In many cases the notion that something in the brain causes the elderly person to fall, with the result that a bone is broken gets things backwards: In fact, the bone "spontaneously" breaks, causing the person to fall.
I don't suppose I could induce the ACM to come up with a covert plan to protect the lives of the unborn? I mean, if you're going to involve yourself in politics, you should be balanced and disinterested about it right?
Funny thing is that what counts as "politics" gets moved around a lot.
Evolution was political once and, if things go as they are going, it will be again. Approximately as retro as debating whether diversity is a good thing in tech.
You can call it "science ideology" if that makes you feel better about it.
This weather won't last forever and when it breaks, it's back to the outgroups with you.
Should I have? My post was composed in such a manner that my meaning (and the concomitant implications) was quite clear to a presumably intelligent person like yourself.
When I got the shingles vaccine two years ago it was the worst I've had in terms of site pain and general malaise, but certainly wasn't as bad as some people here are recounting.
My pharmacist said he knew someone who had gone blind in one eye from shingles, so that was a vivid motivator for me to get vaccinated!
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