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12:05 AM
@tchrist: They gave me Azithromycin.
Knockout doses, 500mg the first day, 250 each the next four days.
At the doc's I asked the nurse if they had had any coronavirus patients. She said none, nada, zilch. But the place was empty.
I had to wear a mask because I have a cough.
 
12:18 AM
Example of the compassion you get from the Republican party.
 
12:36 AM
 
I went to Google Maps and entered the location @Robusto has specified in his profile.
This is what I got.
Well played, sir. Well played.
@Mitch the map of Germany cannot possibly be right.
Nobody lives in the upper right bit. Literally nobody. I'm not even joking.
Mar 13 at 21:59, by RegDwigнt
Schools closed everywhere except in Mecklenburg, which is the least populated state of them all. (The sixth largest in the country, but only 1 million people live there out of a total of 86. And half of them live in just two or three towns on the Baltic Sea coast.)
 
12:54 AM
@RegDwigнt maps are the worst
I don't think the data is in error, it's just what the data is. I think it is the requirement 'town >1000' which plays a weird game with whatever distribution is in that country.
 
Yes I paid close attention to that.
 
maybe most towns in brandenburg are just above 1000, lots of small villages just above the threshold would cover the area with dots but still be sparsely populated.
 
How many towns of 1000+ people can you put in Mecklenburg, if you only have half a million people to work with that don't live in the three major cities.
@Mitch but the density of the red dots in your map is uniform. If anything there's a free spot right in the middle of the most populated state of them all.
 
or for iran which is like 80m fit around a large unnhnhabited desert, should look just like Germany but doesn't. Maybe just a few large towns, or many many just under 1000.
 
France looks quite suspect as well, in places.
Scotland, and Spain, I have no idea. Russia and Scandinavia might be just about right.
 
12:59 AM
champagne is underpopulated so that works, but gascony is too but looks populated in the map.
scotland and Ireland look right
the french alps look right
iceland is pretty accurate
I thought finland was way less populated than what is in the map
 
The whole map looks just the right amount of right to not appear entirely wrong. Just.
 
sardinia corsica sicily look wrong
 
It's like you're listening to some radio host talking about a million topics and you nod in agreement until they come to the one topic that you actually know something about and then all of a sudden they are talking complete bollocks.
And then you have to wonder if the other 999999 topics were likewise a load of BS.
Anyway I must be off to bed. I did want to go to the office tomorrow. And it's 2am already.
 
Where is everybody in spain?
 
How would you pronounce Wisam as a name?
 
1:07 AM
In English?
 
Well yes, or if you'd have a swedish accent to it I'd be chuffed =)
 
It has the appearance of a non-English name so it would have a lot of variation by native English speakers
 
Lets say his last name is Alkhen
 
/wi:zm/ maybe?
/wai sm/
 
That is how I have been saying it. 1.
 
1:09 AM
'kh' is not a standard English spelling so again lots of people will pronounce it in all sorts of ways.
/alkin/ ?
Are you Swedish?
 
He hasn't objected yet, so I'll guess I have to ask him. Thanks for the help =) Yes I am.
 
or is this Swedish names but you're ENglish native speaker?
Names are always special so you should ask.
@CaptainGiraffe So you're asking about a Swedish name?
I have no idea how they would pronounce it.
 
@Mitch No it is a name imported into sweden.
 
It could be all sorts of different from pronouncing it like it was English spelling.
@CaptainGiraffe Well, that complicates it even more, doesn't it? Where from?
 
@Mitch I wish I knew =) that would simplify things immensly.
I'm gonna go with /wi:zm/
 
1:17 AM
"Let's say his name is 'Alkhen'": that's a bit bizarre, why would you say that, especially when you want to know its pronunciation?
@CaptainGiraffe You should ask the person. Don't really on my English pronunciation.
 
@Mitch last name. ??
Clues as to origin was my intention.
 
Yeah, last name. Why would you say "Let's say..."? that's just weird. Just say what the exact thing is. Otherwise who knows what's going on with pronunciation.
@CaptainGiraffe What clues?
 
@Mitch Clues: If someone (including you) would recognize the name to be from a particular region of the world.
 
@CaptainGiraffe no it's not recognizably scandinavian. It's definitely not japanese. If forced to guess I would have said russian, but really, I don't know.
 
@Mitch I appreciate your considerations. Thank you.
 
1:25 AM
sure. I don't think you can take anything I say as corroborating or refuting anything you've already thought. Just because I gave a pronunciation that you would have given doesn't mean either of us are close to correct.
where is the person from?
also, this other person may be acting politely in saying that you're pronouncing their name correctly, when in fact you may be pronouncing it horribly wrong, maybe even some obscenity, but they're just use to foreigners messing it up and don't care to go through the trouble to correct it.
@CaptainGiraffe no worries
 
2:15 AM
 
2:28 AM
@tchrist I meant 40 million people per planet
 
 
1 hour later…
3:55 AM
@Mitch All in the cities.
@CowperKettle Those 40 million would mostly come on top off normal deaths.
And it could be 700 million, if hospitals are quickly overwhelmed.
At least theoretically.
@Mitch @RegDwigнt There are at least 84 towns with more than 1000 inhabitants: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
If you put 84 dots in that Land, you might very well cover up the area in that map, depending on the size of each dot.
In reality, the area occupied by (almost) each of those towns will be much smaller than the area occupied by one dot.
So the dots and the area they occupy misrepresent the population density.
For example, in more densely populated areas, there may be a single dot for a city of 5 million people. But it looks just as big as a dot of 1200 people in Mecklenburg.
And, if several towns are so close together that their dots overlap, the map will be 'hiding' how many towns there really are within the area of their combined dots.
 
5:02 AM
@Cerberus As a country, the United States is growing in known cases and reported deaths by a nearly constant +32% daily increase for both. That’s a double every 2½ days or 60 hours. That means that in one week's time, all else being equal, the USA alone will have seen around 375,000 known cases and some 7,200 known deaths. In two weeks time, that rises to 2½ million known cases and around 76 thousand known deaths. Please reread that sentence. And it only gets worse from there.
(Very technically, the known cases growth rate is the 24th root of (54,823 ÷ 75) or 1.316223, or +31.62%. And the known deaths growth rate is the 24th root of (778 ÷ 1) or 1.319646, or +31.96%.)
That's just the first 24 days of March. But it's a constant rate.
On March 1st, we in the United States had 75 known cases and 1 known death. On March 24th, we had 54,823 known cases and 778 known deaths. Plot all 24 days logarithmically, and each runs very close to a straight line that grows by nearly 32% every single day without fail.
Your country has a scary growth rate as well.
If we see 2½ million deaths in May, as well we might, do you think they'll let us fire Trump for it?
It shouldn't be too hard to get agreement from ⅔ of the surviving senators who’ll still be around by then.
They wouldn't survive their next elections otherwise.
Then again, by then senatorial replacement by actual election instead of gubernatorial replacement because of deaths in office will probably be itself a minority of the seats.
Does the Supreme Court need a quorum?
 
5:24 AM
Martial law in the United States refers to several periods in United States history where in a region or the United States as a whole were placed under the control of a military body. On a federal level, only the president has the power to impose martial law. In each state, the governor has the right to impose martial law within the borders of the state. In the United States, martial law has been used in a limited number of circumstances, such as New Orleans during the Battle of New Orleans; after major disasters, such as the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 or the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 or...
 
So we couldn't impeach him?
 
They tried that.
One billion people under lock-down for 21 days is going to be an interesting test of democracy in India.
 
5:44 AM
You'd be surprised how few doubles it would take to hit a billion
 
5:54 AM
yup, exponential is extremely fast
2^30
 
6:30 AM
@Robusto WOW!!!
 
7:23 AM
@Cerberus According to a large-scale official study done in 2019, 50% of Russians have no savgings at all. They spend what they earn and have to go and earn some more.
I have friends living hand-to-mouth. I can't imagine what they will do if the economy stops.
And I don't believe the 700 mn figure. The death toll in the USA is about 1.5%
And it may be even lower because not every ill person gets diagnosed.
 
 
3 hours later…
9:58 AM
@RegDwigнt @Mitch many thanks!
 
10:39 AM
Prince Charles has tested positive.
 
 
1 hour later…
11:41 AM
Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related
 
 
2 hours later…
1:34 PM
@Mitch How did you get to type that word? unnhnhnunhnhbited
 
1:57 PM
@Gigili I have a special keyboard
 
Keyboard software likes to introdufe typos randomly, upon which it has a good giggle.
 
Mar 18 at 16:33, by Mitch
It sounded right in my head.
 
That is an ambiguous statement.
 
Very Mitchy
6
Q: Did Russia Release Lions onto the streets to keep people in isolation?

Lio ElbammalfI've seen the below image circulating facebook: Claiming Lions are being used to keep Russians indoors during the Coronavirus pandemic.

Lockdowns have bored people immensely it seems
@Cowp don't forget to take a selfie with the lion
 
@M.A.R. How can lions do what the Russian winter can't?
 
2:08 PM
Lannisters don't look particularly threatening in the north
 
Lannisters are from the south, Kings Landing.
 
I know
I'm in the middle of book five, Tyrion is on his way to Dany, Cersei is busy exchanging passive-aggressive retorts with the Tyrell queen, and Jamie is getting bruises, training to fight with his left
Few characters have remained, and fewer are ominous
 
@Robusto I am relieved to hear it.
 
Thanks.
Feb 8 '13 at 15:27, by Robusto
Seriously, though, George R. R. Martin writes way too long. Compared to The Song of Ice and Fire, Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings feels like a novella.
 
Here we have 500 mg pills, and doctors usually administer 1000 the first day and 500 the next days
 
2:13 PM
@tchrist I actually felt better a few hours after the first pill.
 
It's kinda the drug for cold
 
@M.A.R. Rhinoviruses and coronaviruses aren't biotic enough for antibiotic treatment.
 
Cefixime works better with operations and stuff
 
But the host of bacterial hangers-on are usually offed by gram negative antibiotics, sometimes gram positive.
 
@tchrist Aye
With viral respiratory illnesses, previously (and still) cuddled in a "cold" category, the best course of action, after treating the symptoms, was to deal with it
@Robusto Well, I prefer this entertainment to napping and gaming, so the other contenders aren't very competitive
 
2:18 PM
I'll grant you that.
Although I do like a good nap when I can get one. Usually after a long bike ride with lots of climbing.
Sit back on the couch, put on whatever golfing event is happening, and just like that I'm asleep.
I don't know what I'll do now that they've cancelled golf events. Nothing is quite as soporific as that.
 
My United States Census 2020 form arrived by postal mail yesterday, with a big black enclosing box like on cigarette packs or other dangerous drugs reading YOUR RESPONSE IS REQUIRED BY LAW above and SU RESPUESTA ES REQUERIDA POR LEY. I bet they're in a hurry to count people before the tsunami floods the morgues.
 
Heh, true. Cynical, but true.
 
Spain is out of morgues. They're stacking up bodies at ice rinks.
 
Keerist.
 
That's coming, soon.
 
2:23 PM
14 hours ago, by Robusto
At the doc's I asked the nurse if they had had any coronavirus patients. She said none, nada, zilch. But the place was empty.
Hopefully that persists, but I doubt it.
 
It will come later to some places than to others.
 
Spain passed China, already?
 
Yes, in attributed deaths.
 
We are on "stay home" restriction here. I went to the supermarket the other day and there were almost more checkout people than customers.
 
Yes: if a government is unwilling or unable to provide for the basic necessities of life for all of its citizens in times of crisis, such as food and healthcare, such measures may be impracticable.

As to the death toll, we simply don't know. I said 700 million as an upper bound: if all humans are infected around the same time, and if 12% of those infected suffer very serious effects (as some statistics from China show), and if those cannot be hospitalised (no country has nearly that large a capacity), then you could be looking at 700 million in theory. I think it will probably be less even
 
2:25 PM
Officially.
 
:-/
 
Italy, Spain, China, Iran
 
Many countries, including China, have had infections and fatalities caused by the virus, or complicated by it, that have gone unattributed to the virus.
All official tallies are lower bounds on reality.
 
"official"
 
@tchrist But your government, or your states, have taken some serious measures now, haven't they? Holland is already seeing the first, uncertain signs of a possible flattening in hospitalisations. Italy, too, I believe. It should take about 14 days to see the effects of any measures.
 
2:28 PM
Trump wants his economy back up and running by Easter.
 
You know, I took the 24th root to arrive at an average +32% American growth rate in cases and deaths between the 1st and the 24th of March. But that's a fencepost error: it's actually the 23rd root because the first of the month plus twenty-three days is the twenty-fourth of the month. That makes it +33% instead.
 
And some idiot Republican lt. governor in Texas said grandparents should sacrifice themselves to get the economy going again. I shit you not.
 
Trump wants re-election.
 
Duh.
 
@Cerberus Some have, but nothing even half-close to good enough yet.
 
2:29 PM
"You first, sir"
 
@skullpatrol His real estate empire is bleeding cash.
 
right
 
I'd like to see him try to hold a rally in this climate.
 
@Robusto That is...rather extreme. And would people vote for someone like that?
Your Republicans should be careful: I believe their voters are old people...
 
@Robusto It's not just him. This is everywhere on Fox.
 
people want to make America Great Again: virus or no virus
 
@Cerberus Because they are ignorant, stupid, or evil—or all of the above.
 
The Prince of Wales has contracted the virus.
 
@skullpatrol It'd look really big and great. Like, big
 
2:33 PM
yup
 
@tchrist I saw that. I bet he's first in line for a ventilator if he needs one.
"Eat the rich!" I say.
2
 
Trump cannot lift these stay-home orders.
 
@tchrist Except you know that none of those Fox people will step up and offer themselves or their families.
@tchrist Even if he could, I doubt it would have any effect.
 
@Robusto Pack the churches, pack the rallies.
 
Now there's an idea ... "pack the churches"!
 
2:35 PM
This is happening in red states, you know.
 
Well, the chickens surely have come home to roost, haven't they?
 
Avian flu?
 
More to be royally fricasseed than roasted.
 
coronavirus is the future on Ted talks
 
@Robusto Hmm slightly less bad, and at least he includes himself in the people willing to die.
 
2:38 PM
Or rather, how we've entangled ourselves and our science within bureaucratic webs to be so crippled in times such as this
 
@tchrist So I read. But he says he is doing well.
 
The Prince of Monaca has also got it.
 
Noobs
 
@Cerberus Maybe Tom Hanks can cheer him up.
 
2:39 PM
Half our ministers got it before it was cool
 
@Cerberus Bill Clinton?
Wait, Monaco not Monica.
 
@Cerberus Lip service.
 
@Robusto This actually happened in Korea: I believe the largest group of infected is a large denomination of (probably crazy) churches.
@M.A.R. Yes, your holy city wins.
@tchrist Tsk!
 
I remember the image of people laughing as they mockingly shattered test tubes of a plague in some Jack London short story. That resonates today, doesn't it?
Let me see if I can find it.
Here's the Wikipedia article:
"The Unparalleled Invasion" is a science fiction story written by Jack London. It was first published in McClure's in July 1910. == Plot summary == Under the influence of Japan, China modernizes and undergoes its own version of the Meiji Reforms in the 1910s. In 1922, China breaks away from Japan and fights a brief war that culminates in the Chinese annexation of the Japanese possessions of Korea, Formosa, and Manchuria. Over the next half century, China's population steadily grows, and eventually migration overwhelms European colonies in Asia. The United States and the other Western powers launch...
> It is true, three Chinese were killed by the tubes dropping on their heads from so enormous a height; but what were three Chinese against an excess birth rate of twenty millions? One tube struck perpendicularly in a fish-pond in a garden and was not broken. It was dragged ashore by the master of the house. He did not dare to open it, but, accompanied by his friends, and surrounded by an ever-increasing crowd, he carried the mysterious tube to the magistrate of the district. The latter was a brave man. With all eyes upon him, he shattered the tube with a blow from his brass-bowled pipe. No
 
Laughs
 
2:46 PM
> With much of the country under a kind of lockdown as the number of coronavirus cases rises, #NotDying4WallStreet became a leading trending topic on Twitter on Tuesday.
 
#ChillAndQuarantine was leading?
 
@Robusto Hmm I'm sure nothing would happen as a result of that.
 
@Cerberus In the logic of the story, it would and does.
The story was written in 1910.
 
@Robusto Yes, I was being ironic.
 
A picture I took 30 minutes ago
Afro-Russians playing soccer
Generally the streets are full of people
I was jogging without my glasses, so I thought it were Russians playing soccer
 
2:54 PM
@Cerberus We need an "I'm being ironic" punctuation mark for chat.
@CowperKettle I didn't know there were such people. Afro-Russians? Wow.
 
why not?
 
@CowperKettle You thought it was Russians playing soccer. Not were. "It" is the singular dummy subject.
@skullpatrol No reason. Just hadn't occurred to me.
 
Afro-Anything
 
@CowperKettle You can tell this is not the US because they'd be playing basketball instead of soccer.
 
or football
 
2:58 PM
@CowperKettle The streets have been empty here for more than a week.
 
> While the virus might kill thousands, Mac Donald argued, a depressed economy could irreparably harm millions of Americans, young and old.

“The millions of people whose lives depend on a functioning economy also deserve compassion,” Mac Donald wrote.
This may apply to poor countries, but not to rich ones.
In a rich country, you can help the poor while isolating everyone.
 
This is the weirdest circumstance of my life so far, bar none.
 
America is not Zambia.
 
yeah, its weird
once in a life time kind of weird
and it's going to get stranger
the internet is intensifying it
imo
 
3:10 PM
Yeah, perhaps one ought not to read the news more often than once a day.
 
but there is so much happening, so fast
 
Still, how much of it affects you directly?
 
true
 
@Cerberus Hard to tell.
 
I'm sure few news messages will require you to act immediately.
 
3:20 PM
@Cerberus Sometimes not acting is taking an action.
 
There you go.
 
You're just a bundle of cheer today.
 
@Cerberus oh I know why the map is useless. I just wanted to point out that it is.
 
@RegDwigнt Ah, OK. Useless depending on what you use it for, I suppose.
 
3:31 PM
Well. It is quite useless as toilet paper, for example.
 
Digital maps suck for that.
 
Is it grammatically correct?
<<From the 18th-century novelists, Jane Austen learned the insight into the psychology of the characters and the importance of the common actions and ordinary events that every figure performs, like balls, visits to friends and neighbours, walks and tea parties>>
 
@skullpatrol I do wonder when they'll stop saying "novel". It's fucking pretentious. We all know which of the virusiiises it's talking about. So what gives.
@Curio well, grammatically it is fine. Doesn't mean that it's fine otherwise.
"Learned the insight" doesn't sound right.
 
Easy to read?
 
@RegDwigнt Why, if you print it on kitchen paper?
 
3:37 PM
And "like balls" is just hilarious.
 
XD
 
@Cerberus why would I print it out on kitchen paper?
 
@RegDwigнt dance parties?
How should I write it?
 
If I'm using kitchen paper as loo roll, I am using the kitchen paper as loo roll and not whatever map you print on it.
 
Because it's decorative?
 
3:38 PM
You're decorative.
And nothing else.
 
Thank You.
 
You Are Welcome.
 
@Curio Balls is fine.
 
Haha of course you would say that.
 
@RegDwigнt That capital is Google's fault.
I have a script that automatically fixes typos.
At first I had Than kyou.
 
3:40 PM
room topic changed to English Language & Usage: Multi-Layered Discourse Room: Where social distancing is already a way of life. And toilet paper never runs out. [phrase-requests] [pronunciation] [single-word-requests] [synonyms]
 
Thanks
 
@Curio I'm not sure why you need examples there at all. Much less why you'd need a whopping five. The sentence is quite long as is.
 
I agree with Reg that learned the insight is not right.
 
@Cerberus I saw that. Also, as a mod I can forever see that.
 
"Gained insight" is more idiomatic.
 
3:41 PM
@RegDwigнt Tsk. Not if I destroy it.
Purge it.
 
@RegDwigнt a whopping five?
 
@Cerberus so your script automatically fixes typos by automatically introducing other typos?
That's genius. Why didn't I think of that.
@Curio well, technically balls is two, so you're right, it's actually six examples.
 
I can't understand what you're saying XD
 
Five examples is five too many.
 
There are dozens of ways to rewrite that sentence.
 
3:43 PM
That is what I'm saying.
 
So far have I asked for 5 examples?
I haven't counted them
 
Who?
Where?
Reboot.
Your sentence lists five examples.
I don't know how many sentences you have asked about. I'm not counting those.
 
@RegDwigнt Yes. But better typos. It basically takes the text that Google suggests as "did you mean..." and replaced it with that. Usually works quite well.
@Curio He is just joking.
I think your examples are fine.
 
@Cerberus I am not.
 
Yes, you are.
 
3:45 PM
No I am not. The sentence is fine, and indeed much better, with the five examples omitted.
@Cerberus If I start typing "Usually works quite well" into Google, it suggests "usually deutsch".
 
You're thinking of auto-complete?
> Let me typpe a sentence like thiis for yo.
> Let me type a sentence like this for you.
 
Ahh the five examples
 
@RegDwigнt See: that was automatically corrected by my script.
I just do select all, press alt-control-c, and voilà.
 
So what should I use instead of "learned the insight"?
"learned how to describe bla bla"?
 
That would be an improvement.
 
3:47 PM
"learned how to go inside bla bla"?
 
I wouldn't do that.
 
OK
 
@RegDwigнt they wrote the title before it was officially named
 
Last thing
Should I say Mr. X or Mr X?
 
@Curio "acquired the insight", or "gained the insight" as Rob suggests, or simply "learned". One word.
 
3:51 PM
I wrote ,"Jane Austen learned how to describe the psychology"
 
From the 18th-century novelists, Jane Austen gained insight into the psychology of the characters. She realized the importance of common actions and ordinary events the characters performed: going to balls and tea parties, visiting friends and neighbours, all the little details that flesh out the characters' lives.
 
See. Why am I even here.
 
That sounds better
 
You bet it does.
 
My english level doesn't let me create cool things yet
 
3:53 PM
experience shows :-)
 
It's okay. Just make sure to not create uncool things.
Mind you, that's what native speakers are prone to doing, too.
 
"going balls to the wall at tea parties" is how I prefer to read that
 
Of course you do.
 
@MattE.Эллен It's hard not to do that at a tea party.
 
Should I put a dot after Mr?
 
3:54 PM
I've never been to a tea party.
I learn so many things here.
 
Mr. Federer or Mr Federer?
 
@Curio In Britain, it's Mr without a dot.
 
Thanks
 
@Curio you can do whatever as long as you do it consistently.
 
Incidentally, balls to the wall doesn't mean what you think it does. It doesn't have any risqué references.
 
3:55 PM
Because the last letter of the abbreviation represents the last letter of the original word.
 
@Robusto which balls does it mean, then.
 
@Robusto especially in Jane Austen's time
 
Thank you all
 
Balls to the Wall ist das fünfte Album der deutschen Heavy-Metal-Band Accept. Das Label Lark Records veröffentlichte das Album im Dezember 1983. Es ist das bekannteste und meistverkaufte Accept-Album, sie verkauften rund zwei Millionen Alben weltweit und in Amerika und Kanada gab es je eine Goldauszeichnung dafür. == Wissenswertes == Das Cover des Albums, das den Teil eines männlichen Unterkörpers mit kurzer Lederhose zeigt, brachte in Verbindung mit dem Stück London Leatherboys den Musikern das Gerücht ein, homosexuell zu sein. == Rezeption == Das Album erreichte in Deutschland Platz 50, in den…
 
3:57 PM
I vote for Robusto's version.
 
I vote for Putin.
 
I vote for great balls of fire!
 
It seems Putin made a speech today.
 
@Curio By the way, looking back on it, you would do well to change performed to experienced. That way the verb addresses both noun phrases correctly.
 
@MattE.Эллен I thought "Balls to the wall" meant standing near a wall facing it
 
3:58 PM
@Robusto I see. Well it's good that the five of us in this chat now know that. But I'm afraid that's not enough.
 
@RegDwigнt That's old news.
 
@Robusto nono, I have to do it every five years.
 
@CowperKettle it means "going full throttle"
 
@RegDwigнt "Testicles" will always win in the common, uneducated mind.
 
Adverb: balls to the wall (not comparable)
  1. (US, idiomatic, slang) Full throttle; (at) maximum speed. [since the 1960s]
  2. (US, idiomatic, slang) (With) maximum effort or commitment. [since the 1960s]
  3. 2006, Michael D. Brown, Testimony before the US Senate Homeland Security Committee:
  4. I told the staff...the day before the hurricane struck that I expected them to cut every piece of red tape, do everything they could, that it was balls to the wall, that I didn't want to...
 
3:58 PM
@RegDwigнt It's the law.
 
"Maximum effort!" as Deadpool would say
 
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