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Last active January 15, 2018 06:22
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Onto a. Sun may twenty six at two AM. Three club executives at. The the club vanity and open the gate were arrested. About fifty cops showed up. And arrested them and they were charged with violating the entertainment business law. And the entertainment business laws that basically you can't dance after one AM but they had registered as a restaurant so they were kind of exploiting a loophole. But the cops decided that they were gonna. They were gonna let that fly so they they showed up and arrested these exact executives. They were they were going to five AM right.
Yeah it's it's really strange that they they have the signs and they're saying no dancing. Button you know everyone's dancing you know and and it's kind of. What do you what constitutes is dancing like is bobbing your head dancing is. Could have been a.
So did the cops show up and see if people were dancing first or did they just assume that people were dancing.
I wonder why vanity and not some of these other establishments.
I mean you can go to cuddle care. You know there's a.
Yeah year. Clearly from Tokyo. I don't you know this. Seems like they want they don't have that law outside of Tokyo to the. The.
So Yahoo auctions. And I'm sending the info of. The private information.
Of a thousand four hundred twenty seven people. Eight hundred thirty five people. And. We don't really know how this happened.
Like you how does that happen. How does how does one individual have access to all that stuff. Was it just the emails or like account information.
Israeli. It's really tricky though I'm surprised there aren't more mistakes in the IT like this. Now it's so complicated there's so many things going on it so dynamic they're always having to update their systems and. There are so many security issues and there's so many like. Really clever hackers out there. And. It's just that such as soon.
Yeah. Yeah that was. As far as what bullets.
So. Basically these cockroaches are involving. And the way that they're involving is we have these little. Pesticide pellets. Better to have a.
A little glucose covering on them which is what entices the cockroaches to eat these as a side pallets and die. And these. These cockroaches have they're beginning to no longer eat the palace. And. We're calling it evolution but you know what's really happening is that all the cockroaches that had a sweet tooth there their debt. You know
so as the. The ones that didn't have that sweet tooth for that glucose covering on the pesticides as they survive. You know they're the ones that repopulating so. And it's kind of shifted that way it's kind of similar to the way that. Virus not viruses but bacteria. Develop resistance to antibiotics you know if you kill off all the ones that it's effective against but it's not effective against all of them then only the strong ones survive and I know that in a sense is evolution.
It's really interesting because we we tend to think that evolution. Is an entirely natural process and then it doesn't continue it's not really going on anymore. You know because it's because of the way that we. Because of human intervention. But in a way where actually causing the things around us to adapt. Possibly in a in a more. Rapid way than it was than they would have otherwise. And I I imagine this is going to happen to. Not just that. That particular type of cockroach but. I imagine it's it's happening with. With all the varieties of cockroach that we. Use pesticides again.
South Korea shut down two more nuclear reactors over fake certificates.
This is something that also happened last November they shut down two reactors that. Basically. Certificates for their certificates kind of.
Ensuring that the parts of the reactors are up to par that their quality is high enough. To withstand the stresses of being part of a nuclear reactor. And the certificates are fakes so they're having to go through and and get the the proper parts in this case cables. So they're going to experience electricity electricity shortages and rolling blackouts. Like never before. And. The nuclear reactors are about a third of south Koreans power mix. And they're gonna be close for about four months.
Yeah I I think it's. I think this just goes to show that this is what.
This is what people do I mean this is what humans do I always gonna.
Cut corners on these sorts of things as they were you know it was a very similar situation with KEPCO. And they had similar problems in the United States.
Yeah. They have they have they have the sort of issue with earthquake proofing to standards.
Mmhm. So I mean it's it's really it's really not where you want to be cutting corners.
Yeah. So some six hundred a year old plants. Are basically coming back to life. These are ancient plants they were trapped underneath glaciers.
And as these. With with climate change a lot of these glaciers are are moving and revealing things that have been covered the at the last six hundred years these are bryophytes the plants. I'm bryophytes are like little. Bernie. Like. Not not trees or anything like smaller plants.
And they were previously assumed debt scientists had assumed that all the plants that were underneath this. That were in this subglacial her region where dad but as the as the glacier moved they realize that. These plants were actually still alive and they're actually re animating. And. These questions have been there since the little ice age. Which was fifteen fifty eighty.
Yeah. It's not that definitely gonna be starting his plans to see if there's anything weird about it because we don't have anything I don't I don't think we have anything bad old that's. A lot.
I wonder I mean they wouldn't still be alive if the glaciers weren't there ran.
On may thirty first its world. No tobacco day.
This was created in nineteen eighty seven to promote awareness awareness of. The. I guess. Not just the death but you know all the. Obviously tobacco is not very good for you so unawareness of. All of those negative facts and maybe try to inspire some people to quit. Smoking. So. As a.
The latest studies. It's estimated that tobacco causes five point four million deaths every year so that's a pretty big number. It's bigger than pretty much everyone out there.
Yep five point four million deaths.
Well that's because you're eating it's not because you're. It's not because you're not smoking I mean there. Supposedly there are some cognitive benefits to to make a team. But. The costs far outweighs the benefits as. And now it's it's pretty clear at this point.
S.. I mean if they if they came out with tobacco. Today. Like it would never be approved it would never be approved there's no way.
No way and you know there's so many other. Substances and drugs that are illegal but none of them are as bad as tobacco. None of them are as harmful or not of from. Kill as many people none of them are as addictive they say that tobacco is more addictive than you know even the hardest drugs out there.
Yeah that's pretty mind blowing. So don't smoke on may thirty first.
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