Oh, nice. Just requested it and their bot made the community almost instantly. Might put up a post about it here.
Well, would you look at that?
I just went back to the community that wasn't showing the subscribe button for me and it's back there now too.
Yeah good point. For those who don't feel like clicking through them all, and because I already have Notepad++ open, here they are:
Is that supposed to be John Key? This one gives me Piers Morgan vibes, with a sprinkle of Mike Hosking. While this one reminds me of some other NZ politician, but I can't put my finger on who.
FYI: You can embed images in posts/comments by wrapping the URLs like this:
![](https://files.catbox.moe/ejnvze.jpg)
which will do this:
You can also make that a link to the full size image like this:
[![](https://files.catbox.moe/ejnvze.jpg)](https://files.catbox.moe/ejnvze.jpg)
Edit: That all applies to images hosted elsewhere. You can also tap the little image icon amongst the formatting icons which will upload the image here and format the embed code for you.
I carry one of those little Vick's inhalers with me everywhere I go. It's often the only thing that will get me breathing again.
Aside from all the obvious uses for wool, I love the wool-based masks Lanaco makes. If you need or want a P2/N95 mask for whatever reason I would highly recommend their Waire masks. Nothing comes close in terms of breathability. I've had a good experience with everything I've got from Lanaco.
We absolutely need to stop putting it into the air as soon as possible. If these kinds of technologies delay transitions then they're counterproductive. I'm inclined to think that reducing atmospheric CO₂ at every possible opportunity is important at the moment.
Even if the world becomes carbon neutral, we'll need to remove the excess CO₂ from the atmosphere if we want the heating to stop. This is one of the most practical systems for doing that that I've seen so far. We'll need it to happen on a much larger scale, but it's important to be researching it now.
The dissolved CO₂ reacts with reactive rocks, like basalt, forming solid, stable carbonate minerals. It's essentially permanent on a human timescale. But you're asking the right questions.
The scientists link to this page, which explains it in more detail.
@RaoulDuke
@lemmy.nz