplus @RhodJones2 @holland_tom @DAaronovitch You are aware, I suppose, that most councils issue similar documents, and have done for years? It's about not asking children to act against their OWN religious beliefs or their consciences. It is NOT restricting anyone's actions because of other people's beliefs.
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