Message from @R9b1t

Discord ID: 510333596251455503


2018-11-09 05:56:05 UTC  

hepatitis?

2018-11-09 05:56:11 UTC  

Yeah . . . apparently yeah . . . your right sir

2018-11-09 05:56:40 UTC  

That reminds me of a video game mod about the Korsakoff syndrome.

2018-11-09 05:57:13 UTC  

I really like surreal games like that.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRZjdk31org

2018-11-09 05:58:18 UTC  

It is named after an alcoholic syndrome that impairs short term memory, which results from the effects of alcohol that reduce vitamin supply in the brain.

2018-11-09 06:00:05 UTC  

Victor, Maurice, Raymond Delacy Adams, and George H. Collins. "The Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. A clinical and pathological study of 245 patients, 82 with post-mortem examinations." Contemporary neurology series 7 (1971): 1.

2018-11-09 06:00:49 UTC  

Bellamy, R., et al. "Tuberculosis and chronic hepatitis B virus infection in Africans and variation in the vitamin D receptor gene." The Journal of infectious diseases 179.3 (1999): 721-724.

2018-11-09 06:00:59 UTC  

That poor tucker :(

2018-11-09 06:01:10 UTC  

Poor sucker or poor Tucker?

2018-11-09 06:01:23 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/510333063431979009/susan-ok-seriously-my-college-kid-neighbors-keep-chanting-usa-27229419.png

2018-11-09 06:01:33 UTC  

Whats the difference

2018-11-09 06:01:34 UTC  

Whats the difference

2018-11-09 06:01:46 UTC  

lel

2018-11-09 06:02:33 UTC  

Wagner, Martin, and Jörg Oehlmann. "Endocrine disruptors in bottled mineral water: total estrogenic burden and migration from plastic bottles." Environmental Science and Pollution Research 16.3 (2009): 278-286.

2018-11-09 06:02:57 UTC  

Hohenblum, P., et al. "Monitoring of selected estrogenic hormones and industrial chemicals in groundwaters and surface waters in Austria." Science of the Total Environment 333.1-3 (2004): 185-193.

2018-11-09 06:03:02 UTC  

I think they are turning the boys gay.

2018-11-09 06:03:13 UTC  

Hmm?

2018-11-09 06:03:21 UTC  

2004 and 2009 studies

2018-11-09 06:03:27 UTC  

I don’t feel-

2018-11-09 06:03:30 UTC  

Okay actually

2018-11-09 06:03:33 UTC  

I do

2018-11-09 06:03:39 UTC  

"In order to address the Austrian situation concerning endocrine disrupting substances (EDS), a consortium called Austrian Research Cooperation on Endocrine Modulators (ARCEM) was established in 1999. Among several other issues that were investigated, ARCEM monitored more than 400 ground- and surface water samples for selected estrogenic hormones and industrial chemicals. Appropriate analytical methods were established using GC-HRMS for the detection of hormones and LC/MSMS for the detection of industrial chemicals. Since analytical results were forwarded for toxicological assessments within the programme, quantification limits below 0.1 ng/l (ethinyl estradiol) and 10 ng/l (industrial chemicals) were required depending on the NOEL of the individual compound."

2018-11-09 06:03:43 UTC  

My voice should be deeper shouldn’t it

2018-11-09 06:04:23 UTC  

It’s deeper than deep actually

2018-11-09 06:04:25 UTC  

Bach, Cristina, et al. "Chemical compounds and toxicological assessments of drinking water stored in polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles: a source of controversy reviewed." Water research 46.3 (2012): 571-583.

2018-11-09 06:04:46 UTC  

So water bottled?

2018-11-09 06:04:56 UTC  

"Genotoxic and estrogenic activities in PET-bottled water have been reported. Chemical mixtures in bottled water have been suggested as the source of these toxicological effects. Furthermore, sample preparation techniques, such as solid-phase extraction (SPE), to extract estrogen-like compounds in bottled water are controversial. It has been suggested that inappropriate extraction methods and sample treatment may result in false-negative or positive responses when testing water extracts in bioassays. There is therefore a need to combine chemical analysis with bioassays to carry out hazard assessments.

Formaldehyde, acetaldehyde and antimony are clearly related to migration from PET into water. However, several studies have shown other theoretically unexpected substances in bottled water. The origin of these compounds has not been clearly established (PET container, cap-sealing resins, background contamination, water processing steps, NIAS, recycled PET, etc.)."

2018-11-09 06:04:56 UTC  

Not water treated by local state companies?

2018-11-09 06:05:36 UTC  

When I was in tennis my bottle was full of plastic bottles

2018-11-09 06:05:49 UTC  

I’d get home and drop them on the floor get up the next day and get a new one

2018-11-09 06:06:10 UTC  

Room*

2018-11-09 06:06:59 UTC  

I think the most effective way to get endocrine disrupters into the water is to let the body sit in the heat for a little.

2018-11-09 06:07:22 UTC  

You get the most endocrine disruptors for the buck if you let it expand and contract a few times.

2018-11-09 06:07:33 UTC  

Oh I was in the heat

2018-11-09 06:07:42 UTC  

Perfect.

2018-11-09 06:07:46 UTC  

It was **hot** outside

2018-11-09 06:07:46 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/510334669435437066/unknown.png

2018-11-09 06:08:08 UTC  

Mama mia the olda ladys gossipo so mucha it surveilance for mafia

2018-11-09 06:08:38 UTC  

It takea da skill

2018-11-09 06:10:13 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/510335284429193236/aeMKmGq_460s.png