@_iamlougotti I see a lot of the ones I'd list but one I don't see (or didn't scroll far enough to see) - 12 Monkeys @12MonkeysSYFY each season was amazing
it seems (lately) that almost every post on Twitter (x) is from a card from "Would I lie to you" #wilty and I have to figure out which (I assume lie always)
@ThrillaRilla369 I bought a rotisserie chicken from the store with some side salads and fresh veg. so dang true. (also add in some pork in there every now and then)
Steven Tyler spotting a street performer playing his own song, I Don't Want to Miss a Thing, and jumping in for an impromptu duet.
This was in Moscow, 2015, during Tyler's holiday.
A young girl waits outside her home after learning that her delivery driver is deaf. She has practiced a few words of sign language from school. When he arrives, she signs to him, and his face softens with surprise. Now every time he comes, they greet each other that way. She is learning more signs just to talk with him, and he helps her in return
El astrofísico Neil deGrasse Tyson lo resume con datos que no admiten mucha discusión:
En la época de las cavernas, un ser humano vivía en promedio 30 años. Para 1840, la esperanza de vida apenas había subido a 35. Y eso que todo era “orgánico”: aire puro, agua sin procesar y animales de libre pastoreo.
Aun así, la gente moría joven.
Lo que realmente disparó la expectativa de vida no fue la “vida natural”, sino la ciencia: vacunas, antibióticos, saneamiento, tecnología médica y conocimiento acumulado.
Por eso las expectativas razonables deben alinearse con lo que muestra la evidencia científica.
Y si algo enseña la historia es esto: cada vez que confiamos en la evidencia, avanzamos; cada vez que la ignoramos, retrocedemos.