What’s the point? Just take a picture.
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They’ll say that’s not how the covid vaccine works, which is true. They’re still dumb though
kevlar21@lemm.eeto
Work Reform@lemmy.world•Trump's pick to lead workplace safety agency will derail heat protections, advocates fear
6·7 months agoAt least it’s not the hottest year in recorded history or anything like that, right?
kevlar21@lemm.eeto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•14 nurses at the same hospital are pregnant at the same time
6·8 months agoAlso, FMLA is federal (for now anyway). The article is about paid family medical leave in some states, which they abbreviate PFML.
Clearly the battery is positioned there in order to enable charging via belly rubs
kevlar21@lemm.eetoPolitical Memes@lemmy.world•The best anyone’s ever seen people are saying
18·8 months agoMe playing Stardew Valley with my girlfriend
Not me! It’s been too reliable and everything that I need works fine without much effort at all, so I never get any experience troubleshooting or using the command line.
kevlar21@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What hidden song gems would you recommend people check out?
6·11 months agoPlease - Flashlight (2024) https://youtu.be/sSkcsuv_A8I
kevlar21@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What app is so useful, you can’t believe it’s free?
75·11 months agoDon’t forget to donate!
I think I saw that this was more of a recommendation to the shareholders? Idk how all that works to be honest.





I don’t doubt that women are underrepresented in medical research, but at the same time I suspect most medical research targets issues that affect both men and women, since that is true of most medical issues. The 7% statistic would be more impactful if we could compare it to the percentage of medical research focused on medical issues specific to men.
Edit: after further consideration, my initial take here isn’t great either, because women face more medical issues specific to their gender. I still think the 7% statistic is a little misleading.