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Assume Nothing

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  1. [hide=Wikipedia's article]Looking directly at the photosphere of the Sun (the bright disk of the Sun itself), even for just a few seconds, can cause permanent damage to the retina of the eye, because of the intense visible and invisible radiation that the photosphere emits. This damage can result in permanent impairment of vision, up to and including blindness. The retina has no sensitivity to pain, and the effects of retinal damage may not appear for hours, so there is no warning that injury is occurring.[51][52]

     

    Under normal conditions, the Sun is so bright that it is difficult to stare at it directly. However, during an eclipse, with so much of the Sun covered, it is easier and more tempting to stare at it. Unfortunately, looking at the Sun during an eclipse is as dangerous as looking at it outside an eclipse, except during the brief period of totality, when the Sun's disk is completely covered (totality occurs only during a total eclipse and only very briefly; it does not occur during a partial or annular eclipse). Viewing the Sun's disk through any kind of optical aid (binoculars, a telescope, or even an optical camera viewfinder) is extremely hazardous and can cause irreversible eye damage in a fraction of a second.[53][54][/hide]

  2. I'm aware that many people are leading increasingly unhealthy lifestyles. However, I don't think that has nearly as much to do with the fact that they didn't learn how to cook for themselves, as it does the abundance and cheap price of unhealthy food which makes cooking unnecessary for them in the first place.

     

    It still factors in. For some, it's the lack of time/laziness, or the perceived 'value' of unhealthy foods. For others, it's the lack of a better alternative (cooking for oneself is a non-option if they don't know how, obviously).

  3. I didn't want to over-elaborate, so you could have simply requested it without the unnecessary remark.

     

    Cooking is a necessary life skill - it's unhealthy to rely on processed foods and such. It's true - nobody starves to death because they can't cook pizza, but if they're eating frozen ready-meals prepared in the microwave everyday, they're certainly not living a healthy lifestyle - and that's killing people every year (obesity, diabetes, bowel cancers, etc.). I can't see why anyone shouldn't learn cooking in the classroom.

  4. It's precisely that - the average person just doesn't know how to cook well enough to live independently. It's exactly why we need to incorporate more vocational material into our curriculum - or perhaps, better vocational material (since food technology is mandatory in the UK). It doesn't matter whether we could cook a pasty/fairy-cake well - it should matter whether we could learn cutting/cooking techniques effectively, and apply them to a general scenario.

     

    It's infinitely frustrating for me to see how people couldn't even boil water.

  5. I was scared of the cooker and the oven. I've gotten a fair bit better now. I don't make complicated meals by any stretch of the imagination, but I managed to grill chicken without giving myself salmonella so I'm getting better :P

     

    I find it particularly striking that anyone could be scared of cooking. Is there anything particularly threatening about it? - is it the complexity of the skill, or the associated risk of poor cooking, or the perceived threat of hot surfaces, knives, and such?

     

    I see the lack of motivation for improving one's ability as wasteful - you could have so much untapped potential here. Bah.

  6. As an ethnically Chinese individual, I'm often asked with slight prejudice about the Chinese consumption of dogs/cats.

     

    It raises an important question - what's wrong with eating dogs/cats? On a purely ethical level, it would seem rather illogical to give dogs/cats any special or otherwise exclusive treatment in regards to their consumption or lack thereof.

     

    Just to reiterate: what's wrong with eating dogs/cats?

  7. atheism is a god-less religion in itself, though I encourage the ambiguity of knowledge in spirituality, so good for him [her?].

     

    today I ate my weight in burgers. I tried a beef patty smothered in chocolate covered bacon served on a sliced in half donut. It was fantastic.

     

    It's not even close to a religion in and of itself, but its organizational aspects might be similar if you're talking about new-atheistic groups.

     

    Somehow, your ideal burger sounds like a terrible mess. Hmm :/

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