Message from @Jesup Colt

Discord ID: 523746198260023297


2018-12-16 02:36:26 UTC  

MumkeyJones sounding ass

2018-12-16 02:37:12 UTC  

Never heard of a bank that pays taxes 🤔

2018-12-16 02:56:48 UTC  

@anonymous I’ve never heard of someone changing religions to Jewish tbh

2018-12-16 02:56:59 UTC  

Ashkenazi albino looking ass

2018-12-16 02:58:30 UTC  

@Zer0 you can live in my apartment complex if you want, or you could like go live in the sea if you want

2018-12-16 03:22:28 UTC  

my intwebs is sucking it up.

2018-12-16 03:22:52 UTC  

everyone is cutting out way to much

2018-12-16 03:31:06 UTC  

Tfw I try and watch porn ^

2018-12-16 03:40:40 UTC  

I’m going to discriminate against this olive

2018-12-16 03:40:48 UTC  

Green looking ass

2018-12-16 03:40:53 UTC  

Sour

2018-12-16 03:40:56 UTC  

Tree grown

2018-12-16 03:41:06 UTC  

Here we go

2018-12-16 03:41:18 UTC  

😤

2018-12-16 03:41:21 UTC  

Pitted

2018-12-16 03:41:52 UTC  

Oh I want an olive rn

2018-12-16 03:43:20 UTC  

The Jewish argument never ends

2018-12-16 04:56:14 UTC  

lol

2018-12-16 05:59:49 UTC  

Yeah yeah sure sure we’ll sure

2018-12-16 06:20:24 UTC  
2018-12-16 07:05:29 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/514084882390188033/523757544469168139/FsVqhnAe7kcVHxJa74mCJpSSUoJ0Ww-M_ZkLvXPGdXI.png

2018-12-16 07:46:04 UTC  

Uhm

2018-12-16 08:45:04 UTC  

These results challenge the conventional view that radiation inflicts its punishment on DNA solely by direct corruption of nucleic acids, says Dudley Goodhead, director of the U.K. Medical Research Council's Radiation and Genome Stability Unit in Harwell. Goodhead says the rate of mutation found in Kazakhstan is "orders of magnitude too large" to be accounted for by direct damage to the germ line DNA--the DNA that gets passed from parent to child. But exactly how long-term exposure to low-dose radiation causes such a high mutation rate remains unknown.

What these germ line mutations mean for health is a mystery, says Bryn Bridges of the Medical Research Council's Cell Mutation Unit in Brighton, United Kingdom. But evidence is mounting that minisatellites affect gene transcription and hike the risk of contracting some diseases. Screening for such mutations might offer a new tool for monitoring radiation exposure, says William Morgan, director of the Radiation Oncology Research Laboratory at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore.

2018-12-16 09:30:38 UTC  

1.) If these miniature black holes exist, the Earth has been getting hit by them for billions of years, and it’s still here.

2018-12-16 09:30:39 UTC  

2.) If you do create a miniature black hole, they will decay, via Hawking Radiation, on ridiculously small timescales.

2018-12-16 09:30:47 UTC  

3.) You can compute the rate at which a black hole eats matter, and it’s not even close to being as small as the lifetime of our planet.

2018-12-16 10:34:43 UTC