- 13
- 31
https://old.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/1ir8idw/comment/md6j97q/?context=8
Canadians, trust me, nobody outside of extremely online people have any idea you are boycotting us lmao
- 11
- 45
Thank you, Civ fans.#Civ7 pic.twitter.com/RTEpCCHSpu
— Sid Meier's Civilization VII (@CivGame) February 11, 2025
- 4
- 22
- 60
- 65
- Draki_Oldtooth : Poop doesn't come from the cow's udders dipshit
- 111
- 107
Some choice quotes from the top food scientists of reddit
/u/Brujo-Bailando writes
Make Americans drink poop milk again!
/u/ahifun writes
Milk souring is a separate process from spoiling, as it occurs when lactose splits into different acids. But with that falsehood out of the way, I'm sure this genius knows a lot about microbiology. He could definitely name the good/bad bacterias he's talking about straight from memory, doubly so for his nutrients and enzymes.
/u/KT0QNE jokerposts his milkifesto
People have been drinking raw milk for thousands of years.
People have been eating fermented milk products for thousands a year, leading some, not all, to develop a gene that prolongs their infantile ability to break down lactose based on the trace amounts found in processed milk. Dairy producing countries pre-pasturation did not have raw milk drinking cultural traditions outside of farmland, as refridgeration to slow down the growth of bacteria of raw milk didn't exactly exist.
Such as? What are they? How much is lost?
A true blue fentposter /u/Cliphdiver adds:
@K the FDA!
Is it safe or does it need to be strained? I hope they have a strainer from the future that can filter microbes smaller than milk's existing fats.
Past ignorance does not somehow make the repeating the same stupidity less ignorant. The police comes because raw milk farmers are a threat to society, and honestly they should be shot where they stand so we don't have to hear them whining that they can't profit off selling people dangerous bullshit. Libertarians can't comprehend this because they're stupid enough to be libertarians in the first place.
/u/huntsvillekan posts the following legitament historical account detailing why you can't trust dairy farmers not to kill people, ergo why they must be regulated by force under capitalism: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/surprisingly-intolerant-history-milk-180969056/
Some highlights: 8000 yearly deaths in NYC from unregulated milk farmers, "The Greeks castigated barbarians for their gluttonous desire for dairy...in Rome, milk was widely regarded as low-status food because it was something only farmers drank," "
It would take both technological innovation and a change in social mores to popularize animal milk...milk was one of the first foods to be truly affected by industrialization"
So is mass milk drinking thousands of years old and ubiquitous, or a product of the industrial revolution. Anyway...
/u/chobbs2006 comes in explaining how raw milk is their latest schizo-cure to the new in-vogue hypochondriac illness: GERD!
It's like these fad-diet chasers come out of a factory somewhere
Most of the remaining commenters of note just have anecdotes about living on a farm, drinking raw milk, and using a fricking cheesecloth on their already contaminated milk to get the shit-chunks out.
Happy drinking!
- 49
- 73
The account seems to be mostly focused on anti-miscegenation, calling black men "nakers" and putting out a narrative that because of yts girls getting BLACKED , the black race is getting BLEACHED
The profile pic is misleading because that's supposed to represent the disgustingness of BMWF couples
This is who she actually is:
I'm getting a Black Girl Magic vibe here, anyone else? She fine! Tell em, sis!
So here's one of her typical TRVTHENVKEs
JAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJJAAAAAAAAAAA
This naker really said the line.
Anti-racism (pro-racism) vs pro-racism (anti-racism), who should you listen to when two Black women are arguing?
Anyway to lazy to make a big post about it, the account is a great follow for black woman seethe.
Here are some screenshots of her other posts:
- 34
- 12
I do wish there was a way to be a girl without transitioning because trans shit is gay and cringe but I was so obsidianlug so posed to be a woman
- 2
- 10
if so, I think this is a mistake and they should work the same way they do on rdrama (downmarseying makes a post more visible in the default sort but lowers it if you sort by "top", which I assume is how it still works though maybe not).
- 19
- 14
Who should I ban next. Should I ban award @sandkwinn more? She said something mean to my girlfriend. I hate her. I hate Sandkwinn.
- 12
- 113
- 21
- 54
Part 1
17 Nov 2018
r/ambien: It this for real help
Edit: I really dont like this medicine.
I guess 20mg is too much, I mean I'm suppose to take 5mg. And my wife, a really wonderful woman, counted my pills for me. I took 4 5mg accused my wife of Loving our dog more. Then asked her what concrete was made out of then got angry and sat in the pantry until she would tell me. I slept on the couch. She's really upset, but understands it was the influence of the medicine. I made this post last night seeking help more than likely while I was in the pantry.
18 Nov 2018
r/ambien: I accused my wife of knowing what concrete is made out of than accused her of loving our dog more than me.
She's in a bad mood. I need to sleep but i really don't like this medicine.
Part 2
22 Nov 2018
r/ambien: mywife is soft nd ilikeher
05 Dec 2018
r/ambien: my wiwwwfie wife is visting her mom and i miss her
she smells nice and is reall soft
09 Dec 2018
r/ambien: MY EWFIE IS HOME MY WIFE8
yes i lovd her you have to bewilling to love her and shelllove you
Part 3
19 Nov 2019
r/ambien: It's been a long time since I've posted here, but I want you all to know my wife is still soft and I still like her.
I completely forgot about these posts, and I got a message today that reminded me of them I went through and couldn't stop smiling. I got in a fight with her recently and after reading these I went into our kitchen and held her. I told her I loved her and showed her the posts. She said she loves you guys.
Part 4
19 Feb 2022
r/ambien: diforce 
Epilogue
20 Sep 2022
r/ambien: Not on Ambien today, but my Wife calls you all my "Reddit fans." She told her coworkers I'm famous on this subreddit because of how often I gush about her
Bonus Material
r/TheLastAirbender: [No spoilers] just a world building question in general. but be warned NSFW. Do you think water benders can be their own contraceptive?
- 62
- 124
Sorry guys, no rebuilding your fancy houses that burned down by the ocean in LA until thereβs a new crack den installed right in the middle of the neighborhood.
— Joe Lonsdale (@JTLonsdale) January 31, 2025
The area is like D+43; this seems fair. I donβt make the rules π€·ββοΈ. pic.twitter.com/SVXM5cSCnH
- 4
- 20
MISSION, Kan. (AP) β An 86-year-old Missouri man has died just days after pleading guilty to a lesser charge in the 2023 shooting of Ralph Yarl, a Black honor student who rang the white man's doorbell by mistake, prosecutors announced Wednesday.
Yarl testified at a hearing that he rang the bell and then waited for someone to answer for what seemed "longer than normal." As the inner door opened, Yarl said, he reached out to grab the storm door, assuming he was at his brothers' friends' parents.
He said Lester shot him in the head and uttered, "Don't come here ever again." Although the bullet didn't penetrate Yarl's brain, the impact knocked him to the ground. Yarl said Lester then shot him in the arm. The teen was taken to the hospital and released three days later.
Imagine the terror if a Texas A&M student showed up at your door uninvited.
I love sucking peepee and seeing racist old Missourians die. Kill all Missourians, knockkers forever.
- 49
- 113
Video is not necessary to watch at all and there are others, but I'm too lazy.
The comments however are fricking great
Elon has lost complete and total street cred with the most important demographic on the internet - !g*mers
Oh hey look it's Darkmatter2525, haven't seen that guy in like 10 years
- 285
- 153
[β]Circumin -3 points 15 hours ago
[β]Wyvernrider[S] 12 points 15 hours ago
https://static01.nyt.com/newsgraphics/documentcowtools/f548560f100205ef/e656ddda-full.pdf
[β]Ok-Bookkeeper6926 -3 points 14 hours ago
More
in the comments
- 38
- 58
- 7
- 17
- 29
- 29
When Lorraine Kelly shared her experience of menopause on her daytime TV show in 2017, she was her own last resort. Initially, she set out to interview a famous woman about her story, but everyone she approached refused.
"I thought, nobody else will talk about it so I'll do it. It was a breakthrough moment," said Kelly.
Seven years later, it often feels as though we have reached peak menopause. Michelle Obama, Salma Hayek and Gwyneth Paltrow have all been open about their experiences, encouraging women not to feel ashamed about a biological process an estimated 13 million people in the UK are now going through. And yet there's still one part of it that is barely spoken about.
Vaginal dryness.
As with so much in this realm, it took a celebrity β Davina McCall in this case β to shine a light on it. For those of us who'd assumed this symptom was a minor inconvenience, which only affected s*x and was easily remedied with the kinds of lubrication readily available from high street chemists, it was a brutal wake-up call.
"I had severe dryness, so severe that when I tried to wipe myself after going to the loo, it was so sore I was having to kind of dab," McCall said in her 2021 documentary, S*x, Myths and the Menopause. "I didn't know what it was, I had no idea that it was part of being perimenopausal."
Previously known as vulvovaginal atrophy, now rebranded as genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), vaginal dryness will probably affect between 60% and 80% of women, according to various studies. It is caused by the drop in oestrogen levels, which happens as women go through menopause, causing vaginal tissue to become thinner and less elastic. Despite it being so common, one study has found that a third of female sufferers did not report it to their doctor.
This is partly because of embarrassment, says Haitham Hamoda, consultant gynaecologist and clinical lead of the menopause service at King's College Hospital. "Most GPs are well informed and offer a great service, but of course, there are variations of what you can access. Part of it is going to be what is available to you, what is offered to you, and what you feel comfortable talking about."
He continues: "You'd be surprised how many people would come and see you because they're talking about flushes and sweats and brain fog. And when you say, 'Do you have vaginal dryness?' they will say, 'Oh, yes, it's really uncomfortable'. But they never really think about bringing it up, unless you specifically ask."
Hamoda has seen women who are too sore to wear underwear. "You do find people who say clothes are uncomfortable because it's touching against the area β¦ In extreme cases they find it uncomfortable sitting or walking."
GP and menopause expert Dr RenΓ©e Hoenderkamp has had cases like this too. "I've seen women who can't go about their daily life because of vaginal dryness. It's absolutely debilitating. They can't go to the gym any more, can't wear jeans, can't go for a bike ride, can't run up the stairs at the station. It's all just too painful."
Clare, 55, says GSM "consumed my whole life". "I used to sit in a shallow, cold bath, sobbing. It was agony, the burning never let up for one second of the day or night. Even walking was painful." It began when she was 47, but she never considered her symptoms could have anything to do with being perimenopausal because her periods were regular, and she was not having hot flushes.
But, as Hoenderkamp points out, every menopause is different: "For some women, vaginal dryness will be their first symptom, very early, even before their periods have changed. Other women won't get it until they've gone through it all. It's really individual."
She also believes that seeing dryness as just a symptom of menopause can be misleading. "Women who breastfeed for more than six months will suppress their oestrogen to a level where they may get vaginal dryness. The pill can cause it. Antidepressants. It's not just restricted to menopausal women."
The implications of vaginal dryness can go far beyond pain, says Hoenderkamp. "Once past menopause, when all of the tissue in and around the vagina and urethra dries and atrophies, women become much more susceptible to urine infections because bacteria are able to attach to the tissue."
Hamoda has also seen women avoiding or missing cervical screening due to GSM. "Sometimes you can't open the speculum because they're so dry and uncomfortable, even though, of course, you're using plenty of lubrication." In some cases, he has told patients to "take vaginal oestrogen for the next two months, then come back and we'll attempt this smear again. Sadly, this is not an uncommon scenario."
Not every doctor is aware of how to help women with GSM. Emily, 44, sought medical advice as soon as her vaginal dryness began four years ago. "It felt like there was a red hot poker inside of me," she says. She also suffered from urinary tract infections. Her GP found it so hard to reach a diagnosis that at one point he told her β on the phone β that she might simply have to prepare herself for a life of chronic pain.
As she was 40 when her symptoms began, her doctor didn't consider perimenopause. She was passed between different NHS services, given courses of antibiotics, a cystoscopy, referrals to urology, gynaecology and physiotherapy. She also paid to see a private vulval pain specialist. As all this was going on, no painkillers could make any difference, and she remained in agony.
"It's been catastrophic," she says. "The pain makes it very difficult to concentrate. I've had to give up four jobs in the space of four years. I've had to sell my house and move away from my friends because I need to have more savings in case I can't carry on working. It's had a massive effect on my mental health."
Out of desperation, Emily began to research her symptoms herself. She found out that one in 20 women go through perimenopause before they're 45, and, presuming this was what was happening to her, Emily wrote a detailed letter to her GP, asking for vaginal oestrogen. He agreed to put her on a low dose. "And within two days the burning stopped."
She is still, however, struggling with her UTI symptoms β which include needing to pee around four times an hour. While it's impossible to know what has caused this, she believes that because her infection was not treated for so long it has got worse. She is now being treated separately for her persistent UTI.
Misdiagnosis is a common thread through this condition. Dr Paula Briggs, a consultant in sexual and reproductive health at Liverpool Women's NHS Foundation Trust, reports, "It depends who the patient presents to, how likely they are to get the right diagnosis. Loads of women will be told they've got thrush."
It's a perfect storm β women reluctant to seek medical help in the first place, then a delay in being diagnosed.
"Whereas other menopausal symptoms resolve β generally they get less severe, then they stop β GSM becomes progressively worse over time and is very difficult to reverse," says Briggs. She now thinks all women should be given vaginal oestrogen at around the age of 45 as a default.
However, as oestrogen pessaries fall under the HRT umbrella, some women remain nervous due to the small increased risk of breast cancer linked to progestogen-containing forms of HRT. Hoenderkamp says that vaginal oestrogen does not carry the same risk. "It is just about as safe as houses, and very easy. I often have women who say I can't have vaginal oestrogen because I've had breast cancer. Well, you can."
Hamoda is more cautious: "Generally speaking, with breast cancer patients you would try other non-hormonal options first. But on an individual basis."
However, it is not a problem that will disappear overnight. "In terms of the oestrogen, women are not going to do it for a year and then it will all be OK. It's probably a lifelong commitment to their vagina," says Hoenderkamp.
Vaginal oestrogen is available from chemists β although it's cheaper on prescription from your GP β and there are also moisturisers and lubricants women can buy over the counter as a possible first port of call.
The message overall is clear, though. If you are uncomfortably dry, you should never suffer in silence β it's not just a part of ageing that happens to everyone, which you have to grin and bear β it's something that can be treated and, in most cases, eased.
"Awareness is key," says Hamoda. So, while there has never been so much talk about menopause as there is now, there's still a lot that needs to be said.
Some names have been changed