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New surveillance footage shows Armed Robbery walking around construction site
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2020-05-15 at 5:13 AM UTC
Originally posted by Technologist No, but I did admire a nun that I had as a 4th grade teacher. She had a huge affect on me. She turned me into the anally organized neat freak that I am to this day. I don’t think Sister Micalean ever hurt a soul.
of course you'd admire an old nun because you're an old witch yourself -
2020-05-15 at 5:19 AM UTC
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2020-05-15 at 7:20 AM UTCITT: people being utterly retarded and missing Technologay's point.
Tell me mmq, do you believe the following line is true:
"The Nazis and Unit 731 were terrible but gave us a lot of data that helped advance medical science". -
2020-05-15 at 7:28 AM UTC
Originally posted by Wariat jesus christ your a whiney molest cidtim bitch. only americans twlk like this constantly about peros because you yourselves are them. nobody in europe cares bro or a fifth as much.
When wariat gets mad his English falls apart even more. Like watching a soggy cookie disintegrate into a cup of milk. -
2020-05-15 at 7:28 AM UTCJesus 19 pages.
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2020-05-15 at 7:35 AM UTC
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2020-05-15 at 7:44 AM UTCin another related development,
psychopathic psychologists inadvertently invalidated psychopathy.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-neuroscientist-who-discovered-he-was-a-psychopath-180947814/ -
2020-05-15 at 8:53 AM UTC
Originally posted by ORACLE ITT: people being utterly retarded and missing Technologay's point.
Tell me mmq, do you believe the following line is true:
"The Nazis and Unit 731 were terrible but gave us a lot of data that helped advance medical science".
Thats true. Operation Paperclip was a thing for a reason.
It sounds like her point is “I can never recognize someone who’s done awful things”. But all of those scientists were complicit in what Nazis and Japanese did. -
2020-05-15 at 11:11 AM UTC
Originally posted by CASPER Thats true. Operation Paperclip was a thing for a reason.
It sounds like her point is “I can never recognize someone who’s done awful things”. But all of those scientists were complicit in what Nazis and Japanese did.
Didn't America nuke and firebomb a whole bunch of cities? -
2020-05-15 at 11:18 AM UTC
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2020-05-15 at 12:55 PM UTC
Originally posted by CASPER Thats true. Operation Paperclip was a thing for a reason.
It sounds like her point is “I can never recognize someone who’s done awful things”. But all of those scientists were complicit in what Nazis and Japanese did.
Operation Paperclip was for rocket scientists and helped legit Nazis escape prosecution.
The only reason it was "okayed" was because the Russians were doing the same.
The reason why we don't use medical "data" from Auschwitz and unit 731 is because their methodology was hopelessly tainted by their ideology: because it's recognized you cannot disentangle and extract useful information from Eichmann's "clinical trials".
The connection between Ted Kaczynski and his work is: it is by a mentally ill, probably autistic, lifelong misanthrope, reclusive narcissist.
The issue isn't that he is stupid and wrong but that his most famous work is a deep reflection of exactly how disturbed he is, and you can see that in all the ways it's useless. It is written to appeal to the types of Sploo. It really tickles your pickle if it's the first treatise you've ever read for sure so it is very popular for public consumption. -
2020-05-15 at 2:22 PM UTCRocket technology that killed people and was meant to be a vehicle for biological weapons. And that was financed by a regime that wanted people exterminated.If that knowledge came from such a tainted place, can we ever really trust it? Apparently we did bc von braun and my grandfather worked on some of the same projects at NASA.
I domt believe for a second that we didnt squirrel away the results of some of the more relevant experiments. The US and Russia were pretty much at each others throats trying to stash whatever goodies they could find after Berlin. -
2020-05-15 at 2:31 PM UTC
Originally posted by ORACLE The reason why we don't use medical "data" from Auschwitz and unit 731 is because their methodology was hopelessly tainted by their ideology
kek. Much of that data was actually used as the basis for further study - in the case of the Germans, specifically the tests to determine how long an airman could survive in freezing water. In the case of 731, the US absorbed much of the leadership in the same way they did with Operation Paperclip and it served as the basis for their bioweapons programme. They explicitly used U731-devised techniques to spread Scarlet Fever and others across the countryside to cover their retreat from the Korean War. -
2020-05-15 at 2:33 PM UTCScience is science is science. And war is a whole lot of science.
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2020-05-15 at 2:47 PM UTC
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2020-05-15 at 2:47 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra kek. Much of that data was actually used as the basis for further study - in the case of the Germans, specifically the tests to determine how long an airman could survive in freezing water. In the case of 731, the US absorbed much of the leadership in the same way they did with Operation Paperclip and it served as the basis for their bioweapons programme. They explicitly used U731-devised techniques to spread Scarlet Fever and others across the countryside to cover their retreat from the Korean War.
I was gonna say i dont know shit about shit but i couldve sworn they used hypothermia data that for coast guard and navy research on search and rescue. . -
2020-05-15 at 2:49 PM UTC
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2020-05-15 at 2:55 PM UTC
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2020-05-15 at 3:18 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra kek. Much of that data was actually used as the basis for further study - in the case of the Germans, specifically the tests to determine how long an airman could survive in freezing water. In the case of 731, the US absorbed much of the leadership in the same way they did with Operation Paperclip and it served as the basis for their bioweapons programme. They explicitly used U731-devised techniques to spread Scarlet Fever and others across the countryside to cover their retreat from the Korean War.
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/25982
Inb4mainstream(((media)))
Just to be clear: it's complicated. But a very tiny amount of medical data ended up being valid from the totality of their work. -
2020-05-15 at 3:23 PM UTCYou cant make me read.