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Over the past year, Guterres said women leaders are among those who've kept COVID-19 transmission rates low and put their countries on tract for recovery while countries with less effective responses to the pandemic "have tended to be those where strongman approaches prevail and women's rights are under assault."Lol!! This is comedy gold! I don't even know where to start with this...man, I'm just so sick of this shit, the assault on humanity is actually a womens rights issue...who knew? Fucking lol.....
First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a socialist.TPTB are literally torturing us. 5 minute vid [Link]
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.
Yeah I agree pal.In case you weren't being ironic - and didn't know; P&T is a girl.
* I certainly wasn't being disparaging*It (and, nor I wasn't being disparaging neither )
And, as a #superstraight cis meself, I felt I wuz Woke if I didn't!Brilliant, love it
we wouldn't be having this back 'n' forthBut its a good thing!
Necropsies revealed that they were both males. (RIP DSS)When I was reading your comment and I got to "Disney captured..." I already knew how that was going to end.
(such as "chirp chirp" in the west and "burpa burpa" in the east)What, all this 'duck' talk and no "quack quack" in the middle...?
..birds seem to use slightly different call functions depending where they are in their migration cycleWell they're incredibly intelligent animals, it totally makes sense to hear that. There's a bird called a Drongo (love that name) that warns meerkats when trouble is coming, but the clever sod also does false alarms so it can steal the food instead.
Indeed drongos are notorious among wildlife observers for their thieving ways. But sometimes the birds call "hawk" too often, and like the boy in Aesop's fables who cried "wolf" one too many times, they discover that no one's paying attention.from [Link]
Now researchers report in Science that when that happens, the clever birds deploy another trick: They imitate their victim's alarm call or that of another species. The discovery reveals that drongos are paying surprisingly close attention to their target's responses to their calls—perhaps even employing a type of sophisticated cognition that researchers usually reserve for humans only.
..effects the electromagnetic sphere of the planet might play on them..Wow now that is a real head scratcher! I won't even try to work that one out haha.
So that makes me think about 'animals who seasonally migrate'Monarch Butterfly's also migrate. What amazes me is it might take the monarchs as many as four to five generations to complete the journey all the way back up to Canada. I think that shows some kind of inbuilt compass, because obviously they aren't doing it from experience.
This feels similar to a study that was published only last year, but on a species of sparrow: white-throated sparrow. Just one example of likely many among bird species. Dialects and song is learned primarily by parents but the environment plays an important part too. For example, a bird living in a dense coniferous forest has quite a different dialect and song structure than a bird of the same species living in an open environment (e.g., prairies) - sounds travel and reflects off the vegetation differently, so birds (over the generations) learn to compensate / work with the environment they're in to maximize their vocal displays. I enjoy figuring out the puzzles and making sense of why things are what they are and how, and how songs/dialects change in space and time. The Rockies have created a divide in populations of the same species of birds, however, most songbirds are migratory and those that breed west of the Rockies may winter in the same area as those that breed east of the Rockies. Researchers think some species are singing and learning from each other also on their wintering grounds where west and east population come together. Here's an explanation that might help answer your friend:Hope that answers some...
[Link]
Incidentally, during lockdown last spring, bird researchers studied the effects of less noise (from less traffic on roads) in urban environments on birdsong frequencies (bandwidth) and volume. Birds living in urban areas were quick to adjust their song with the quieter environment, both by shifting back to their favoured frequencies (as shown from that species decades ago and in natural environments) and reducing their volume. Good evidence that birds are resilient and will adapt and learn new songs with shifting environmental cues.
Over the past year, Guterres said women leaders are among those who've kept COVID-19 transmission rates low and put their countries on tract for recovery while countries, blah, blah, blah . . .What? Are they going to place those countries on top of some subdivision with tract housing? Typical BFM, it's "on track."
"I'd guess that what we have us here is one of them there 'woked' editors. Don't let the door hit y'all in your fat asses on your way back north.R.C.
We see over and over again how hard it is as an individual to raise your voice in defense of rights and how easily authority figures can discount, trivialize or silence it. 🤔 [Link](Actually, I've got to give the lady kudos, I expected to read far more PC illogic there than I did.)
'women seem to be more predisposed toRCautoimmune diseasesbitching."
Like Gretchen Whitmer? Or the Horse from NZ shutting a whole country down for a few cases? Merkel has done OK, oh wait... 'looks at notes' no she hasn't.