Today was intense. HRM condemned the building I'm in due to mould in the air (the result of inaction by landlord M. Ranjbar to fix/control the issue). I was told to leave within hours.
Itβs not over. I want repairs completed & to return to my home.
#renovictions#NSPoli
@goalaccelerator Yes please tell that to someone born into poverty and is deprived of basic needs for generations. Individual change is fun to focus on but systematic change is just as, I'd argue more important and more efficient change to focus on.
@adhdjesse Lol no kidding. I just booked my assessment test, and wrote in the more info: I'll try my level best not to forget about this appointment after setting 5 reminders.
@B52Malmet From what I understand storms aren't uncommon but the intensity and frequency is pretty uncommon. Cat 3 in Cape Breton...! That's scary, it's not a stretch of imagination to say climate change is definitely playing a big part here.
@Freakonomics This was by far the most disappointing episode. Why was there nobody to offer how just solar, water, wind are enough to power us like @mzjacobson has researched in his latest study.
@LinkenAL @Freakonomics Yea that's what came to my mind as well when listening to this episode. It was a biased episode. There wasn't anybody to defend who was super knowledgeable in solar, wind, and hydro.
@shubhgauti I have lived with plenty of different room mates who ate meat. Bacon, fish definitely have a very strong smell. Just heat a piece of fish in the microwave for a minute. The way one cooks meat makes a difference in smell. A friend of mine made beef and I couldn't smell it at all.
@MilesHind@UltimaGenerazi1 When majority of the doctors are interpreting it in the same way, that's called consensus. Data alone can't tell the whole story, you also need people who are educated on the topic to know what they are doing. An alpaca on twitter isn't good enough for reading climate models.