OF THE
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This is a predictable outcome when a wild animal is removed from its native environment and relocated to an area with an indigenous population...
Has Israhell ever actually contributed anything to the world?
And what, exactly, does the EU gain by this?
Certain dissociative anesthetics, such as ketamine , impact the brain's inhibitory structures. This can result in a state of detachment where...
Released memos show anti-Trump nonprofit aided state prosecutions of Trump supporters And were are the memos showing Trump-aligned non-profits...
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Reader Comments
"World Health Organization representative Dr Pieter van Maaren said that while he was not a biologist by trade, the explanation admittedly sounded a bit odd."
This UN official has a duty to uphold the Universal Declaration of Human Rights! Punishing these children in this way was a clear human rights violation. Fainting among people forced to stand for long periods is common. The excuse from the Chinese doctor and officials is total rubbish.
This UN official has shirked from his duty by being "reasonable" about the Chinese explanations for the sake of decorum, or some such. This is not the time to be "reasonable" in the face of insanity! We need to call things as they obviously are! These children were being bullied - you could even say tortured - by whoever ordered them to do this. It should be duly noted as a human rights violation.
The saddest part of this story, overall, is that there is no mention of the fact that, in the daytime, trees take in carbon dioxide, and emit oxygen (the opposite happens at night).
So standing under a tree or in a forest during the day is actually giving you more oxygen than otherwise, not less. I learned that in school when I was maybe 10 years old.
This should have been posted in "Don't panic, Lighten Up" not in "Science & Technology". The dumbing-down process has been effective, it seems.
Sigh...