This is the toilet roll aisle at my local store:
And I can't fucking believe that Supernatural turned out to be prophetic after all.
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This is the toilet roll aisle at my local store:
And I can't fucking believe that Supernatural turned out to be prophetic after all.

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Preaching to the choir here, I know, but apart from inconveniences to quality of life, loss of smell is a safety hazard. Odor is added to natural gas in stoves and heating to make leaks detectable before they cause suffocation or explosions, but that safety precaution is rendered moot if your nose doesn’t work anymore. Loss of smell is a driving hazard. If your car smells like pancakes, you need to check for an antifreeze leak. If it smells like burning rubber, you need to check for an oil leak or for problems with your clutch or drive belt. If it smells like burning plastic, you need to check for electrical shorts. If it smells like burning carpet, you need to check your brakes. Loss of smell is a fire hazard. Careless mistakes in a kitchen can either ruin dinner or ruin lives, so reaction time matters. How do you detect smoke or fire before you see it?
If you drive or use your kitchen at home, you need a working sense of smell. If you work in a kitchen, or around chemicals, electronics or fuel, you need a working sense of smell. If you’re within proximity of flammables or other hazardous materials, you need a working sense of smell. Loss of smell is a safety hazard that will follow you from work into the car and around your home. Even if the COVID19 fatality rate were acceptable, loss of smell as a safety hazard is grossly overlooked.
Watching ppl talk about the experience of being homebound en mass rn is weird lol ngl
I dont want to be an asshole but sometimes it is frustrating how many ppl talk about the boredom, the uncertainty, the frustration of being unable to do things, the helplessness, the feeling of being trapped, the way time moves slowly and how hard it is to keep track of it, the pressure to do things and the pain of finding out how few you can actually get done (even with "all that time"), the stuff you miss out on, the lack of security of your needs being met, the struggle with self care, the isolation, the loneliness...like pals. That's me. That's me all the time. Every day. Once this thing is over, i and ppl like me will still be here, doing this, feeling all those things
Can ppl be a lil more sympathetic and concerned for our wellbeing now?
Reposted from @dtdesk #Biden #Impeachbiden #bidenresign #CDC #Trump2024 #maga #Afghanistan #Afghan #kabul #taliban #isis #bordercrises #kamala #kamalaharris #nancypelosi #impeach46 #fda #democrats #republicans #CV19 #conservatives #GOP #DNC #sleepyjoe #Pfizer #impeachbidenharris #trump #vaccine #congress #senate https://www.instagram.com/p/CTCyBRGrSguiat_kXhbwPecoHD492RYDObNYJY0/?utm_medium=tumblr

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Gender Roles
Philadelphia _ May 2020
While baseball, basketball, and other sports struggle to adapt, an international team of skater-experts has figured out a safer way to play.
“Leave it to a women's sports organization to put together a quite reasonable return plan,” says Emory University epidemiologist Zachary Binney, who has been a vocal critic of how some other sports are coming back. Syra Madad, a special pathogens expert at NYC Health + Hospitals, praises the association’s “return-to-derby ladder,” with its specific and data-based benchmarks, for its grounding in science and “basic infection-control principles.”
The roller derby guidelines put community and player health ahead of the need to keep the game going for the sake of eager fans. Meanwhile, in other sports, efforts to resume play continue even as cases turn up among players; and Covid-19 numbers are rising in the very areas where events are meant to be held. By taking local infection dynamics into account, the roller derby guidelines could end up serving as a template for how other leagues—including those for recreational, youth, and high school sports—could safely come back.