neglectedselenium
neglectedselenium t1_j5k519o wrote
Reply to comment by reboot_my_life in Diets with low potassium are associated with kidney injuries and a culprit in cardiovascular disease by giuliomagnifico
They will most certainly not burn a hole, but they would strongly irritate the stomach in some people
neglectedselenium t1_j5k4dsi wrote
Reply to comment by ZipTheZipper in Diets with low potassium are associated with kidney injuries and a culprit in cardiovascular disease by giuliomagnifico
It gets dissolved in water
neglectedselenium t1_j5ixksm wrote
Reply to comment by SeriousPuppet in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
All reasonable concerns. Our planet sadly loses a lot of hydrogen, too. 3 kg per second. But since we are obsessed with terraforming other worlds, we need to decide which one: Venus or Mars
neglectedselenium t1_j5itkij wrote
Reply to comment by earthman34 in The race to make diesel engines run on hydrogen by FDuquesne
Which was built poorly
neglectedselenium t1_j5itcly wrote
Reply to comment by SeriousPuppet in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
I'm just saying that it would heat the atmosphere and melt water. The conditions of the Earth roughly 4 billion years ago
neglectedselenium t1_j5f68cn wrote
Reply to comment by Fiskifus in The race to make diesel engines run on hydrogen by FDuquesne
The life expectancy in the US dropped because of gun violence, car centered cities and poor lifestyle choices
neglectedselenium t1_j5f5fpt wrote
Reply to comment by earthman34 in The race to make diesel engines run on hydrogen by FDuquesne
So are methane and propane and butane. But hydrogen has an advantage in that it instantly evaporates instead of sinking. It's actually less of a fire hazard than other hydrocarbons
neglectedselenium t1_j5f4cxy wrote
Reply to comment by SeriousPuppet in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
It's actually feasible to terraform Mars. Humans would need to release very large amounts of sulfur hexafluoride and perfluoroalkanes into the atmosphere. Those inert and harmless gases will heat the planet, increase the atmospheric pressure by melting all ice caps
neglectedselenium t1_j5f1wqo wrote
Reply to comment by SayTheLineBart in My face when I saw this months gas bill. by bearsharkbear3
Ok? Sodium batteries are soon to be everywhere
neglectedselenium t1_j5e8wxx wrote
Reply to comment by pierogieking412 in My face when I saw this months gas bill. by bearsharkbear3
You can have dirt cheap energy right now but you need to install solar power panels on your roof. They are record cheap and will continue getting cheaper
neglectedselenium t1_j5e8s4k wrote
Reply to comment by KentuckYSnow in My face when I saw this months gas bill. by bearsharkbear3
Don't worry about them lithium batteries. There are other more common metals which could replace lithium, like sodium.
neglectedselenium t1_j4pqbhd wrote
People will do anything to just not eat their veggies and fruits
neglectedselenium t1_j2y4naf wrote
Reply to comment by DaltonTanner1994 in Why TikTok’s future has never been so cloudy by prehistoric_knight
Sincere question, in which ways?
neglectedselenium t1_j2eest7 wrote
Reply to comment by SquidDrive in A significant proportion of Texas adolescents reported experiencing dating violence, and this group also reported higher noncontraception use versus those not experiencing dating violence. by Respawan
Judging by their voting patterns, they don't need it.
neglectedselenium t1_j20dtgy wrote
Reply to comment by SWATSgradyBABY in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
Why would that be the case? The US didn't try to blackmail their allies with oil and or gas embargo, your whataboutism has no standing
neglectedselenium t1_j20dhzk wrote
Reply to comment by Jack04trades in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
I trust the Swedish investigation
neglectedselenium t1_j20cq87 wrote
Reply to comment by Jack04trades in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
Yeah but it gets billions of $$$, massive community outrage and million years to construct a single nuclear plant. So hell no, no politician can afford to waste their points on that
neglectedselenium t1_j20cect wrote
Reply to comment by JimmyMyJimmy in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
Thank goodness. This process should have started back in the 70s after the oil embargo, but better now than later
neglectedselenium t1_j20c7ty wrote
Reply to comment by Northstar1989 in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
Well firsr of all, that's the feature of authoritarianism: they all grow impatient, they have no correct info and are surrounded by the yes men. In case of putin, he doesn't even use the technology. Second, the US was always open to post soviet russia. Hell, they were even invited to G7. They were given massive aid, but because of the widespread corruption, the money was stolen. Russian Democracy ended in 1993 when tanks were deployed against the Parliament
neglectedselenium t1_j20bgfm wrote
Reply to comment by Northstar1989 in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
You're wrong, Ukraine was not armed to the teeth. That's BS. They still largely use soviet era tanks, aircraft, etc. A couple of thousands of Javelins and Stingers ≠ armed to the teeth. Another BS is your assertion that the US wouldn't help the brown/non-white people in case of a hypothetical russian invasion. Also wrong.
neglectedselenium t1_ixghmup wrote
Reply to comment by LastInALongChain in ‘Without enough Latvians, we won’t be Latvia’: eastern Europe’s shrinking population | Latvia’s population is 30% smaller than it was in 1990 and by 2050 numbers will be in decline in over half of Europe’s 52 countries. by mossadnik
The only working solutions are to ease immigration for college educated people and start handing out working visas and allow anyone to serve in the US military, I guess
neglectedselenium t1_ixd12yu wrote
Reply to comment by LastInALongChain in ‘Without enough Latvians, we won’t be Latvia’: eastern Europe’s shrinking population | Latvia’s population is 30% smaller than it was in 1990 and by 2050 numbers will be in decline in over half of Europe’s 52 countries. by mossadnik
Empowering women is great, actually.
neglectedselenium t1_ixd0quw wrote
Reply to comment by MavriKhakiss in ‘Without enough Latvians, we won’t be Latvia’: eastern Europe’s shrinking population | Latvia’s population is 30% smaller than it was in 1990 and by 2050 numbers will be in decline in over half of Europe’s 52 countries. by mossadnik
For some reason even Romani people and muslims easily adapt in the US and the New World in general. Just tells you how racist Europeans are actually
neglectedselenium t1_ixd0jtm wrote
Reply to comment by Beli_Mawrr in ‘Without enough Latvians, we won’t be Latvia’: eastern Europe’s shrinking population | Latvia’s population is 30% smaller than it was in 1990 and by 2050 numbers will be in decline in over half of Europe’s 52 countries. by mossadnik
Just open the damn borders already. Child stimulating programs have never succeded in history, and that's good. Lax the borders. That'll also decrease poverty
neglectedselenium t1_j63do6k wrote
Reply to comment by LastTrainLongGone in Access to modern military technology substantially reduces the probability of democratisation of authoritarian regimes — New details about the spread of 29 ground-breaking military technologies in all independent states from 1820 to 2010, as well as the form of government in these states by marketrent
Yeah, but now social media is flooded with bots and paid idiots or outright blocked