1 hour later…
04:00
@CowperKettle I skimmed this article, noting that it's a rare disease with severe consequences, manifesting itself in different ways at different times (sometimes delayed onset) and is difficult to diagnose.
@CowperKettle So I think, in the sentence you quote, that they're suggesting gathering data from a variety of places (centers) would provide information on the methods (modality) used to treat the disease and the results achieved. The authors are all from Poland. The rarity means that tests of treatments with control groups are therefore not feasible.
2 hours later…
07:06
28 yo Denis Ulyanov was given a state funeral in Artemovsky, a town in the Urals. He enrolled in the Wagner Group from prison, where he served a sentence of 2 years 9 months for car theft.
Denis has been repeatedly caught for car theft since his youth, was getting 1 to 2 years in jail, then get out and did the same.
Once he stole a smartphone, a bicycle and a sum of money from his mom, and she went to the police. That time, he served 6 months in prison.

The Order of Courage (Russian: Орден Мужества, Orden Muzhestva) is a state decoration of the Russian Federation first established on March 2, 1994 by Presidential Decree 442 to recognise selfless acts of courage and valour. Its statute was amended three times, first on January 6, 1999 by Presidential Decree 19, again on September 7, 2010 by Presidential Decree 1099, and finally on December 16, 2011 by Presidential Decree 1631. The Order of Courage nominally replaced the Soviet Order "For Personal Courage" in the post-USSR Russian awards system.
== Award statute ==
The Order of Courage is awarded...
The funeral was attended by representatives of the Military Commissariat, war veteran organizations, and the local Mayor's Office.
> We mourn along with the family and friends. We are proud that on our land such sons of the Russian land are born, who, at the cost of their lives, protect our peaceful skies. They give us the opportunity to live, raise children and grandchildren, - said the head of Artemovsky, Konstantin Trofimov, at the funeral.
The General Military Staff of the RF has rescinded the reprieve from mobilization for men with three children, announced in October. e1.ru/text/world/2023/01/13/71970422
08:15
NASA is planning a gigantic serviceable telescope in space for finding new planets in 2040s science.org/content/article/…
09:05
Olesya Krivtsova was posting messages against the Special Operation. Her classmates at the University filed a complaint to the police. At 6 am her apartment was raided. During the raid, one of the policemen stood above her holding a sledgehammer. He told her: "this is a greeting from the Wagner Group" (one of the group's members was taped as his head was crushed with a sledgehammer for deserting).
2 hours later…
2 hours later…
@Mitch My distant relatives who used to be rich had a house worker/gardener who earned a university degree in Tajikistan, but fled because of poverty/civil war/etc
> Five times (in the elections of 1994, 1999, 2006, 2013 and 2020), Rahmon won undemocratic presidential elections; in addition, he extended and reformed his powers based on the results of the national constitutional referendums of 1999 and 2003. Since 25 December 2015, Emomali Rahmon has held the lifetime title of Peshvoyi Millat (Tajik: Пешвои Миллат), which means “Leader of the Nation”
14:06
5

What is the source of the snowclone:
X is the last refuge of Y
Here are the following examples I could find:
Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel. - Samuel Johnson
Audacity is the last refuge of guilt. - Samuel Johnson
Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative. - Oscar Wilde
...
@FaheemMitha I've actually said that out loud and people (well, person) was aghast at the suggestion.
I think that Plato didn't invent the person (other writings of greeks at the time supposedly refer to him as being a pretty smart guy). And the Socratic dialogs may have been -inspired- by discussions remembered by Plato.
1 hour later…
18:20
@FaheemMitha Yeah, I meant that. I'm saying that Socrates was probably a real dude, and probably had good arguments for everything, and probably had great sessions talking bullshit while drinking late into the night about subjects that Plato ascribed to him, but Plato (not Socrates) constructed the dialogs with those well thought out arguments (not Socrates) and actually wrote them down.
18:46
A manager writes to another in some company in Russia - "We made an icon using the MidJourney AI and placed it instead of the icon drawn by a human designer, and it was viewed 14% more".

Donald Taylor Ritchie, OAM (9 June 1926 – 13 May 2012) was an Australian who intervened in many suicide attempts. He officially rescued at least 180 people who had intended to attempt suicide at the Gap.
== Early life ==
Ritchie went to Vaucluse Public School and attended Scots College. He enlisted into the Royal Australian Navy on the 30th of June 1944 as a Seaman during World War II aboard HMAS Hobart and witnessed the unconditional surrender of the Japanese Imperial Forces in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945, officially ending World War II in the Pacific. After the war he was a life insurance...
19:02
@Mitch Yes, something like that. AFAIK, the only evidence that Socrates existed was his students writing about him. Let's say there was a real person called Socrates. It doesn't therefore follow that the depiction of him is accurate.
But didn't Plato and Xenophon cross-reference each other? So at least they provided supporting evidence for each other's existence. But I really know very little on the topic. Some distant memories from a long-ago childhood, mostly.
As a child, I tried to read the Socratic dialogues, and thought they were so much gibberish. He would just make random assertions which were supposed to follow from what went before, and as far as I could tell, didn't at all. And then everyone would go, yes, yes, Socrates. What a bunch of yes-men.
2 hours later…
21:55
@Vikas Neither French, nor 007: हम्फ्री बोगार्ट in उच्च सिएरा. Loosely related to Mitch's quote: Patriotism is the last refuge of scoundrels.
« first day (4446 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (772 days later) »
Transcript for
Jan12
Jan '2313
Jan14
English Language & Usage: Multi-Layer…
Not for the faint of heart or those easily triggered by Englis...