Only thing is my grass was only 3" high. It was the leaves he apparently didn't like. Guess what, leaves fall out of trees this time of year and I have many trees. Again, it doesn't bother me.Have to agree with this. When I moved into my current place, I needed a riding mower...before I got one, the grass got a little bit long. One day my neighbor just cut it. Made me feel like shit, that my yard looked bad enough that someone else in the neighborhood said fuck it, and just cut it themselves. Maintained my shit nice and tight ever since.
nationalfile.com
What’s the wait for steel?
quote:
Vanessa Gelman, Pfizer Senior Director of Worldwide Research: “From the perspective of corporate affairs, we want to avoid having the information on fetal cells floating out there…The risk of communicating this right now outweighs any potential benefit we could see, particularly with general members of the public who may take this information and use it in ways we may not want out there. We have not received any questions from policy makers or media on this issue in the last few weeks, so we want to avoid raising this if possible.”
You are right. Developed in 1797.I don't believe they had smallpox vaccines in 1777.
Beavis and the Buttheads
Cmon man, Me n Cornpop used to Jargy
It would have been front page every 24/7 365 if it had been Trump.
Well Have You Ever Noticed Over The Years …If you take away how crazy it sounds, that theory actually takes the least amount of assumptions. Almost every other thing I have heard does not fully explain what we saw with the flu. The only two theories I do not think have major holes are the one you mention, and social distancing & masks worked but I cannot buy that one.
I've put pets down that weren't this far gone.
Fenestration is struggling with Aluminum supply. Widow and door lead-times are long.I'm not sure on steel. It's not something that has been brought up as having issues by any of the builders or subs I deal with.
I don't believe they had smallpox vaccines in 1777.
I too did some digging.You are right. Developed in 1797.
In Asia and Africa they would take dried smallpox pustules, grind them up into a dust and blow them into the noses of the people to be inoculated. They were doing this in the late 1600s. By the early 1700s the practice had reached England and the USA, was tweaked as Jake articulated above, with better survivability rates. They still lost about 2% of the people who were inoculated, but this was thought a marvelous improvement over the 30% who died when they contracted the disease naturally.Smallpox inoculations happened decades before Jenners work.
They would take a needle and stick it in a smallpox sore, then stick it under the skin of the healthy person.
Incestuous Deliverance
Fenestration is struggling with Aluminum supply. Widow and door lead-times are long.
Covid Jab Players
Pinkies and the Brain (picture 2)