''Swearing of oaths used to actually count for something. It used to be that people really respected sworn oaths, and would take you at your word, pretty much without question. Nowadays we're much too cynical a society to really put anywhere near as much credence on to an oath. I mean, if the director of a huge company swore on his mother's grave to stop polluting the rivers near his chemical factories, would anyone really believe him? It would be nice if we could revive faith in oaths, so that you really could believe someone if they swore to stop dumping toxic chemicals into the waterways. Lend such things more credence. It would be a credence clear-water revival."
As alarming as some of those deficits in science knowledge might appear, Americans fared better on several of the questions than similar, but older surveys of their Chinese and European counterparts.
Only 66 percent of people in a 2005 European Union poll answered the basic astronomy answer correctly. However, both China and the EU fared significantly better (66 percent and 70 percent, respectively) on the question about human evolution.
More people have said that and been killed than there are thorium decay products.
but bluh bluh miko that thing you said something negative about isnt really true because i dont want to believe it and all the sources are making it up, just like science!!!!
but bluh bluh miko that thing you said something negative about isnt really true because i dont want to believe it and all the sources are making it up, just like science!!!!
More people have said that and been killed than there are thorium decay products.
But I am a feisty Miko tonight. >:3 I am a boiling pan and someone turned up the heat!!! Boiling oil is nothing personal, you know, but bacon sure tastes good. UnU
"Duck Dynasty" => "duck" as an east-Asian surname, and thus the name of a dynasty (yes, dynasties exist outside of east Asia, but English-speaking people often think of east-Asian dynasties when the term is mentioned)
"One Hundred and One Dalmatians" => 101 dalmations being given the right to vote
Comments
HH quit working in mobile Chrome, then it quit working in Dolphin, now it works in Chrome again
something. It used to be that people really respected sworn oaths, and
would take you at your word, pretty much without question. Nowadays
we're much too cynical a society to really put anywhere near as much
credence on to an oath. I mean, if the director of a huge company swore
on his mother's grave to stop polluting the rivers near his chemical
factories, would anyone really believe him? It would be nice if we could
revive faith in oaths, so that you really could believe someone if they
swore to stop dumping toxic chemicals into the waterways. Lend such
things more credence. It would be a credence clear-water revival."
大學的年同性戀毛皮
aaaaa
My old computer could barly do interne explorer 2.0.
I use Internet Explorer because it works way better than anything else.
dime-a-dozen backstabbing scumbags!
like you!
...no offense.
Nature is an infinite sphere, whose center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere
anyway here
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/02/14/277058739/1-in-4-americans-think-the-sun-goes-around-the-earth-survey-says
http://time.com/7809/1-in-4-americans-thinks-sun-orbits-earth/
http://abcnews.go.com/US/quarter-americans-convinced-sun-revolves-earth-survey-finds/story?id=22542847
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/imageo/2014/02/17/1-in-4-americans-believe-sun-revolves-around-the-earth/
http://io9.com/a-quarter-of-americans-think-the-sun-revolves-around-th-1525478788
http://www.gallup.com/poll/3742/new-poll-gauges-americans-general-knowledge-levels.aspx
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/one-in-four-americans-dont-know-the-earth-orbits-the-sun-and-only-half-believe-in-evolution-9131721.html
http://news.discovery.com/space/astronomy/1-in-4-americans-dont-know-earth-orbits-the-sun-yes-really-140214.htm
http://doubtfulnews.com/2014/02/do-one-in-four-americans-really-not-believe-earth-revolves-around-sun/
...I have about 94.7 million more pages, if you *really* need them.
brb [doing thing]
"Duck Dynasty" => "duck" as an east-Asian surname, and thus the name of a dynasty (yes, dynasties exist outside of east Asia, but English-speaking people often think of east-Asian dynasties when the term is mentioned)
"One Hundred and One Dalmatians" => 101 dalmations being given the right to vote
well, except Due, since she's dead
because it was amusing for me to officially declare you a Nanoha character based solely on your sharing a name with that character
I think I dismissed it as an unrelated thing though