@Leucrotta @chr I look at America as a Nation and a Culture that's ready for a Radical Reboot.
NSFW, Protests, USPOL, Seattle
No Armor is best armor apparently.
RT @kerrywashington@twitter.com
Today marks 💯days until the 2020 Election so I’m sharing 100 reasons why you should register to vote. Our lives depend on it. Literally. #100DaysToGo
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/kerrywashington/status/1287408514068107267
@Caudle This is what I'm talking about when I say the words "Psychic Weapon"
I ADORE THIS
AND EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS
RT @luseals@twitter.com
the librarian’s hoard
re: COVID-19 in young(er) adults
@Verdigris Gonna look into it here.
re: COVID-19 in young(er) adults
@Verdigris I had an illness back in late January that Destroyed me for 3 weeks and left me with lingering, awful health and neurological problems.
I had Heard about COVID back then but nobody believed me that I got it.
And yeah. It leaves you feeling for Months like you're just Wrecked.
COVID-19 in young(er) adults
Why should healthy people not in extra danger due to age continue using masks and distancing protocols? How about because COVID-19 has a prolonged recovery period.
The CDC now has a short write-up available about a study that followed up on nonhospitalized working-age adults who had tested positive for COVID-19 in the prior 2-3 weeks. Of the 18-34 age group, 24% reported feeling that they hadn't returned to their previous state of health by the time they were surveyed; for the 35-49 age group, that figure was 33%.
Of the majority who did feel they'd regained their health, a third still reported one or more lingering symptoms. Those were most commonly coughing, fatigue, and shortness of breath. (I don't know about you, but I'd consider the latter two significant reductions in my quality of life.)
For context, otherwise healthy people who test positive for influenza virtually always feel like their old selves--with complete resolution of symptoms--within two weeks of testing.
The actor who played Garak in DS9 was Andrew Robinson. When he got the acting role, he wrote 200 pages of Garak's backstory. His use of this as a guide for his acting is probably a big reason why Garak's character has so much depth.
Most of that backstory was officially canonised by the head Trek writers. Robinson used it to write a novel, A Stitch in Time, in which Garak writes an autobiographical letter to Julian Bashir.
It's not a contest. Someone else being in pain does not mean that you are not allowed to be in pain.
Goes the other way, too: even if stuff is minor, you are allowed to be happy.
There, you have permission, go out and use it wisely.
RT @nikinami_beauty@twitter.com
In case y'all forgot 🖤
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/nikinami_beauty/status/1286526297380982785
Southern Mass's local machine healer and part time witchdoctor.
Tiny motorcycles, magic potions, machine tools, progressive rock, trance states, and hand sharpened drill bits. Oh, and I read Tarot. Probably 18+ just to be sure.
#nobot