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>This is my intro, beware

> Hi I’m Tachanka/Tank/Chank! (I also use sooo many nicknames)

> I’m 19!

> Feeling?: Loved and cherished

> My main pronouns are he/him and xe/xim, my other ones can be found here (Also, dont use xey/xem or they/them pronouns for me)

> I am taken, dont flirt with me

> Selectively sharing Hank McCoy gachikoi

> My art acc @violentclown555

> My hoarding acc is @mashashoard

> My backup hoarding acc is @mashasotherhoard

> My sys acc is @dark-carnival-sys

> THIS ACCOUNT IS NOT FULLY SAFE!!! I reblog triggering content! Unfortunately this is where all my follows and likes come from but if I interact any agere accs/content please know they come from @poorweelamb and to go there for sfw/regression related interactions!

> Heres my strawpage! [potential eyestrain warning]

[Click read more for more info + interests + fandoms + byf + dni]

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Keep reading

baddywronglegs:
“derinthescarletpescatarian:
“ deathsmallcaps:
“ derinthescarletpescatarian:
“ kinkeryandgeekery:
“ picktheonesthatlast:
“are we ignoring both of the penises, or…..?
”
Pilots drawing things with flight paths is a niche interest but a...

are we ignoring both of the penises, or…..?

kinkeryandgeekery

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Pilots drawing things with flight paths is a niche interest but a fucking fantastic one. Boeing Dreamliner 18-hour test flight.

I’m just happy that the pilots out there have this kind of precision.

Oh I thought some pilot was doing this to some poor passengers who just wanted to go from Chicago to LA or something and then I scrolled up and saw it was test pilots.

“And if you look out the left window, you’ll see the same mountains again, but from a slightly different angle.”

“This is a notice to all passengers to remain seated as we are about to experience some serifs”

One of the team behind the letter was blunt. “The brain microplastic paper is a joke,” said Dr Dušan Materić, at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research in Germany. “Fat is known to make false-positives for polyethylene. The brain has [approximately] 60% fat.” Materić and his colleagues suggested rising obesity levels could be an alternative explanation for the trend reported in the study.

Materić said: “That paper is really bad, and it is very explainable why it is wrong.” He thinks there are serious doubts over “more than half of the very high impact papers” reporting microplastics in biological tissue.

But the brain study is far from alone in having been challenged. One, which reported that patients with MNPs detected in carotid artery plaques had a higher risk of heart attacks and strokes than patients with no MNPs detected, was subsequently criticised for not testing blank samples taken in the operating room. Blank samples are a way of measuring how much background contamination may be present.

Another study reported MNPs in human testes, “highlighting the pervasive presence of microplastics in the male reproductive system”. But other scientists took a different view: “It is our opinion that the analytical approach used is not robust enough to support these claims.”

Further challenged studies include two reporting plastic particles in blood – in both cases the researchers contested the criticisms – and another on their detection in arteries. A study claiming to have detected 10,000 nanoplastic particles per litre of bottled water was called “fundamentally unreliable” by critics, a charge disputed by the scientists.

The doubts amount to a “bombshell”, according to Roger Kuhlman, a chemist formerly at the Dow Chemical Company. “This is really forcing us to re-evaluate everything we think we know about microplastics in the body. Which, it turns out, is really not very much. Many researchers are making extraordinary claims, but not providing even ordinary evidence.”

While analytical chemistry has long-established guidelines on how to accurately analyse samples, these do not yet exist specifically for MNPs, said Dr Frederic Béen, at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam: “But we still see quite a lot of papers where very standard good laboratory practices that should be followed have not necessarily been followed.”

A key way of measuring the mass of MNPs in a sample is, perhaps counterintuitively, vaporising it, then capturing the fumes. But this method, dubbed Py-GC-MS, has come under particular criticism. “[It] is not currently a suitable technique for identifying polyethylene or PVC due to persistent interferences,” concluded a January 2025 study led by Dr Cassandra Rauert, an environmental chemist at the University of Queensland in Australia.

“I do think it is a problem in the entire field,” Rauert told the Guardian. “I think a lot of the concentrations [of MNPs] that are being reported are completely unrealistic.”

“This isn’t a dig at [other scientists],” she added. “They use these techniques because we haven’t got anything better available to us. But a lot of studies that we’ve seen coming out use the technique without really fully understanding the data that it’s giving you.” She said the failure to employ normal quality control checks was “a bit crazy”.

Py-GC-MS begins by pyrolysing the sample – heating it until it vaporises. The fumes are then passed through the tubes of a gas chromatograph, which separates smaller molecules from large ones. Last, a mass spectrometer uses the weights of different molecules to identify them.

The problem is that some small molecules in the fumes derived from polyethylene and PVC can also be produced from fats in human tissue. Human samples are “digested” with chemicals to remove tissue before analysis, but if some remains the result can be false positives for MNPs. Rauert’s paper lists 18 studies that did not include consideration of the risk of such false positives.
Rauert also argues that studies reporting high levels of MNPs in organs are simply hard to believe: “I have not seen evidence that particles between 3 and 30 micrometres can cross into the blood stream,” she said. “From what we know about actual exposure in our everyday lives, it is not biologically plausible that that mass of plastic would actually end up in these organs.”

“It’s really the nano-size plastic particles that can cross biological barriers and that we are expecting inside humans,” she said. “But the current instruments we have cannot detect nano-size particles.”

Whoopsie it was all bad science rushed out the door.

dykepuffs:
“placeofwonder:
“stackcats:
“wsherlockscottholmesblog:
“ euphoria-my-love:
“ magimerlyn:
“ nezumipi:
“ emi–rose:
“ moodyehudi:
“ epaulettes:
“ wildlyannoyingdoofus:
“ These kinds of responses are my FAVORITE. Some examples to answers to...

These kinds of responses are my FAVORITE. Some examples to answers to this question I have heard:

1.

“Okay, and who’s the president?”

“Obama, no wait, shit *vehemently* fuck, I hate him… what’s his name…”

“It’s okay, you know who he is.”

2.

“Who’s the president?”

“*drunkenly angry and confused* ..uhhhhhhh…Orange… damn it what’s the fuck’s name….

“Yup, good enough.”

3.

“And who’s the president,”

“Not fuckin’ Obama!”

“I feel ya.”

4.

“Who’s the president- wait, nevermind you’re from Korea you said, right? So who’s-“

“Everybody knows that Trump-bitch.”

“Oh, well, alright then.”


5. (My personal favorite)

“Who’s the president?”

“Ew.”

“Good enough.”

My roommate is a neurologist and has to do this check all the time. Her all-time favorite so far has been “ay dios mio” during which the woman was vigorously crossing herself.

moodyehudi

lol me too , lady

One time I got “that orange fuck” from a very cute little old lady with urosepsis

I have - quite unintentionally - contributed to this phenomenon.

I was waking up from surgery in the post-op observation room, where they kept people before sending them off to the ICU. The nurse was talking to me as I was semi-awake, telling me that as soon as it was ready, I would be sent to room 2008.

I did not hear the word “room”.

I started trying to sit up and get out of bed (entirely unsuccessfully), shouting (mumbling forcefully), “He’s not president yet! I have to warn everyone!”

That’s awesome. Thank you for trying to warn us

i’ve been looking for this post for ages and it finally crossed my dash again

(( *smiles* the post is back))

Paramedics had to stop asking “who’s the prime minister?” in Australia because it changed so often that not knowing the answer wasn’t really all that indicative of anything.

One paramedic reported receiving the answer “I haven’t watched the news today”.

Meanwhile in Germany, the joke goes that a teenager is waking up in a hospital bed, the nurse asks them who the chancellor is and they say, “hang on are you telling me that can change?”

Accidentally making the paramedics think I have a concussion because I spend too long trying to think of the perfect witty answer when asked who the Prime Minister is.

Hey other trans men (+ other trans people), FTM international and FTM newsletter publications are available online .
This is stuff I urge people to read because people know nothing of trans man/FtM history, struggles, and activism.

Many things discussed in these are still things argued about today - because people refused to listen to trans men then and they are refusing to now.

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Anon asked: is there any archives for the work of trans women, like how there is of the FtM newsletter?

Yes! The same archive that hosts FtM Newsletter also hosts many works of trans women! The Digital transgender archive has newspapers, letters, photography, and books by trans women.

By putting ‘MtF’ into the search bar it will show you everything tagged MtF in the archive

Hermaphrodites with Attitude is also archived here, it was an occasionally published newsletter by the Intersex Society of North America 💛💜💛

No really, you should read it.

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"It is the color of bad news delivered with bureaucratic indifference"

And;

"The color of a person's thoughts while ignoring war"

And;

"The color of the humming sound that an overhead flourescent light makes in a disillusioning job"

And;

"It is, however, the color of the discussions on the subject, as well as the color of the awareness of the context from which those discussions inevitably spring"

And;

"It is the color of a corporate apology"

And;

"When the decision was revealed, I knew I would never own a house."