Source โ
14.02.2026 22:21 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0@canemtemple.bsky.social
Rescue, Foster, Rehabilitate & Rehome hard-luck K9s Teach people to communicate with their canine companions
Source โ
14.02.2026 22:21 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0This one is working for me Thank you
13.02.2026 17:15 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Screenshot showing that this link is absolutely not a gift article link and the article cannot be read by clicking on this link unless you have an account with Wall Street journal So the exact opposite of what this poster claims
It absolutely is not a gift link
13.02.2026 07:43 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0This Fkng post needs a trigger warning
There are so many people who suffer dramatically from receptive aphasia, dyslexia, et alii...
๐๐
Thank you! I love her and esoteric, dry and intellectual humor โฃ๏ธ
10.02.2026 06:52 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0๐ D'accord et merci
10.02.2026 01:25 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0.
.
Kind of you, but I seem unable
09.02.2026 21:36 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Yeah, I accept that
You absolutely may, and thank you
Garbage gift link if you have to create an account to read it
09.02.2026 16:31 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0"Laying," what, prone?
Not sure what you're a doctor of but you missed elementary school grammar
Laying is a transitive verb and requires an object
You can lay a book on a table
After that the book is lying on the table
In the above sentence someone is in fact *lying* prone on a Florida beach
๐ง
"...a fun phenomena...?"
โโ
"I'm a teacher but I don't understand basic grammar re plurals"
๐๐๐ฝ
DSotM ๐ reference
Brava
๐คท๐ฝ Really?
Nobody is going to challenge this racist jackass on that tired old wildly inaccurate tropeโโ
Okay
๐๐ฝ I will
"...most were criminals and probably ended up back in jail"
Fuck you, Art Nerd
Educate yourself and stop being a classist, racist piece of shit
Cannot speak to anyone else's experience, but my familiars tend to be amazed that voice rec renders so accurately for me
But of course that and $5 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks
๐คท๐ฝโโ๏ธ๐ฅด
If you say that training whatever algorithm is involved in learning to accurately render our spoken diction to text is more difficult for Apple users than Android, okay
Took me 10s of 1000s of texts to train the tiny person in my phone in my voice idiosyncrasies
Not in the least
Despite being occasionally not just grammarian but pedantic ๐, when it comes to those homonymic transpositions, people can learn to speak typo
Voice rec / wo proofing
29.01.2026 17:29 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0๐*passed
29.01.2026 02:44 โ ๐ 2 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0But no -my appreciation for jejune comedy past 50 plus years ago
29.01.2026 02:24 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 3 ๐ 0I do not remember, and did not catch the reference
29.01.2026 02:23 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Ooh, so sorry we discontinue at 11am CST answering inane questions that can be answered in moments with a modicum of actual interest in the query
29.01.2026 01:24 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0*...is a plethora..."
or
"There are plethoric reasons..."
"Cuts to science have 'Leed' to long term consequences."
โ
You don't know the difference between the element lead and the past tense of the verb lead?
๐ wtf
Seriously?
You're an editor and a law professor and you don't know the difference between the element lead and the past tense of the verb lead?
๐ง
Gtfooh widdatshyte
* "...with malice AFORETHOUGHT"
26.01.2026 14:48 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0Screenshot of a page from the above book "On 19 October 1939, Hitler briefed his generals on the German plan of attack. The ruthless employment of the Luftwaffe against the heart of the British will-to-resist,' he said, 'can and will follow at the given moment. In Britain, everyone felt the clock ticking. A last-ditch plan to dig a network of underground shelters in London was considered, but ultimately scrapped over concerns that the populace, paralysed by fear, would never re-emerge. At the last moment, a few psychiatric field hospitals were thrown up outside the city to tend to the first wave of victims. And then it began. On 7 September 1940, 348 German bomber planes crossed the Channel. The fine weather had drawn many Londoners outdoors, so when the sirens sounded at 4:43 p.m. all eyes went to the sky. That September day would go down in history as Black Saturday, and what followed as 'the Blitz'. Over the next nine months, more than 80,000 bombs would be dropped on London alone. Entire neighbourhoods were wiped out. A million buildings in the capital were damaged or destroyed, and more than 40,000 people in the UK lost their lives. So how did the British react? What happened when the country was bombed for months on end? Did people get hysterical? Did they behave like brutes? Let me start with the eyewitness account of a Canadian psychiatrist. In October 1940, Dr John MacCurdy drove through south-east London to visit a poor neighbourhood that had been particularly hard hit. All that remained was a patchwork of craters and crumbling buildings. If there was one place sure to be in the grip of pandemonium, this was it. So what did the doctor find, moments after an air raid alarm? 'Small boys continued to play all over the pavements, shoppers went on haggling, a policeman directed traffic in majestic boredom and the bicyclists defied death and the traffic laws. No one, so far as I could see, even looked into the sky. In fact, if there's one thing that aโฆ
19.01.2026 22:04 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0Cover of the book "Humankind: A Hopeful History" by Rutger Bregman
19.01.2026 18:29 โ ๐ 4 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0On 19 October 1939, Hitler briefed his generals on the German plan of attack. The ruthless employment of the Luftwaffe against the heart of the British will-to-resist,' he said, 'can and will follow at the given moment. In Britain, everyone felt the clock ticking. A last-ditch plan to dig a network of underground shelters in London was considered, but ultimately scrapped over concerns that the populace, paralysed by fear, would never re-emerge. At the last moment, a few psychiatric field hospitals were thrown up outside the city to tend to the first wave of victims. And then it began. On 7 September 1940, 348 German bomber planes crossed the Channel. The fine weather had drawn many Londoners outdoors, so when the sirens sounded at 4:43 p.m. all eyes went to the sky. That September day would go down in history as Black Saturday, and what followed as 'the Blitz'. Over the next nine months, more than 80,000 bombs would be dropped on London alone. Entire neighbourhoods were wiped out. A million buildings in the capital were damaged or destroyed, and more than 40,000 people in the UK lost their lives. So how did the British react? What happened when the country was bombed for months on end? Did people get hysterical? Did they behave like brutes? Let me start with the eyewitness account of a Canadian psychiatrist. In October 1940, Dr John MacCurdy drove through south-east London to visit a poor neighbourhood that had been particularly hard hit. All that remained was a patchwork of craters and crumbling buildings. If there was one place sure to be in the grip of pandemonium, this was it. So what did the doctor find, moments after an air raid alarm? 'Small boys continued to play all over the pavements, shoppers went on haggling, a policeman directed traffic in majestic boredom and the bicyclists defied death and the traffic laws. No one, so far as I could see, even looked into the sky. In fact, if there's one thing that all accounts of the Blitz have in common it'sโฆ
Image of the cover of NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER "Humankind A Hopeful History" By Rutger Bregman An absolutely remarkable work Grounding and uplifting at the same time
An absolutely remarkable work
Grounding and uplifting at the same time
files.addictbooks.com/wp-content/u...