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calfoxwc

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Everything posted by calfoxwc

  1. wrong. www.cdc.gov/malaria/resources/pdf/fsp/drugs/Hydroxychloroquine.pdf Both adults and children should take one dose of hydroxychloroquine per week starting at least 1 week before traveling to the area where malaria transmission occurs. They should take one dose per week while there, and for 4 consecutive weeks after leaving. The weekly dosage for adults is 310mg base (400mg salt). go to that PDF and open. pretty interesting - the CDC says: "Hydroxychloroquine can be prescribed to adults and children of all ages. It can also be safely taken by pregnant women and nursing mothers."
  2. Thanks for explaining, which was really important since you did NOT LINK to the source. I guessed Georgia, not bad, out of fifty states, I do say. So you didn't post a reference link, to be intentionally vague, to show how the graph by itself doesn't mean diddly? So, why did they only include a relatively few counties? Thanks for tryin. At least it was more than a blank sheet of paper, professor woodpecker. lol Here, I'll help you: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_counties_in_Georgia The U.S. state of Georgia is divided into 159 counties, more than any other state except for Texas, which has 254 counties.
  3. so, my ccw instructor and good friend - showed me this gun a few months ago. The more I thought about it, I had to have one. So, I had him order me one - he has his own business selling guns etc... it's a little PT-22. 22 long rifle. Barrel flips down, put a bullet in, snap shut. Then, pop in the 8 shot magazine, and you are ready to shoot. It's semi-automatic without racking the slide. Seems nicely made, nice very easy access manual safety. After watching the snake catchers on tv, those big 10'-16' pythons in Florida, I can see having this little gun in my pocket if we went on a boardwalk in some park.... Now, offhand, it's my survival/snake gun. If we got lost in the wilderness - it would get all sorts of great food without blowing up the squirrel/turtle/frog, etc. But I also wonder about it being a self-defense weapon. Surely, not in a situation where the other...violent nutjob might also have a gun, but if someone were to pull a knife on me, I think he'd look at it and think that he'd better back away and run off, before he gets shot in the face or groin. etc. It's impressive - it fits my hand beautifully, but the rest of it is pretty small. It's light enough I can toss it in my sweat pants pocket, and it's light enough to not sag. It'll be fun to plink with - see how accurate it can shoot - and also three shots with it - the sound would travel farther than yelling for help. The biggest advantage is, in the top heat of the summer, in shorts and tshirt, a bigger ccw and holster would get impossible? to conceal appropriately, and it would be freaking hot wearing jeans/belt/holster and ccw. It is very limited as a self-defense ccw as far as caliber obviously, but for $220 bucks, it is fun and important to own.
  4. there's no link, no source reference, which for this graph, would be absolutely necessary. Cherry-picked few counties for some weird? reason? It doesn't deserve any consideration. I looked at it, for a second or two, not worth any more time. It's like a professor gives each student a blank sheet of paper, and tells his students describe the meaning... of course, there is none. But he has a pseudo-intellectual point about the deeper meaning behind all the words on the sheet of blank paper. "it's suppose to make you think".
  5. it's an indictment of home-schooling then. There are far more horror stories in public schools. It just concerns me that it's a social engineering battle for the minds of children - and public school leftwing ideologues have the upper hand, and that is an understatement.
  6. it's worthless so far. so is your point, apparently. It's tough to try to have a serious discussion with someone who is allegedly so intelligent, that they try to make a point by being vague.
  7. 1. your graph - no idea what state. 2. There is only one county in Ohio named "Fulton". It's up near Toledo. 3. There is also a Fulton county in Georgia, who knows what other states. 4. Your ASSumptions are surely boring, where do you get home schooling as the problem? Why do you think STEM education is the solution to a meaningless graph? 5. Your premise needs explaining, your graph needs explaining...and you need explaining as to your ignorance. You don't communicate anything efficiently. https://hiphomeschoolmoms.com/how-to-promote-stem-education-in-your-homeschool/ try again if you are serious. for the first time.
  8. woody FINALLY ventures outside of his room: https://www.facebook.com/MrBean/videos/3234982603201667/
  9. STEM reading lesson for woody: https://www.facebook.com/leonhb.vanzweel/videos/1738895776251787/
  10. Yes, the HATE runs through the left. And yes, they hate home schooling because THEY are doing the indoctrinating, and they can't stand competition in being able to reach students. To the left, it's a cultural war to own the future, and to DE-form our United States - one student at a time. This has been the left's ulterior motive all this time. https://www.theblaze.com/news/harvard-professor-homeschool-ban-christianity Harvard professor who wants to ban homeschooling says it is used to indoctrinate children with 'extreme' ideologies, like Christianity Last month, Harvard Law professor Elizabeth Bartholet made headlines calling for a "presumptive ban" on homeschooling in the United States. In an article, titled "The Risks of Homeschooling," she suggested that the practice is dangerous because it allows parents to have "authoritarian control" over their children. Then on Friday, in a follow-up interview with the Harvard Gazette, Bartholet doubled down on her anti-homeschooling stance, specifically citing why she believes giving control of education to parents is such a terrible thing. What did she say? Bartholet credited the recent growth of homeschooling to "the growth in the conservative evangelical movement." She added: "Conservative Christians wanted the chance to bring their children up with their values and belief systems and saw homeschooling as a way to escape from the secular education in public schools." The fact that many Christians homeschool their children is detrimental, Bartholet reasoned, because "many homeschooling parents are extreme ideologues, committed to raising their children within their belief systems isolated from any societal influence." Bartholet then went on to make sweeping stereotyped generalizations of conservative Christians, suggesting that "some believe that black people are inferior to white people and others that women should be subject to men and not educated for careers but instead raised to serve their fathers first and then their husbands." "The danger is both to these children and to society," Bartholet concluded. "The children may not have the chance to choose for themselves whether to exit these ideological communities; society may not have the chance to teach them values important to the larger community, such as tolerance of other people's views and values." Anything else? Bartholet's concerns that homeschooling is primarily used to close off children from society and indoctrinate them with beliefs in female subservience and racial supremacy is unfounded, according to data from the Institute for Family Studies data from the Institute for Family Studies. **************** David Sikkink, a professor of sociology at the University of Notre Dame, analyzed surveys of homeschooling families and found that the families "are not overwhelmingly Christian nor religious, and are not as universally closed-off to the outside world as Bartholet asserts," the Catholic News Agency reported. ********************* Data from one of the large surveys showed that only about 16% cited religious beliefs as the most important reason for homeschooling and only 5% cited moral instruction. Rather, the most cited reason for choosing to homeschool was concern over the environment at other schools in the area.
  11. so dangerous in our country. so sad that a lot of partisan hacks are happy with it, because their party did it. But Watergate was SO much a threat to our existence. Watergate was a grain of sand on this endless beach. https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mark-levin-on-trump-wiretapping-claims-were-talking-about-police-state-tactics
  12. and he says First Responders will lose their jobs if the fed doesn't give him a lot of money. right.
  13. your candidate can't speak intelligently, was a corrupt failure in more than one scandal, and our candidate MAGA, with an outstanding economy, better trade deals, help for our Veterans with medical care, the list goes on and on. Not the same, troll woodpecker. Your usual fake moral equivalency is bs.
  14. yep. bipartisan sellout. "for peace", except now they threaten with a vastly updated military, expanded space efforts, and talk about going to war with us if America doesn't bend over. We'd kick their asses.
  15. Thank GOD FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP !!!!!!!
  16. yep. while the rest of the world is diverted attention-wise, they moved in - dragged out pro-democracy members, and installed communists into their place in their government. don't be surprised if they militarily take action soon. I said as much earlier on. "conspiracy" eh, Hoorta? https://www.theblaze.com/news/video-security-drags-hong-kong-pro-democracy
  17. apparently..."Husband" and "Wife" are... offensive. https://www.theblaze.com/news/united-nations-inclusive-speech
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