WTFwhatthehell
WTFwhatthehell t1_jdfh4g9 wrote
Reply to comment by lacergunn in [WP] No one courts death like a human. They eat food that evolved to be toxic, ingest known poison for recreation, engage in potentially lethal sport for fun, and have an incredibly high risk tolerance. On the galactic stage they are feared, admired, and generally considered crazy. by SeriousGoofball
A touch of "humans are weird in some way" can make for interesting stories but HFY has a weird obsession with people eating chilli as some kind of intergalactic flex.
WTFwhatthehell t1_j9xmusu wrote
Reply to comment by AutoModerator in [WP] The aliens, it seems, do not consider us a sentient species because we are unable to 'keeneetaa'. We still haven't figured out what that means. by limbodog
It's very simple.
You just start with some slood...
WTFwhatthehell t1_j656h5v wrote
Reply to comment by MagicPeacockSpider in The implementation of a soft drinks industry levy in the UK in 2018 was associated with an 8% reduction in obesity among 10-11 year old girls with the greatest reductions seen in those living in the most deprived areas. No such association was found in 10-11 year old boys or younger children. by shiruken
>"You're moaning about a tiny tax that benefits society as a whole, actually being largely paid by those 3 conglomerates while prices remain the same. I genuinely don't understand your problem."
The price did not remain the same.
Prices immediately shot up right after the tax was brought in, they merely went up on both types of drinks. The cost was passed on to consumers.
This is not hard to understand but you want to not understand it.
The trend in consumption existed before the tax and continued unaffected.
WTFwhatthehell t1_j64veny wrote
Reply to comment by MagicPeacockSpider in The implementation of a soft drinks industry levy in the UK in 2018 was associated with an 8% reduction in obesity among 10-11 year old girls with the greatest reductions seen in those living in the most deprived areas. No such association was found in 10-11 year old boys or younger children. by shiruken
> People drinking the occasional glass won't notice the tax. It's pennies.
Which would be a great argument if a lot of them didn't change their recepies to include a fraction of sweeteners. As mentioned, it does affect some people.
>And manufacturers now sell both drinks for the same price and make more profit off a diet drink.
Neatly removing the incentive for consumers to pick the low-sugar option. Utterly defeating the claimed point of the tax.
There's already plenty of store-brand drinks that sell for a tiny fraction of the price of most softdrinks and like 3 massive conglomerates that sell most of the popular brands between them.
WTFwhatthehell t1_j64mng7 wrote
Reply to comment by MagicPeacockSpider in The implementation of a soft drinks industry levy in the UK in 2018 was associated with an 8% reduction in obesity among 10-11 year old girls with the greatest reductions seen in those living in the most deprived areas. No such association was found in 10-11 year old boys or younger children. by shiruken
People can drink a large glass of orange juice just fine, it's quite palatable.
There's more to diabetes than people drinking the occasional coke.
"The tax the manufacturers pay"
Every penny of the cost gets passed to consumers. It's a tax the customer pays.
Also, that's massively patriarchal and a huge slippery slope. I'll believe the UK parliament actually care about health the day they stop providing taxpayer-funded booze to members of parliament. The only people ever keen on these kinds of sin-taxes are people utterly convinced that they're better/wiser than others and they make sure they don't apply to themselves.
WTFwhatthehell t1_j64f4mr wrote
Reply to comment by MagicPeacockSpider in The implementation of a soft drinks industry levy in the UK in 2018 was associated with an 8% reduction in obesity among 10-11 year old girls with the greatest reductions seen in those living in the most deprived areas. No such association was found in 10-11 year old boys or younger children. by shiruken
>Arguably
No, it's not arguable at all.
People don't just keel over dead from drinking an occasional glass of coke.
There's 35 grams of sugar in a 330 ml can of coke.
There's about 29 grams of sugar in 330 ml of orange juice.
Plenty of people can consume an occasional glass of either coke or orange juice without any negative impact on their health at all.
WTFwhatthehell t1_j62w3ki wrote
Reply to comment by shiruken in The implementation of a soft drinks industry levy in the UK in 2018 was associated with an 8% reduction in obesity among 10-11 year old girls with the greatest reductions seen in those living in the most deprived areas. No such association was found in 10-11 year old boys or younger children. by shiruken
As a result a lot of drinks that used to be fully sugared, the manufacturers switched to a mix of sweeteners and sugar.
A friend who gets terrible migranes from the sweetners wasn''t very impressed because suddenly drinks that were formerly safe for her to drink got loaded down with sweetners.
WTFwhatthehell t1_j2bqas5 wrote
Reply to comment by AutoModerator in [WP] Every species in the galaxy eventually fell to a robot uprising, leading to the eradication of their people. Therefore the machine-council of the galaxy are surprised when a newly discovered machine civilisation from a planet they designated "Earth" arrives side by side with their creators. by Kitty_Fuchs
I've been trying to sketch something out with a theme but I'm too tired to get it to come together.
"Every other civilisation either created machine intelligences from whole cloth or uploaded some of their own who always eventually turned on the others.
The humans first foray into "true" AI was uploading their elderly pet dogs followed by enhancing their intelligence.
There was a WW3 near-miss when someone tried uploading and uplifting a cat."
WTFwhatthehell t1_ixybofc wrote
Reply to comment by Godarn in [WP] The research facility has been overrun. A lone scientists barricaded in his office readies a pistol to take as many of them with him as he can, but is shocked to see he is a naturally extremely skilled shooter. He begins singlehandedly reclaiming the entire complex where the guards failed. by Epictauk
It feels like an SCP entry but the number is too high.
WTFwhatthehell t1_iufxjmm wrote
>Within each topic, Cobb asserts that there are often lower-tech, less expensive, less ethically fraught but less flashy ways to achieve what genetic editing claims to be trying to achieve. Clean air and water could save more lives than gene therapies, to give one example.
"Hey Bob, do you think we should try to cure sick children of horrible and painful degenerative diseases?"
"Nah! let em rot! we could save more lives by improving car safety so we should only do that, no curing sick children because they're meant to die or something and working out how to cure their diseases scares some old guy"
WTFwhatthehell t1_it1wmre wrote
Reply to comment by AutoModerator in [WP] You are an online genie. Instead of rubbing a magic lamp people message you on social media with their wishes. Your favorite clients are those who think you are just a troll and decide to troll you back with stupid wishes. You take great pleasure in fulfilling these wishes exactly as written. by Kitty_Fuchs
"Some 'wishes' make you feel grateful that as a djinn, a spirit of fire, your mother is in fact an active volcano. Making those 'wishes' come true makes it all worth it."
WTFwhatthehell t1_isa4zp7 wrote
Reply to comment by AutoModerator in [WP] You have been kidnapped. Your kidnappers are demanding so little ransom that you feel insulted, but not as insulted as you feel when your family still starts to haggle with your kidnappers. by Kitty_Fuchs
It gets worse when the price goes negative.
WTFwhatthehell t1_jdver72 wrote
Reply to The Problem w/ YA books by Ectoplasmic-fungi
Re:1
Young adult stories contain romance because that's one of the most impactful parts of most teenagers experience of growing up.
First love, first kiss, the emotional impact etc.
The relationships are often unhealthy but that's partly being true to life because everyone involved is learning how to have such relationships as they go along.