Streetlights

joined 2 years ago
[–] Streetlights 6 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

Opinions are not beliefs, no matter how hard you hold on to them.

[–] Streetlights 26 points 4 weeks ago (9 children)

Plenty of blame to go around. Where is Gerhard Schroder these days?

[–] Streetlights 13 points 4 weeks ago (6 children)

Insane engineering. The diameter of a silicon atom is about 0.2nm for context.

[–] Streetlights 6 points 4 weeks ago (6 children)

Interesting take. Government policy should only favour loyal voters? Minority interest groups be damned?

[–] Streetlights 1 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

Shock and awe, and a demonstration that they do infact have operational nukes, can deliver them and are prepared to use them. Brinkmanship.

[–] Streetlights 2 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

Unfortunately, they have been making territorial gains this year. They pay for each metre with horrendous manpower losses, but life is cheap in Russia and they have demonstrated they are more than willing to keep this up.

[–] Streetlights 3 points 4 weeks ago

Ditto. Can't believe it's been 8 years.

[–] Streetlights 10 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Almost certainly an RS-26 then, first use of an ICBM on a civilian target (whether you call that ICBM or IRBM is semantics).

And Putin hasn't been seen in public in almost two weeks. 🤔

[–] Streetlights 31 points 1 month ago

Until it explodes, you don't.

[–] Streetlights 15 points 1 month ago (1 children)

There's still a few steps left on the escalation ladder.

Conceivably I can see them detonating a nuke somewhere over the blacksea at a high enough altitude to minimise fallout as a demonstration that they are serious and have the capability.

 

There was no group difference in reaction times and accuracy between males and females (using contraception and not). However, within subject analyses revealed that regularly menstruating females performed better during menstruation compared to being in any other phase, with faster reaction times (10ms c.ca, p < .01), fewer errors (p < .05) and lower dispersion intra-individual variability (p < .05). In contrast they exhibited slower reaction times (10ms c.ca, p < .01) and poorer timing anticipation (p < .01) in the luteal phase, and more errors in the predicted ovulatory phase (p < .01). Self-reported mood, cognitive and physical symptoms were all worst during menstruation (p < .01), and a significant proportion of females felt that their symptoms were negatively affecting their cognitive performance during menstruation on testing day, which was incongruent with their actual performance.

 

New paper casts doubt on the often reported huge rise in maternal deaths in the United States over the past 20 years. They put the blame firmly on a change in the reporting method.

 

Rushed through last minute before parliament is dissolved using emergency powers.

Should've been debated in the commons at least.

 

Was Roger Penrose not completely insane when he proposed his Orch OR theory of the mind? Still doesn't explain the hard problem of consciousness, but a step closer?

2
submitted 7 months ago by Streetlights to c/skeptic
 

Excellent essay from Coyne and Maroja that picks apart six widespread examples of biology being corrupted by (often well-intentioned) ideology.

 

Were the Greens booted out before they could quit? Lorna's properly fuming calling it "an act of political cowardice".

If the opposition put forward a VONC on Humza right now, I'm not sure he'd survive it.

21
Dan Dennett died today, RIP (whyevolutionistrue.com)
submitted 8 months ago by Streetlights to c/skeptic
 

Brilliant mind. I was lucky enough to meet him at an invited lecture once and he was nice enough to sign Freedom Evolves for me.

Another horseman falls.

 

SNP having a great day

 

There is a lot of disinformation flying around about this. The original myth about Cass "dismissing 98% of all data" started because an activist on twitter read the wrong paper.

Question everything, especially if it agrees with you.

 

Seen the "98% of studies were ignored!" one doing the rounds on social media. The editorial in the BMJ put it in much better terms:

"One emerging criticism of the Cass review is that it set the methodological bar too high for research to be included in its analysis and discarded too many studies on the basis of quality. In fact, the reality is different: studies in gender medicine fall woefully short in terms of methodological rigour; the methodological bar for gender medicine studies was set too low, generating research findings that are therefore hard to interpret."

 

Appendix 4 in the Cass Review revealed that 6 out of the 7 adult GDC clinics currently operating in the UK refused to collect or share their patient followup data. If you want better care for struggling LGBT kids, you need the data.

 

The mighty Hitch and one of his great orations. I often wonder what would he think of the world, such as it is, in 2024.

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