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Topic: In other news ...

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betarhoalphadelta

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5026 on: April 21, 2021, 12:06:08 PM »
Except that both are absurd fantasies.  :)
That's possibly true. 

Kinda like every [rare] time I buy a lotto ticket... I'm a millionaire until the numbers are drawn. 

Cincydawg

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5027 on: April 21, 2021, 12:26:34 PM »
Hasn't this pandemic proven that restaurants aren't a great idea to pump money into?  Thin margins and more at the whim of the economics of the masses than most other enterprises? 
I think it has demonstrated why chains are a better idea than a one off place.  Chains are doing pretty well since last year.

medinabuckeye1

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5028 on: April 21, 2021, 12:46:12 PM »
That's possibly true.

Kinda like every [rare] time I buy a lotto ticket... I'm a millionaire until the numbers are drawn.
The lottery is a tax on people who are bad at math.

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5029 on: April 21, 2021, 12:52:16 PM »
Yup.
One teacher at my school sends out numerous, obnoxious emails about gathering money together to buy powerball tickets.  Most people put $5 in, including the principal.

I abstain.
« Last Edit: April 21, 2021, 12:57:40 PM by OrangeAfroMan »
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

betarhoalphadelta

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5030 on: April 21, 2021, 12:57:16 PM »
The lottery is a tax on people who are bad at math.
Yep. I do it maybe 3 times a year as an absurd fantasy.

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5031 on: April 21, 2021, 12:58:39 PM »
My extended family started giving scratch-offs as a stocking stuffer for Christmas like 10 years back.  Made me feel icky, but I don't know why.  There's nothing wrong with that at all.  
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

FearlessF

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5032 on: April 21, 2021, 01:01:22 PM »
there's nothing wrong with gambling if you understand the odds and realize the more you gamble the more you will lose
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5033 on: April 21, 2021, 01:12:13 PM »
Exhibit B on school lunches:  today's main entree is a big pretzel + cheese sauce.  

If that's not a shortcut on a technicality, I don't know what is.  Ohhh, they're "whole grain" pretzels.  That makes it better.

Might as well save money on cafeteria staff and let the kids eat from vending machines.
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

Cincydawg

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5034 on: April 21, 2021, 01:16:55 PM »
There's a thought, using some sort of reasonably advanced vending machines, stocked with at least decent sandwiches.  How hard is it to provide a sandwich?

It sounds as if your school meals are far worse than what our HS served routinely.

Our HS also provided breakfasts which were pretty decent.  A lot of students were on free lunch programs.  I saw concern here that kids out of school because of the pandemic would not be eating at all.  That is truly a sad statement if accurate.


OrangeAfroMan

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5035 on: April 21, 2021, 01:29:13 PM »
There's a thought, using some sort of reasonably advanced vending machines, stocked with at least decent sandwiches.  How hard is it to provide a sandwich?

It sounds as if your school meals are far worse than what our HS served routinely.

Our HS also provided breakfasts which were pretty decent.  A lot of students were on free lunch programs.  I saw concern here that kids out of school because of the pandemic would not be eating at all.  That is truly a sad statement if accurate.


We had a drive-thru lunch hand-out system on days our district was closed to students.  It's still going on now, even as 2/3-3/4 of the students are back in person.  
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5036 on: April 21, 2021, 01:39:11 PM »
There's a thought, using some sort of reasonably advanced vending machines, stocked with at least decent sandwiches.  How hard is it to provide a sandwich?

It sounds as if your school meals are far worse than what our HS served routinely.


I think eating even fresh food from vending machines is as common in Japan as fast food is here.  It could absolutely replace a lot of the bad food service infrastructure we have.

I assume school lunches have gotten worse as time has passed - as companies keep finding ways to provide worse barely acceptable for cheaper, while remaining legal.
This is what all of the pro-corporate guys here don't understand:  what I just said is the end game.  Finding ways to provide the least acceptable for cheaper, while remaining legal.  That's how it works, at least in this industry at this time.
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

Cincydawg

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5037 on: April 21, 2021, 01:50:40 PM »
I'm not pro-corporate, I'm pro DATA and information instead of blanket emotional response and reactions.

Cincydawg

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5038 on: April 21, 2021, 01:52:01 PM »
Why the Arabic World Turned Away from Science — The New Atlantis

To anyone familiar with this Golden Age, roughly spanning the eighth through the thirteenth centuries a.d., the disparity between the intellectual achievements of the Middle East then and now — particularly relative to the rest of the world — is staggering indeed. In his 2002 book What Went Wrong?, historian Bernard Lewis notes that “for many centuries the world of Islam was in the forefront of human civilization and achievement.” “Nothing in Europe,” notes Jamil Ragep, a professor of the history of science at the University of Oklahoma, “could hold a candle to what was going on in the Islamic world until about 1600.” Algebra, algorithm, alchemy, alcohol, alkali, nadir, zenith, coffee, and lemon: these words all derive from Arabic, reflecting Islam’s contribution to the West.
Today, however, the spirit of science in the Muslim world is as dry as the desert. Pakistani physicist Pervez Amirali Hoodbhoy laid out the grim statistics in a 2007 Physics Today article: Muslim countries have nine scientists, engineers, and technicians per thousand people, compared with a world average of forty-one. In these nations, there are approximately 1,800 universities, but only 312 of those universities have scholars who have published journal articles. Of the fifty most-published of these universities, twenty-six are in Turkey, nine are in Iran, three each are in Malaysia and Egypt, Pakistan has two, and Uganda, the U.A.E., Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Kuwait, Jordan, and Azerbaijan each have one.
There are roughly 1.6 billion Muslims in the world, but only two scientists from Muslim countries have won Nobel Prizes in science (one for physics in 1979, the other for chemistry in 1999). Forty-six Muslim countries combined contribute just 1 percent of the world’s scientific literature; Spain and India each contribute more of the world’s scientific literature than those countries taken together. In fact, although Spain is hardly an intellectual superpower, it translates more books in a single year than the entire Arab world has in the past thousand years. “Though there are talented scientists of Muslim origin working productively in the West,” Nobel laureate physicist Steven Weinberg has observed, “for forty years I have not seen a single paper by a physicist or astronomer working in a Muslim country that was worth reading.”



Cincydawg

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Re: In other news ...
« Reply #5039 on: April 21, 2021, 01:52:33 PM »
Given that Arabic science was the most advanced in the world up until about the thirteenth century, it is tempting to ask what went wrong — why it is that modern science did not arise from Baghdad or Cairo or Córdoba. We will turn to this question later, but it is important to keep in mind that the decline of scientific activity is the rule, not the exception, of civilizations. While it is commonplace to assume that the scientific revolution and the progress of technology were inevitable, in fact the West is the single sustained success story out of many civilizations with periods of scientific flourishing. Like the Muslims, the ancient Chinese and Indian civilizations, both of which were at one time far more advanced than the West, did not produce the scientific revolution.

Nevertheless, while the decline of Arabic civilization is not exceptional, the reasons for it offer insights into the history and nature of Islam and its relationship with modernity. Islam’s decline as an intellectual and political force was gradual but pronounced: while the Golden Age was extraordinarily productive, with the contributions made by Arabic thinkers often original and groundbreaking, the past seven hundred years tell a very different story.


 

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