Great points. Here is the original post:
I will delete this post and replace it with one about the dog whistle.
What the fuck! I thought it was just a cute post about small talk being mostly about boring patterns like the weather and recent sports results.
I didn’t miss anything
it’s borderline but I think this is allowed
Eating gizzard sounds offal to me
What? Explain yuself
To be fair, you are repeatedly quite inflammatory and borderline trolling, which is not the culture of this community at all, so I can understand why there is such a reaction. So, although like I said, this doesn’t technically break any rules, it’s clear that not many people like it.
On the Lemmy app I’m using that doesn’t display correctly.
And then also just in a browser, it’s not the same as an image link.
Thank you again for the suggestion, but this community will remain images only, and you can put a link in the description. That is the only way to ensure everyone gets a consistent experience regardless of how they access Lemmy.
This post has had a number of reports. It technically doesn’t break any rules, and it’s also on -74 votes, so I’m not going to remove it.
Thank you for the suggestion but I’m afraid it’s screenshots only. The content on this community needs to be visible without leaving it. I would encourage users to add a link to the toot in the description however - I’ll add this to the rules now.
Mastodon is the federated alternative to twitter.
Only nine! Those are rookie numbers.
Should have expected this
United States
I feel like this is the sort of conservation that conservatives should be all about. Rather than conserving wealth.
As a mod I’m torn about this post because I agree with it politically, but it’s not really a meme. It’s just political content and there are other places for that.
I have addressed this here: https://lemmy.world/post/11704237
Ophidascaris robertsi is a roundworm usually found in pythons. The Canberra hospital patient marks the world-first case of the parasite being found in humans.
The patient resides near a lake area inhabited by carpet pythons. Despite no direct snake contact, she often collected native grasses, including warrigal greens, from around the lake to use in cooking, Senanayake said.
The doctors and scientists involved in her case hypothesise that a python may have shed the parasite via its faeces into the grass. They believe the patient was probably infected with the parasite directly from touching the native grass or after eating the greens.
Moral of the story: make sure you wash all the snake shit off your produce and hands before eating.
Is this a microblog post?