The fire department in Paris followed a protocol: Save the people, save the art, save the altar, save what furniture you can, then focus on the structure, in that order. They know what can be rebuilt and what can't.
this one is worth a read. I donno how true it is but they claim they actually have trees in place from the last time the cathedral burned down ... a very long time ago as a backup
so they can replace the timbers
@rahuldottech twitter is.. brief, and well it gets all sorts
it's like "This seems to be a [link-only](link) answer. And if the link breaks this answer becomes useless." instead of looking the topic you're trying to refer to back your comment up you have a few already defined that you can just paste it
not sure if i'm making things clear or messing it up more ahah
No more re-typing the same comments over and over!
This script adds a little 'auto' link next to all comments boxes. When you click the link, you see a popup with 6 configurable auto-comments (canned responses), which you can easily click to insert.
This script was inspired by answers to thi...
> In the early 80s, the NIS was investigating homosexuality in the Chicago area. Agents discovered that gay men sometimes referred to themselves as "friends of Dorothy". Unaware of the meaning of the term, the NIS believed that there actually was a woman named Dorothy at the center of a massive ring of homosexual military personnel, so they launched an enormous and futile hunt for the elusive "Dorothy", hoping to find her and convince her to reveal the names of gay service members.
> Reusable cotton bags seem like a fine substitution for plastic bags and they are—if you reuse them consistently for at least 11.5 years. According to a Danish study, anything less than that won’t offset the fact that manufacturing these types of bags creates 606 times as much water pollution as making a plastic bag.
shit
> A better option is to use brown paper bags for lighter items (and re-use and recycle them afterward), or reuse those flimsy but remarkably-strong plastic bags and ditch this notion that they can only be used once, for a short period of time.
I think companies are going to switch to paper bags, and charge a fee for them because they're a lot more expensive than plastic bags (which will also encourage reuse).