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-   -   Interesting graphs and charts department (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=24480)

glatt 12-18-2014 07:18 AM

So there are actually a few respondents out there who think it's OK to punch a guy, but threatening to punch a guy is taking it too far.

Spexxvet 12-18-2014 08:13 AM

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Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 916636)
But they didn't ask if people thought it worked.

They don't care. They just feel good that someone gets hurt because of 911, and the potential for the next 911. It doesn't matter that every expert on interrogation says it doesn't work and every study shows it doesn't work.

Have you seen this meme?

classicman 12-18-2014 08:59 PM

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Interesting split ....
Always/sometimes = 48%
Never/Rarely = 42%

oh and ... here's another for ya Spex.

sexobon 12-18-2014 09:49 PM

Freedom's just another word for nothin' left to lose.
~
Torture's just another word for nothin' left to gain.

footfootfoot 12-19-2014 12:42 AM

How is pumping food into someone's anus considered feeding?

sexobon 12-19-2014 01:16 AM

Nutrient enema - Wikipedia

Gravdigr 12-19-2014 03:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 916710)
How is pumping food into someone's anus considered feeding?

Food, shoved in a hole. Close enough.

Spexxvet 12-20-2014 09:24 AM

pie hole, brown eye hole - whatever it takes

Gravdigr 12-20-2014 03:00 PM

Spoken like a true Sheldon!

:lol2:

Griff 12-29-2014 08:26 AM

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xoxoxoBruce 12-29-2014 09:30 AM

Causation? :eyebrow:

Griff 12-29-2014 09:44 AM

Apparently, this was done by a computer scientist not a biologist but the relationship is interesting if not conclusive. A question I'd like answered is, does Glyphosate destroy helpful gut flora? A problem we humans have is lumping things together. Monsanto is evil therefor Glyphosate causes autism is a fun thing for an activist's brain to latch onto, but it is conspiratorial thinking. That said I'm going to continue to drink my kombucha because it makes my system run better.

Clodfobble 12-29-2014 10:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff
A question I'd like answered is, does Glyphosate destroy helpful gut flora?

Short answer: absolutely.

Long answer: It's not the only one. The majority of pesticides also kill the majority of gut bugs. Meanwhile, the very definition of a preservative is something that kills microbes, thus delaying spoilage. Everyone sits there and shakes their head about the over-use of antibiotics, but every single time you eat something with any kind of preservative, you are literally swallowing a (tiny, but cumulative) dose of antibiotics.

Bitter answer: Even if this chart did make an impression on someone in charge, the likely outcome would be to remove that one herbicide from the legions in use, see the rate of autism go down not one whit, then shrug and put it back into rotation. Fixing something of this magnitude requires a change of equal magnitude.

Lamplighter 12-29-2014 11:38 AM

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Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 917525)
Causation? :eyebrow:

It is clear that Monsanto has caused the increase in federal and state government
regulations to create, fund, and subsequent child-find activities of the IDEA program,
as confirmed by the 2001 slowdown in Roundup application being diverted
into the creation of the "No Child Left Behind program",
and then direct correlation seen in 2004.

:eek:

lumberjim 12-29-2014 11:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clodfobble (Post 917534)
Fixing something of this magnitude requires a change of equal magnitude.

LIKE A ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE

xoxoxoBruce 12-29-2014 12:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lamplighter (Post 917535)
It is clear that Monsanto has caused the increase in federal and state government
regulations to create, fund, and subsequent child-find activities of the IDEA program,
as confirmed by the 2001 slowdown in Roundup application being diverted
into the creation of the "No Child Left Behind program",
and then direct correlation seen in 2004.

:eek:

Monsanto is a extremely well funded, lawyered up, business and politically savvy, corporation.
In my opinion they are the ultimate evil James Bond scale bad guys.
I find these truths to be self evident.

Back in my youth, mid-50's, a Monsanto engineer/executive type bought my grandfathers house next door. OK, next door was a third of a mile, but they were neighbors, his kids went to my school, yada, yada, yada.

I would listen to him tell the adults about the future Monsanto was planning, and wanted to play a big roll in shaping. To a ten year old kid, it sounded Buck Rogers here we come. And being immersed in agriculture, I knew the food production predictions were incredible, but in the 50's scientists could do... or undo... anything.

Oh, and do you know why we don't have flying fuckin' cars? Because Monsanto wasn't interested. ;)

xoxoxoBruce 01-03-2015 10:05 PM

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None have more than 50% of their highways and byways named "street".

Undertoad 01-04-2015 09:42 AM

No Boulevard in Philly! The Boulevard is the main road through half of town.

And then there's dumb Street Road. Worst name ever

xoxoxoBruce 01-04-2015 11:01 AM

It's not "The Boulevard" it's Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Boulevard. And it comprises what percent of Philly thoroughfares? :eyebrow:

Undertoad 01-04-2015 11:09 AM

OK, YOU go through town and ask people where "Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Boulevard" is, and I will go through town and ask people where "The Boulevard" is, and we'll see who gets more answers. :D

xoxoxoBruce 01-04-2015 11:28 AM

What? I'm a MAN, I don't ask for directions.... mumble, grumble, where's my snit..

But the point is, one road isn't going to show up on a percentage graph.

classicman 01-04-2015 04:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 918075)
And then there (is the) dumb Street Road. Worst name ever

2nded

Happy Monkey 01-04-2015 07:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 918075)
And then there's dumb Street Road. Worst name ever

They should name an avenue in its honor.

xoxoxoBruce 01-04-2015 07:38 PM

Street road isn't in Philly.

footfootfoot 01-04-2015 08:16 PM

It stands to reason that hilly cities would have more terraces.

xoxoxoBruce 01-04-2015 11:35 PM

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In an effort to bring you information you can use...

BigV 01-05-2015 11:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 918048)
None have more than 50% of their highways and byways named "street".

In Seattle, avenues run north-south and streets run east-west. Have any of you noticed a similar distinct pattern in your city?

glatt 01-05-2015 12:13 PM

Streets in Arlington VA are in alphabetical order going east to west going a-z with one syllable words and then starting over again a-z with 2 syllable words, and beginning with 3 syllable words but running out before they reach the county line. N-S they are numbered. There are a handful of old diagonal and meandering streets that are either "Roads" or "Boulevards."

Gravdigr 01-05-2015 12:47 PM

Not really in the same vein, but...

We have South St., and North St., both of which run east-west.

And we have East St., and West St., both of which run north-south.

I don't think we have a blvd.

xoxoxoBruce 01-05-2015 12:49 PM

Boston had street builders follow wandering cows. :haha:

Happy Monkey 01-05-2015 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by glatt (Post 918179)
Streets in Arlington VA are in alphabetical order going east to west going a-z with one syllable words and then starting over again a-z with 2 syllable words, and beginning with 3 syllable words but running out before they reach the county line. N-S they are numbered. There are a handful of old diagonal and meandering streets that are either "Roads" or "Boulevards."

DC has the same pattern, but the diagonals are Avenues named after the States.

footfootfoot 01-05-2015 02:07 PM

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Here's one that I think is brilliant:

xoxoxoBruce 01-05-2015 02:11 PM

You beast! :(

glatt 01-05-2015 03:26 PM

What did you do with the corpses?

Gravdigr 01-05-2015 05:00 PM

I bet he destroyed a good bit of the 'evidence'.

footfootfoot 01-05-2015 06:00 PM

Took them for a ride in the country and left them where the coyotes might feast.

Gravdigr 01-06-2015 10:19 AM

He took 'em to CoyFC!

The Aussie version of KFC.

footfootfoot 01-06-2015 02:49 PM

Coyote Frozen Chicken.

*full disclosure: I am only an honorary Colonel.

xoxoxoBruce 01-06-2015 07:08 PM

What? Oh, I thought you said honorable... nevermind :haha:

infinite monkey 01-23-2015 07:32 PM

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Griff 01-24-2015 07:23 AM

:)

xoxoxoBruce 01-24-2015 11:51 PM

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I know China is down because of the one child policy but I wonder why the others fall below what I would expect to be in the 49% to 51% range?

Griff 01-25-2015 07:13 AM

You can't get real numbers in a closed society especially one where women are property.

edit add: There is a creepy factor to this. Women without rights can be killed without any state reaction. Thinking of the number of young males who are unattached with no hope of building a family... I'd go fucking jihadi.

Clodfobble 01-25-2015 07:42 AM

A number of factors could be in play--more random death for women in general in the name of honor, higher illness-leading-to-death because women aren't worth wasting medical care on, women killing baby daughters either to please their male relatives' need for boys, or to spare them from the life they have in store.

Even still, 23% in Qatar seems ridiculously low. I do wonder if that's partly due to under-reporting because the women aren't considered people.

Undertoad 01-25-2015 08:37 AM

According to the Internets, it's the incoming contractors in oil and construction.

http://www.theguardian.com/news/data...ed-the-country

No wonder they made the stadium into a vagina.

classicman 01-26-2015 09:07 PM

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From here

Clodfobble 01-27-2015 09:04 AM

I can't say much about the other major cities, but yeah, Austin's stayed a high-growth area throughout the economic woes of the last decade. Even when the housing bubble burst, they kept right on building and successfully selling new homes right across the highway from me.

xoxoxoBruce 01-28-2015 02:20 AM

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Griff 01-28-2015 06:13 AM

ooooo looks like a hump day opportunity!

Griff 01-28-2015 06:59 AM

btw... Texas did have a nice run from 2008 on up but you can plot other states from their individual bottoms to skew similarly.

footfootfoot 01-28-2015 07:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 920234)
No wonder they made the stadium into a vagina.

The article calls it "accidental."

Riiiight, because sometimes a stadium is just a stadium.

Lamplighter 01-28-2015 08:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 920579)
...Riiiight, because sometimes a stadium is just a stadium.

:D

Clodfobble 01-28-2015 10:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff
btw... Texas did have a nice run from 2008 on up but you can plot other states from their individual bottoms to skew similarly.

Yeah but not every state... somebody had to go down for the overall US numbers to be at a loss. Admittedly, it could all just be Detroit.



I went looking for what the lone hit song about Thursday might be, and found it in the original article for Bruce's graphic: "Sweet Thursday," Johnny Mathis 1962.

Griff 01-28-2015 09:07 PM

This is an interesting document with some interesting graphs and charts if someone knows how to clip them. The bottom line is a somewhat different economy in Texas. Texas had pretty consistent higher unemployment than the country as a whole until around 2006. From then on Texas performed better than the rest of the country. Now with energy prices sinking we'll see if its a sustainable thing.

xoxoxoBruce 01-28-2015 09:17 PM

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Goats everywhere, The Washington Post has an interactive map where you can check county by county.

Lamplighter 01-28-2015 10:31 PM

Quote:

... literally every goat...
No way. Over the years I gotten many people's goats, and never given them back.
No one knows the number or where they are now.

xoxoxoBruce 01-28-2015 11:14 PM

Obviously you left them, or they wandered to, Texas. :haha:

xoxoxoBruce 01-29-2015 01:44 AM

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Watch your fingers...

footfootfoot 01-29-2015 12:32 PM

"I'll just reach up into this jointer and clear out the chips... I'll just reach under this mower and clear out the clogged grass... I'll just stick my hand into this snowblower to loosen up the packed snow... Let me look down into this barrel and see why the gun didn't go off..."

There's a youtube video of the last one. The guy won the Bronze medal in the Darwin competition.

xoxoxoBruce 01-30-2015 12:59 AM

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After you've mangled your hand (or what ever you're clearing the clog with, Studly) be careful driving to the hospital.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety Highway Loss Data Institute, reports some interesting results. Realize they are recording real world results so it's primarily on vehicles three years old.

In 1989 the reported, A 700% variation between model.(pdf)

In 2011 they reported, "Death rates by model: SUV drivers are among least likely to be killed".

There's a lot of information there. I don't agree with all of their theories or conclusions, but the data charted should be pretty straight foreword.


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