Ancient Greece: 3000 years ago. The birth of Christ: just over 2000 years ago The birth of Christianity: just UNDER 2000 years ago (Christ had to grow up, do the carpenter thing, & start preaching before ANYBODY could call themselves Christian, as Christianity is belief in Christ as a divine being). Make it make sense please!!!
@@WickedCheetah Yeah, they seem to forget that Christianity branched off from another whole religion, and tacked on bits of other religions that they stole along the way.
By Jove! That's not as far off as you might like. The Gentile Christians tacked a lot of the characteristics of various Skygods onto their God the Father to the dismay of the Jewish Christians.
Someone had an idea about the sun being orange. If a place had a lot of air pollution, it could make the sky and sun appear more orange. Now days, we have less air pollution, so the sun can appear more white.
... or maybe as a child they only looked at the sun during sunrise or sunset, when it does indeed glow orange (because of pollution and because the light has more atmosphere to cross when it's low in the sky), and that image is what made their memory.
That's what I was thinking! The sun looks orange here when we get a lot of smoke from forest fires, I think these people are just remembering a time when we didn't have as many regulations for air pollution
Greece wasn’t gay. It was an entirely different concept. Saying greece was gay is like saying they used IPhones and IPads in Star Trek. Similar doesn’t mean the same. The culture and the concept were totally different from what we‘re used to. Yeah there were homosexual relationships but a lot of the times it involved pederastry and in some cases they even were forbidden.
@@The_real_Arovor lmao imagine trying to “um, actually” someone in a queer comment section. In trying to sound intelligent, you’ve only succeeded in making yourself look like a fool, my friend.
Reminds me of the many jokes set in whatever time BC where they are using our modern dates for some reason. And someone points this out and asks, "What are we counting down to?"
in middle school i took horseback lessons, so in my art class i drew horses in my free time. i talked to the whole class about horse anatomy, and brought up the myth of backwards knees. *everybody,* including the teacher, said that the backwards knee thing is true, because that's what we all learned since elementary. had to argue to the point of tears to tell them that that's wrong and outdated. pulled up a photo of a horse skeleton to show where to find the patella and the heel, and then everyone finally backed down. it was so infuriating having to be the only one in class with the facts that day.
That's so frustrating! I remember being in first grade and my teacher insisted I was wrong in saying that people were animals. Like, what did she think we are? Fungi? Bacteria?
@@fluuufffffy1514 Nope, same as horses and all four-legged mammals, they have elbows and knees close to the body and the big, easily identifiable bending point is an ankle and carpal joint, not the knee and elbow like for us. Basically we have loooong thighs, shins, arms and forearms, but small metacarpals [the bones between the wrist bones and finger bones], metatarsals [the bones between the tarsals and the toes] and phalanges, but the four-legged mammals have shorter thighs and arms, but long metacarpals and metatarsals [like horse] or long forearms, shins, as well as all hand and foot bones [like elephants]. Look up skeletons of horses or elephants, first labeled, to see which bone is where, and then gifs for in motion animations, it will explain it much better than any text could [and also looks very cool, because anatomy is cool af]
Yeah, it's infuriating. I once watched a fellow college Anatomy student argue with the prof that the class skeleton was female because it had all its ribs. His pastor told him that all men lack a rib because Adam had surgery. Bad theology AND bad Biology. Sigh. Note:The student wouldn't quit. Only time I've ever seen someone removed from a college classroom.
Pasteurization is the heating of a liquid to kill off bacteria to make it safe for consumption. The temperature required is below the boiling point of water, so boiling for even a minute will reduce the portion of bacteria still living by a factor of millions of not billions. Also, the "burglarize" definition was from the Oxford dictionary, from Great Britain.
Boiling even for a second *should* clear the requirements of pasteurisation, you only need 15 seconds for the high temperature level of pasteurisation where it's only brought up to 72℃. That said, you need to have the equipment sterilised before you use it so if you for some reason wind up with raw milk you're better off boiling it for longer. Even bringing the milk to a boil is going to affect the taste so you might as well go for safety and boil it longer than needed.
8:42 My best friend growing up moved over here to the US when she was 11 from Canada, and we had this teacher that was stupidly strict about spelling. My friend had a lot of points taken off of an assignment for “misspelling” like three words and was very upset about it. We lived near each other so my dad would pick both of us up after school, and when he saw that she was upset we explained why. My dad told us to hang on a moment and went inside. He came back smiling with a note from the teacher that had a short apology and stating my friend had gotten a 100% on her assignment. Apparently my dad told him off for his ridiculous spelling penalties (this was a religion class) and how cruel it was to punish someone who’d only been living here for three months for not using the American English spelling. Our teacher didn’t even know there was a difference. (He also hated that teacher so it was extra fun for him) 😂
The most intelligent person I ever met (RIP Dad) understood that a person can't know everything, and there will always be something the other knows that you don't. Ask questions, listen and learn.
3:10 this genuinely hurts. "Trip" has nothing to do with the prefix "tri-". Like, what is a "p" supposed to be and why are there three of them? Btw, "tri-" comes from Greek.
Actually, pasteurizing just means heating to approximately 80°C - named after Louis Pasteur, who managed to prove that bacteria die off enough to make milk safe at that temperature. If you boil milk, it definitely is pasteurized.
"Ancient Greece wasn't gay" Ancient Greece was so gay that it originated 2 terms for women who are attracted to women. Lesbian and sapphic. And a lesser-used term for men who are attracted to men: achillian. Also, I wonder if the whole "the sun was orange when I was a kid and now it's white" had to do with air pollution? Idk, when I see videos or pictures of locations with a lot of smog, or hell even when we get a lot of smoke here from forest fires it makes the sun look orange. Are these people just remembering a time when air pollution wasn't as controlled?
Google tells me Achillean in this sense only goes back to 1959, but there was another Greek term, Uranian, coined in German (as "Urning") and translated to English in the late 19th century.
Gen X here! Live in rural England too. Clearly remember the sun being white and telling my primary school teacher about it. Never described it as orange, always yellow. I guess someone took too much acid in the 80s
The color gathering thingies in peoples eyes will vary between person to person, hence why people describe colors differently, and will also change as you age. So yes, the color of the sun could have changed for them. HOWEVER, that doesn't make physics wrong!
This seems mostly to depend on how much air pollution there is in your area. Also we tell small kids not to look at the sun, so the only time they should see it is by accident when it's close to sunset - when the light is passing through the air at a long angle, so it can be affected by more of whatever pollution there is. The more pollution, the redder the sun.
Also color-blindness might affect the appearance too. Color-blindness is more common in those carrying an XY pair of chromosomes and I believe it might be hereditary, but don’t quote me on that. I know there are several different types of color-blindness depending on which cones are affected.
16:40 - I guess they define "death" to exclude (e.g.) new-born babies whose hearts stop temporarily when they are born, but who are saved and fully recover due to medical intervention.
When a country splits in two, does their former nation's sun also split in two or does one of them get a new sun? If the latter, then who gets the brand new shiny sun (white) and who gets the old tatty sun (orange)? Similarly, if two countries unite to become one, do their suns also unite or do they just keep one of them? If the latter, how do they decide which to keep and what happens to the spare sun - is it discarded, donated to new countries, destroyed? Also, what definition of country are we using to determine who's allowed a sun? Do city states get their own suns? What about micronations? What about disputed territories and unrecognised countries? What about places that aren't independent, like French Guiana (which is legally part of France)? I have so many questions for that person that thinks that human boundaries can determine natural things! 😆
@@hannahk1306 when 2 countries fuse they keep the newest sun on and keep the older as backup so they don't have to rush to change it in a single night when it stops working. When a countries separates they toss a coin to see who keeps the sun and who have to pay for a new one... the French Guiana, Hong Kong, and the countries that belong to the United Kingdom but are too far to use their sun (Australia, New Zealand) have a separated sun, usually an older version, so people don't catch the conspiracy. Alaska has its own sun too, the USA's one couldn't cover Alaska because the Canadian sun blocks it...😂
12:28 __ Not just a PhD in physics, but in climate physics. Here's the easy saying: 1) Weather is "What's it doing outside *_right now?"_* 2) Seasons are the average Weather. 3) Climate is _the average _*_Seasons._* Longer version: 1) Weather is "What's it doing outside *_right now?"_* 2) Seasons are the average Weather throughout the year, _averaged over months._ 3) Climate is how the Seasons behave over centuries, _averaged over _*_DECADES._* Are the Seasons different _now_ compared to how they were 30, 40, or 50 years ago? _Then the climate _*_HAS CHANGED._* I remember a paper that came out in the 1990s when I was in grad school, about the discovery of "An Instantaneous Change" from a glacial-climate [a.k.a. "ice-age"] to an interglacial-climate [a.k.a. "non-ice-age"]. The change was in a little over 100 years, instead of a few thousand. Let me repeat that, louder for the people in the back: *_THE CLIMATE TAKING 100 YEARS TO CHANGE IS CONSIDERED INSTANTANEOUS_* in the normal scale of time. We are seeing changes that take place _in _*_years_* not centuries.
That dinosaur one reminded me of this person in my class. He was a creationist Protestant, and in REP we were talking about things to do with dinosaurs, which he claimed were fake. When the teacher said "what about the evidence" (can't remember what they cited), the student said "that's not real." And Ancient Greece was very gay, but also largely pedophillic relations. Edit: The guy was also a raging homophobe and transphobe.
@@WhirlyBeepBoops this! Also, "leviathans" which very well could be a whole host of things, but often assumed to be dinosaurs. A lot of the Bible thumpers that I knew were not aware of the fact that the term "Dinosaur" was not coined until the 1800s and therefore would not have been in their Bible unless a newer translation decided to add it.
You also forgot to catch that Greece at the time that AC:Odyssey takes place during definitely was *not* Christian. It takes place *before* Christ during the Peloponessian war. It just chronologically doesn't make sense XD
Not to mention Sappho, the lesbian poetess. We literally get the word "sapphic" from her name, and "lesbian" from Lesbos, the island that was her home.
There's no "American accent." There are literally hundreds of accents mative to the US, just as there are many accents in every other English-speaking country.
while this is correct, most american accents share common characteristics, just like most british accents do, so a concept like "italian accent" or "british accent" or "american accent" makes sense in a practical sense. (Just think about how it's easier to tell someone is american by accent if you're european, than let's say idahoan. I personally can recognize an american accent, but can't recognize most subaccents. Except texan, but that one is easier.)
I'd argue they're all American accents, just as there are different accents in England but we generally consider them all English accents. There is also a specific American accent that is frequently used for broadcasts that are intended for a wider or international audience.
@@riccardozanoni2531 lol Oh God, he doesn't know. Have you visited the deep south? Been to any Islands? You can NOT tell an "American" accent. You can tell many American accents. Many share more in common with British, Irish, Spanish, Italian, German, Slavic, etc, and are extremely difficult to place. For an example, consider Gullah. Remember also that Puerto Ricans, Hawaiians, and American Samoans are also "American." This is similar to saying people who speak one of the London accents sound British... just like those from the most isolated Welsh or Scottish community. Er, no. I think you are more thinking of what many consider the "standard" American accent, or midwestern accents, which to most Americans sounds unaccented and flat. Could be? Edited: I do want to note that I recognize that while a Chicago accent is very different from a Floridian, they both sound "American" to non-Americans. I am only pointing out that you can't tell *all* American accents are from the US, as even many from the US don't recognize them unless from there or with some specific experience of them. Here in NY (state), for example, we have whole villages that speak only, or mainly, German or Polish. Their accents do *not* sound "American."
@@SplotPublishing it still doesn't change what i said, the majority of american accents (not including american languages that are not part of american english, in case that was not clear enough) share common traits. Also, as an italian, no your dialects have nothing to do with italian i can assure you. Some americans can speak italian, but they mostly do so with a very recognizable american accent.😉 And considering immigrants' accents as part of american dialects is disingenuous. There's plenty of american immigrants in italy too, but i wouldn't say that italian can sound like american english just because of them lol.
19:40 in year 5 I was learning about the colonisation of Australia (I’m also Australian) and I said “Wait it was the British who colonised? I thought you said it was the Europeans?”. I asked it so confidently, and the whole class laughed at me 💀
I've got bad news for the dinosaurs didn't exist person who believes women really came from a rib. The word used in that passage was used several times in the old testament texts and it never, ever means rib anywhere else. It means side or half. That passage was intentionally mistranslated to diminish women. The metaphor in that story was supposed to be that an equal, or an other half, was created.
Oooo I haven’t heard that before! Very interesting. I do always think it’s fun when people latch on to one specific word in the Bible but refuse to believe that in order to read it most need to read the translation. Translation is an art and a science and context is so important when doing so. Context can be very difficult to get on a document as old as the bible that has been edited and used for political purposes more than once.
Have I ever been confidently wrong about something? Well, I did confidently claim to be a boy/man for over 30 years just to have the truth (I am a woman) finally realized 1 year ago 😭💕
If I had a dollar for every time someone confused a theory and a hypothesis, anti-evolutionists would have paid for my gender affirming surgeries by now
Yeah, Louis Pasteur's method was to heat liquids until the germs died. Heating it to make it safe is the essence of pasturisation. If you're boiling, you're going beyond pasturisation protocols applied in any country I know of.
11:00 exactly! My science teacher explained that even gravity is a theory. This is because can’t actually see gravity but we can observe it’s effect on objects in the universe. Needless to say, just because theories aren’t 100% proven, doesn’t mean they can’t have overwhelming evidence.
The reason the sun looks yellow despite being white is that the sun shines white light, but the short-wavelength photons (blue light) get scattered in the atmosphere, making the sky blue. Since the blue has been scattered, the sun itself looks yellow-ish from the earths surface. If the sun is in the horizon, the more the light from the sun has to travel through the atmosphere to reach your eyes, so more blue light as well as some green light is scattered to the point where the sun appears orange or even red at sunsets.
Yes..... That is what some genuinely believe.... I know u probably said this as "what a wacky scenario that isn't real". ... But no..... It is genuinely what some people believe....
Claiming the game where you can survive any fall as long as its under a bit of hay, the Assassin and Templars are constantly fighting for the discovery of Pieces of Eden which are basically god magic technology AND you revisit past Assassins via a past life machine is "Striving for historical realism" is wild to me!
I remember someone (either on Tumblr or reddit) posted a story their teacher told of a kid who played a ton of AC2 and was able to successfully lead a tour group through (was it Rome or Italy, I forget) through back alleyways and side streets to the church they were heading to because they played the game and the developers had apparently just made an interactive map. BTW, the group had a tour guide, and the kid stepped in when the tour guide got lost.
@@kaelin_cherise Ahh.... Though even if thats true it doesnt change the many many parts of the game that lead into supernatural and scif elements though. The game might have accurate map structure but doesnt mean that someone is right that they strayed from realism cuz queer people were present in the game
We had goats growing up and pasteurized the milk you heat it to just shy of boiling to a specific temperature for a length of time needed to kill bacteria. If they believe pasteurizing ruins the milk then fully boiling it would make it worse. Actually boiling does change it that's why to pasteurize you don't heat it to boiling.
Literally commented on a post about check vs cheque like 15 minutes ago. "People Incorrectly Correcting Other People" is a fun Facebook group for these things.
13:40 i feel like this could just be chalked up to them getting more sensitive to light lmao i would know, ive gone through that, i used to be able to look at any flashing lights without a second thought, but now it gives me intense headaches after a bit too long. "it cant be that im aging and my sight is changing, it has to be LED LIGHTS REPLACING THE SUN, SON, GIVE ME MY TINFOIL HAT"
i mean, a guy creating all species of animals at the same time in the span of a day is pretty much against any current evidence, so... maybe let's just not consider the bible for anything but religious doctrine
@@daynal9594 It's an old book, from before humans came up with the idea that dinosaurs existed. And therefore, I don't think there can possibly be anything about dinosaurs in the bible, pro- or anti-.
The UK just confuses a lot of people... Just yesterday someone posted on the subreddit that the UK isn't a country... they got shut down by pretty much everyone and just started insulting people... It was kinda funny but also sad. The UK confuses a lot of people... sometimes even its own people...
I must admit I also thought the UK was not a country, just a collection of 4 countries. But I checked and supposedly it is a country, but also 4 countries? So yeah, pretty confusing. It's extra confusing because my own country (the Netherlands) is also part of a kingdom consisting of 4 countries, but I don't think I've ever heard anyone refer to our kingdom as a whole as a single country. So now I'm wondering whether our kingdom would be considered a country as well.
0:57 no, they were speaking "Irish" (or at least a part of them). Scottish Gaelic, together with Manx and Irish, is a Goidelic language and developed out of Old Irish. The Scots then eventually moved over from Ireland towards Scottland (this is why I said that at least a part of them spoke "Irish". The Scots probably, though this is just my guess, mixed with the other people that lived there). Welsh, meanwhile, is a Brittonic language, together with Cornish and Breton. These developed out of Common Brittonic. These two groups are part of the larger Insular Celtic group within the Celtic branche of the Indo-European language family.
1:37 There's actually one more facepalm here: Dinosaurs are also reptiles, and many of them were bigger than the _Titanoboa._ Also, while fact-checking, I discovered that actually, the Titanoboa evolved after the dinosaurs died out.
I don’t like calling dinosaurs reptiles, because I think it’s useful to classify birds as “not reptiles” and I’m not sure how to include dinosaurs while excluding birds. I want there to be a different word that encompasses the non-mammalian terrestrial vertebrates.
@@joelpartee594 I mean but there were lots of dinosaurs that didn't resemble birds at all and looked more like snakes, lizards, etc. The scaly skin lots of them had is not something I could ever find myself relating to birds. The dinosaurs that had feathers and/or wings, sure. But the other types, not so much. I'd more so say that there were some dinosaurs that we could classify as reptiles and some others we could classify as birds. Just my opinion.
@@BeautyMonster1000 That's not how classification works, in the phylogenetic perspective dinosaurs and birds are one and the same since both of them have the same ancestor, in the Linnaean system birds are classified as warm blooded vertebrates with feathers, since we know dinosaurs had feathers and were warm blooded, even if they had scales they are still birds
I LOVE the revelation of 'alpha males' being a first draft. Perfect description for the underdeveloped personalities thag identify themselves that way....yet still hopeful for the possibility they can grow and impeove with a bit more editing
Oh, the woes of a modern age! 18:00 50 years ago, this would have such a great opportunity for Jamie to explain "quarter" by using Pounds, Shillings and Pence... and all the other peculiar peculiarities that used to be the British currency. Oh, how the mighy have fallen! (Just kidding: I'm German, we've had decimal currency since the 19th century. Which is still lagging behind.)
I've had people insist that a word doesn't exist or use the wrong word and yet get mad when I correct them and call them ignorant. And they yell at me because I call them on their crap.
What non scientists call a 'theory' is called a hypothesis by scientists. A scientific theory has been proven so many times that it can be taken as a fact. If disproven, it's no longer a theory.
This is always a fun loophole to me because it means that the ppl saying "whales aren't fish, they are mammals"..... Are technically wrong in the first part. Whales are mammals, mammals are synapsids, who evolved from early reptiles, who evolved from early amphibians, who evolved from lobe finned fish..... Who are a kind of fish..... So yeah, if birds are still counted as dinosaurs, then all tetrapods still count as fish, including whales. Like, whales being mammals is more important than them having fish as oooooold ancestors, but it's still a funny loophole
@@aleksabanjevic8316 I still consider mammals lobe-finned fish as well, but admittedly birds are far, far closer to other coelurosaurs than a whale is to a lungfish.
Laughed so hard at "Schroedinger's milk" that the dog being walked outside my window started barking. Dogs know when it's funny. Thanks, Jamie. I needed that.
Tomorrow it’s time, it’s time for my family and I to travel the United Kingdom. It’s going to fun, except for the fact that we’re going to the Harry Potter museum, and I unfortunately have to go with them. Because leaving me, a neurodivergent 23 year old alone in a hotel room for a whole afternoon is not a good idea.
@@doggycatalanLiking Gacha has no age limit. Besides, it’s not my fault I discovered/got into Gacha when I was 18. I watch Bluey, are you gonna say that’s also weird for a 23 year old to do?
@alicebthegachaweirdo8378 I like Bluey as well. I don't know why Gacha feels different. It's just a stigma in my mind since you're basically playing online with mostly 6-10 yr olds, and the game has a history of creepy stuff and weird role-plays.
working in forensics one of the first things we covered in my more specialised training was a definition of "death" was, along with "natural" vs "non-natural". We do this because the terminology is incredibly important and different ideas of what "death" is can seriously mess up a case. But yeah, it's a weird thing to think about having a definition outside of that context
i understand the confusion with the clock thing. a quarter past or a half past felt vague and confusing as they were not accurate to what the people would say. i kept saying "use numbers! they are on the clock!"
lol I read a lot of fanfics written by people using British spelling so my own grasp on what is British vs American spelling is trash. I usually just rely on my American-English autocorrect/spell check to catch me. I still think grey should be spelled “grey” and I think that’s British…ugh. I don’t particularly like it when people who are so strict on spelling to use it as a “got ya” moment, especially when things like autocorrect and typing on a phone keyboard with big fingers is a thing (my thumbs are not accurate) and completely forget that different dialects spell things differently.
*facepalm* I had a substitute teacher who was confidently incorrect on my name to the point of screaming at me “Jessica! Answer me when I’m talking to you!” 6 year old me was so terrified it took a classmate to say “that’s Rebecca, we don’t have a Jessica in this class”
I'll give my own little confidently incorrect moment I had as a kid! I tend to learn words through reading first before hearing them in sentences, so of course I'd end up making my own pronunciations about them. Most of the time I changed my pronunciation when told the proper pronunciation, but one time I pronounced Hyrule as 'Her-gull'. How I got to that pronunciation, I have NO clue, but I was SO confident that I refused to listen to anybody. It took me watching the Zelda cartoon for me to go "Ohh. Hi-rule. Hyrule." and realize how horribly incorrect I was. I still like to fondly remember going "HERGULL" when talking about Zelda. XD
lol my most memorable moment was when I thought my grandmas name was the city she lived in because my mom would say we are going to visit your grandma in City. So everyone would ask me what my grandmas name was and I would say the city and think they were idiots because I had already told them that like 10 times.
Why do some of these commenters spend so much time being so upset at strangers on message boards tho? Sincerely, I want to read studies on the psychology of that
I wonder if the "the sun is orange" person grew up in a city or a valley and never left. Because, yeah, in the smog-infested inland Southern California of my childhood, the sunsets were spectacular with a lot of weird reds and oranges. Less so now. But there's also a lot less smog and other particulate matter in the air now than there used to be due to efforts to reduce air pollution. Except during fire season. Then all those nostalgic sunsets with their wild, pollution-infused colors pop right back. Edit: LOL. I commented before the punchline. Oh well.
10:30 The theory of germs is also still only a theory, and the theory of gravity (objects move when pushed by another force) also is just a theory. Also, in scientific terms, theory means something different than just "we think this because of a few small details we found", the theories in science have a crap ton of evidence, including observable evidence.
YIPPEEEEEE I was supposed to go to a pride parade today so my mom dropped me off with my dad and my twin, but it was the wrong day so we had to walk 3 miles home😭
THere were six artificial suns in orbit around the (dwarf) planet Pluto in an old Doctor Who episode, to make it possible for humans to live there. Could someone just say "25 is a quarter of 100, 15 is a quarter of 60" at some point?
I've had someone who was a gay man who apparently dated a lot trans mascs confidently tell me that estrogen will make my voice higher and wouldn't back down despite the answer being a quick Google search
something i was once confidently incorrect on was "foxes aren't dogs". i only looked at the "vulpes" part of the scientific name and didn't bother reading forward to where it said "canidae". this had to be when i was in, like, my early- to mid-20s (i'm 32 now) and i look back with shame 🤣
I once heard somewhere that foxes were more closely related to cats than dogs. No idea where I came across this information, but at least I was among friends when my "confidently incorrect" moment was shot down in flames... 😂
I suppose it depends on how you define "dog"? Usually when people say "dog" they're specifically referring to Canis Lupus Familiaris, which does not include foxes. But yeah, the much broader clade Canidae can also be referred to as "dogs", so by that definition foxes would indeed be dogs.
About being incorrect: for the longest time i thought reindeers were made up. You know, fantasy creatures like dragons or unicorns. (Probably because of rudolph). But turns out their actual animals in our actual world. Wild! 😂
Smog was making the sun appear orange, there is less smog in the lower atmosphere in the last 25 years than there has been since the late 18th century.
In Grade 8 (so about 13 years old) I was *supremely* confident that the word "orgasm" was just a mispronounciation of the word "organism" 🤦 I even told my classmates so, with an extreme air of superiority. D'oh!
Okay. As someone who has worked on a farm. Pasteurisation is when you take milk from multiple animals and "standardise" it. Usually by putting into large vats, and warming it up until the curds and wey seperate out. Almost all store bought milk has been pasteurised. What they might be referring to is Lactose Free. Lactose is a common side effect of the pasteurisation technique and is less present in skim or lactose free milk which is processed differently.
I didn’t know that about lactose! I have studied biochem so I always just think of lactose as milk-sugar, is it not present in raw milk? Because I would think it would be because sugars are good energy sources for developing babies (calves in this case). But like I said, I am only vaguely familiar due to biochemical pathways. If you have the time to explain that would be cool!
@@rebeccajesse4604 Nah, see it took a little while for it to happen but over the past two decades there has been a mishmash of ways to counter lactose intolerance. The initial attempt was releasing bottles of unpasturized milk. This stuff had been heat treated but still had lumpy creame in it. Such milk was often advertized as "Lactose Free". Since then they have developed a similar process that instead of using a wheet by product they use a rice bypodict. What happens is this, during homogonization and pasturization, "Chaff" is added to the boiling milk. The majority of the fat from the beef milk attaches to the chaff, making it easier to scoop up. This becomes Cheese! But the excess sugars from the chaff are transfered into the milk. These sugars are the same kind that cause gluten intolerance, but they instead bind to the lactase. Lactase is not the same as lactose. Lactase is a compound found in diary that, honestly human's aren't meant to digest at all. As you grow out of toddler age, your body forgets how to handle lactase cause this is the problem. If Lactase binds with sugars in your body it can be carried into your blood stream. This is why people say lots of dairy makes you fat. People who have a lactose intolerance are people who can't process the sugar enriched lactase (lactose). Usually cause they have week stomach linings. A lot of modern lactose free milk uses a Chaff made from Rice, which does not produce lactose during the pasturization process. My uncle ran a dairy farm for 30 years and I learnd a lot while I was helping on the farm.
11:40 I actually grew up on unpasteurized milk. We lived in the countryside. Once or twice a week, we'd go to our neighbor (a dairy farmer) and fill up a churn of milk to take home. (If you're wondering "what's a churn?" That's a big metal milk can.) The milk was only refrigerated, not pasteurized. Fresh, unpasteurized milk can be kept for a few days to a week as long as it's kept refrigerated. Pasteurized milk can be kept for much, much longer.
I want to jump on the Scottish/not British one because as a Scot, I don't think the first one was about geography, because yes, Scotland is geographically part of Britain. It is common in English media to portray famous Scots as 'British' when they are in favour and 'Scottish' when they are out of favour. (Take tennis player Andy Murray for example. British when he is winning. Scottish when he is losing.) Many Scots feel frustrated that our Scottish representation? culture? achievements? seems to be being taken away from us and being claimed as English (as that is usually the default assumption for 'British'), and "They are not British. They're Scottish." is a common objection to someone claiming a famous Scot as 'British'.
The comment about Ancient Greece caused actual pain. Literally inflicted psychic damage. My breath punched out from throat like I had the wind knocked out of me, just before I dropped my head to cradle it in my hands. Ow.
Hello people. Things are going very well here now. I am out to both of my parents, and both are extremely supportive. I was able to get my nails done yesterday and am going to buy clothes later today :3 Edit: I got a dress!! :3
I feel like a lot of the quarter of an hour being 25 minutes confusion comes from the fact that when learning fractions in school the 1/4 is read as a fourth, not a quarter. But when they do currency then a quarter is a specific coin worth 25 cents. The other coins (dime, nickel, penny) have specific values but arbitrary names. They are not taught to draw the connection that 25 cents IS a quarter (fourth) of a dollar. It's just a quarter because that's what they're told it is. It's mostly the education system to blame for this. However I was only in school once so obviously can't speak for every school in the country.
"I know ancient Greece followed Christianity" is the funniest sentence I have heard all week!
someone needs a lesson on the Greek pantheon, huh?
Ancient Greece: 3000 years ago.
The birth of Christ: just over 2000 years ago
The birth of Christianity: just UNDER 2000 years ago (Christ had to grow up, do the carpenter thing, & start preaching before ANYBODY could call themselves Christian, as Christianity is belief in Christ as a divine being).
Make it make sense please!!!
I think that person was just hellbent on being homophobic
As glorious as "men didn't have rights until the 19th century" 💀 (found on Myanimelist)
The Greek Gods sipping their wine: Fascinating
"the ancient greeks followed christianity" yeah I remember the christian god zeus
Some people think Christianity was the first ever religion
@@WickedCheetah Yeah, they seem to forget that Christianity branched off from another whole religion, and tacked on bits of other religions that they stole along the way.
Yes, and the little naked chubby god Cupid throwing arrows at people with his tiny bow 🏹 😂
dont wanna be that guy but cupid is actually roman (and an adult who is married with a kid)
By Jove!
That's not as far off as you might like. The Gentile Christians tacked a lot of the characteristics of various Skygods onto their God the Father to the dismay of the Jewish Christians.
Someone had an idea about the sun being orange. If a place had a lot of air pollution, it could make the sky and sun appear more orange. Now days, we have less air pollution, so the sun can appear more white.
I thought they were just mixing their memories of how they drew the sun as a kid with how the sun actually looked.
... or maybe as a child they only looked at the sun during sunrise or sunset, when it does indeed glow orange (because of pollution and because the light has more atmosphere to cross when it's low in the sky), and that image is what made their memory.
That's what I was thinking! The sun looks orange here when we get a lot of smoke from forest fires, I think these people are just remembering a time when we didn't have as many regulations for air pollution
Exactly! And it's good news! Like the hole in the ozone layer closing up.
Less? Doubt.
"Ancient Greece wasn't gay!"
No one tell him about Sappho or Achilles then. The ancient Greeks were SO gay.
Nobody tell them about the gods either! Especially not Apollo!
The only straight thing about ancient greece was the pillars-
Greece wasn’t gay. It was an entirely different concept.
Saying greece was gay is like saying they used IPhones and IPads in Star Trek. Similar doesn’t mean the same.
The culture and the concept were totally different from what we‘re used to. Yeah there were homosexual relationships but a lot of the times it involved pederastry and in some cases they even were forbidden.
@@The_real_Arovor there's "THAT" person.
@@The_real_Arovor lmao imagine trying to “um, actually” someone in a queer comment section.
In trying to sound intelligent, you’ve only succeeded in making yourself look like a fool, my friend.
9:39 Ah yes, the Ancient Greeks were so Christian, they worshiped Jesus 400 years before he was born!
Reminds me of the many jokes set in whatever time BC where they are using our modern dates for some reason. And someone points this out and asks, "What are we counting down to?"
🤣🤣🤣🤣
in middle school i took horseback lessons, so in my art class i drew horses in my free time. i talked to the whole class about horse anatomy, and brought up the myth of backwards knees. *everybody,* including the teacher, said that the backwards knee thing is true, because that's what we all learned since elementary. had to argue to the point of tears to tell them that that's wrong and outdated. pulled up a photo of a horse skeleton to show where to find the patella and the heel, and then everyone finally backed down. it was so infuriating having to be the only one in class with the facts that day.
Boy, do I feel seen! This still happens, too.
That's so frustrating! I remember being in first grade and my teacher insisted I was wrong in saying that people were animals. Like, what did she think we are? Fungi? Bacteria?
How do elephants work? Is that a backwards elbow??
@@fluuufffffy1514 Nope, same as horses and all four-legged mammals, they have elbows and knees close to the body and the big, easily identifiable bending point is an ankle and carpal joint, not the knee and elbow like for us.
Basically we have loooong thighs, shins, arms and forearms, but small metacarpals [the bones between the wrist bones and finger bones], metatarsals [the bones between the tarsals and the toes] and phalanges, but the four-legged mammals have shorter thighs and arms, but long metacarpals and metatarsals [like horse] or long forearms, shins, as well as all hand and foot bones [like elephants].
Look up skeletons of horses or elephants, first labeled, to see which bone is where, and then gifs for in motion animations, it will explain it much better than any text could [and also looks very cool, because anatomy is cool af]
Yeah, it's infuriating. I once watched a fellow college Anatomy student argue with the prof that the class skeleton was female because it had all its ribs. His pastor told him that all men lack a rib because Adam had surgery. Bad theology AND bad Biology. Sigh. Note:The student wouldn't quit. Only time I've ever seen someone removed from a college classroom.
I do love that version of "alpha male" as the buggy, inferior version of a man
I don't do alpha males. Only release males, or even tried and true legacy males.
The himbo man 😂! Uga booga me strong, me aggressive!
@@Ricocossa1 Go for ver. 2.0 men. They have all of the bugs worked out of the v1.0 features, and have additional features on top of the basic ones!
I really like that idea. Clearly, the "alpha male" mentality is full of bugs. Here's to hope they get fixed 🤞.
I came here to say something like this! 😃👍
"I don't eat mice" Jammi Dodger, 2024
I'm glad for the clarification, also a little bit relieved.
Pasteurization is the heating of a liquid to kill off bacteria to make it safe for consumption. The temperature required is below the boiling point of water, so boiling for even a minute will reduce the portion of bacteria still living by a factor of millions of not billions.
Also, the "burglarize" definition was from the Oxford dictionary, from Great Britain.
I'm so glad someone else caught the Oxford detail too 😂
Boiling even for a second *should* clear the requirements of pasteurisation, you only need 15 seconds for the high temperature level of pasteurisation where it's only brought up to 72℃.
That said, you need to have the equipment sterilised before you use it so if you for some reason wind up with raw milk you're better off boiling it for longer. Even bringing the milk to a boil is going to affect the taste so you might as well go for safety and boil it longer than needed.
hello lgbt people
i am seeing the endocrinologist tomorrow, wish me luck
update: it went well, i am starting t tomorrow
luck has been wished 🤞🤞
Good luck, dude!
Good luck
Gl
Good luck Prageruwu69
Sun is yellow because I use to draw it yellow in kindergarden😤 Also it's always in corner and wears sunglasses 😎
ACTUALLY the sun is yellow, exists as a flat quarter circle, has sunglasses, AND has a smile. So there. 😈😎😎
@@Bunny_Bill Super Mario Bros. 3 taught me that if you anger the Sun, it will chase you around.
The person in the last post thinks the words "sex" and "sexuality" are interchangeable.
Honestly more understandable than thinking gender and sex are
i'm an "alpha male" in the sense that i'm a trans guy in the weird post-social pre-physical stage of transitioning
Omg im an alpha male too🤝
LMFAO! I'm beta then. Take it either way.
Uh... is there a stage before alpha? That would be me (in the process of socially transitioning).
@@sonnentausnest I believe that is what the gamers call "development"
@@Bunny_Bill ngl, I kinda like that. I'm "in development" then 😆
8:42 My best friend growing up moved over here to the US when she was 11 from Canada, and we had this teacher that was stupidly strict about spelling. My friend had a lot of points taken off of an assignment for “misspelling” like three words and was very upset about it. We lived near each other so my dad would pick both of us up after school, and when he saw that she was upset we explained why.
My dad told us to hang on a moment and went inside. He came back smiling with a note from the teacher that had a short apology and stating my friend had gotten a 100% on her assignment.
Apparently my dad told him off for his ridiculous spelling penalties (this was a religion class) and how cruel it was to punish someone who’d only been living here for three months for not using the American English spelling.
Our teacher didn’t even know there was a difference.
(He also hated that teacher so it was extra fun for him) 😂
Your dad did great! 👏
Dad of the year award goes to yours!
The most intelligent person I ever met (RIP Dad) understood that a person can't know everything, and there will always be something the other knows that you don't. Ask questions, listen and learn.
Socratic wisdom
3:10 this genuinely hurts. "Trip" has nothing to do with the prefix "tri-". Like, what is a "p" supposed to be and why are there three of them? Btw, "tri-" comes from Greek.
Actually, pasteurizing just means heating to approximately 80°C - named after Louis Pasteur, who managed to prove that bacteria die off enough to make milk safe at that temperature. If you boil milk, it definitely is pasteurized.
Pasteurized plus 25%!
Interesting, I always assumed that the word came from “pasture”
Lmao your ramble about "Alpha Males" being the bugged stage of men was hilarious
Real quick adding this to my lexicon.
"You're an alpha? Aww, don't worry, I'm sure those bugs can be worked out and you *advance to beta* real soon." 😈
@@sonnentausnest Makes me want to tell people I'm a post day one patch male 🤣
@@NickKzig 👍🏻
Im still waiting on a patch
"Ancient Greece wasn't gay"
Ancient Greece was so gay that it originated 2 terms for women who are attracted to women. Lesbian and sapphic. And a lesser-used term for men who are attracted to men: achillian.
Also, I wonder if the whole "the sun was orange when I was a kid and now it's white" had to do with air pollution? Idk, when I see videos or pictures of locations with a lot of smog, or hell even when we get a lot of smoke here from forest fires it makes the sun look orange. Are these people just remembering a time when air pollution wasn't as controlled?
Google tells me Achillean in this sense only goes back to 1959, but there was another Greek term, Uranian, coined in German (as "Urning") and translated to English in the late 19th century.
8:58 It's a British-American English distinction. "Cheque" is British, "check" is American.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure America is the only English speaking country to spell it check.
@@michaelmorris1865 we use it pretty interchangeably here in the philippines, thanks to american colonialism 😔
In Canada we also use "cheque", although it seems like "check" is gaining ground along with other American spellings like color versus colour.
Actually cheque is the original French spelling.
@CorwinFound I've seen check a few times here in Canada but mostly cheque.
Constipating the marriage definitely sounds very British 😂 😊
Emotional constipation 💯
Gen X here! Live in rural England too. Clearly remember the sun being white and telling my primary school teacher about it. Never described it as orange, always yellow. I guess someone took too much acid in the 80s
The color gathering thingies in peoples eyes will vary between person to person, hence why people describe colors differently, and will also change as you age. So yes, the color of the sun could have changed for them.
HOWEVER, that doesn't make physics wrong!
This seems mostly to depend on how much air pollution there is in your area. Also we tell small kids not to look at the sun, so the only time they should see it is by accident when it's close to sunset - when the light is passing through the air at a long angle, so it can be affected by more of whatever pollution there is. The more pollution, the redder the sun.
Also color-blindness might affect the appearance too. Color-blindness is more common in those carrying an XY pair of chromosomes and I believe it might be hereditary, but don’t quote me on that. I know there are several different types of color-blindness depending on which cones are affected.
16:40 - I guess they define "death" to exclude (e.g.) new-born babies whose hearts stop temporarily when they are born, but who are saved and fully recover due to medical intervention.
Imagine the power of a people or an institution able to provide **individual suns** to nations. Dude. God ain't shit against that.
When a country splits in two, does their former nation's sun also split in two or does one of them get a new sun? If the latter, then who gets the brand new shiny sun (white) and who gets the old tatty sun (orange)?
Similarly, if two countries unite to become one, do their suns also unite or do they just keep one of them? If the latter, how do they decide which to keep and what happens to the spare sun - is it discarded, donated to new countries, destroyed?
Also, what definition of country are we using to determine who's allowed a sun?
Do city states get their own suns? What about micronations? What about disputed territories and unrecognised countries? What about places that aren't independent, like French Guiana (which is legally part of France)?
I have so many questions for that person that thinks that human boundaries can determine natural things! 😆
@@hannahk1306 when 2 countries fuse they keep the newest sun on and keep the older as backup so they don't have to rush to change it in a single night when it stops working. When a countries separates they toss a coin to see who keeps the sun and who have to pay for a new one... the French Guiana, Hong Kong, and the countries that belong to the United Kingdom but are too far to use their sun (Australia, New Zealand) have a separated sun, usually an older version, so people don't catch the conspiracy. Alaska has its own sun too, the USA's one couldn't cover Alaska because the Canadian sun blocks it...😂
Titanboa didnt live with dinosaurs
it lived among Mammoths, Indricotherium, Megalodon, and Early humans
Iirc, it lived in South America, but during that same epoch.
we all technically live with dinosaurs lol maybe they're talking about birds. I seriously doubt it
12:28 __ Not just a PhD in physics, but in climate physics. Here's the easy saying:
1) Weather is "What's it doing outside *_right now?"_*
2) Seasons are the average Weather.
3) Climate is _the average _*_Seasons._*
Longer version:
1) Weather is "What's it doing outside *_right now?"_*
2) Seasons are the average Weather throughout the year, _averaged over months._
3) Climate is how the Seasons behave over centuries, _averaged over _*_DECADES._*
Are the Seasons different _now_ compared to how they were 30, 40, or 50 years ago? _Then the climate _*_HAS CHANGED._*
I remember a paper that came out in the 1990s when I was in grad school, about the discovery of "An Instantaneous Change" from a glacial-climate [a.k.a. "ice-age"] to an interglacial-climate [a.k.a. "non-ice-age"]. The change was in a little over 100 years, instead of a few thousand.
Let me repeat that, louder for the people in the back: *_THE CLIMATE TAKING 100 YEARS TO CHANGE IS CONSIDERED INSTANTANEOUS_* in the normal scale of time.
We are seeing changes that take place _in _*_years_* not centuries.
That dinosaur one reminded me of this person in my class. He was a creationist Protestant, and in REP we were talking about things to do with dinosaurs, which he claimed were fake.
When the teacher said "what about the evidence" (can't remember what they cited), the student said "that's not real."
And Ancient Greece was very gay, but also largely pedophillic relations.
Edit: The guy was also a raging homophobe and transphobe.
What's even more hilarious is that the Bible refers to dragons quite a few times, which could very well mean dinosaurs
@@WhirlyBeepBoops this! Also, "leviathans" which very well could be a whole host of things, but often assumed to be dinosaurs. A lot of the Bible thumpers that I knew were not aware of the fact that the term "Dinosaur" was not coined until the 1800s and therefore would not have been in their Bible unless a newer translation decided to add it.
You're not officially married until you've taken laxatives together..😂😂😂
You also forgot to catch that Greece at the time that AC:Odyssey takes place during definitely was *not* Christian. It takes place *before* Christ during the Peloponessian war. It just chronologically doesn't make sense XD
Not to mention Sappho, the lesbian poetess. We literally get the word "sapphic" from her name, and "lesbian" from Lesbos, the island that was her home.
5:13 why does this person think triple A is a stage of game development
Was wondering about that too
There's no "American accent." There are literally hundreds of accents mative to the US, just as there are many accents in every other English-speaking country.
while this is correct, most american accents share common characteristics, just like most british accents do, so a concept like "italian accent" or "british accent" or "american accent" makes sense in a practical sense. (Just think about how it's easier to tell someone is american by accent if you're european, than let's say idahoan. I personally can recognize an american accent, but can't recognize most subaccents. Except texan, but that one is easier.)
I'd argue they're all American accents, just as there are different accents in England but we generally consider them all English accents.
There is also a specific American accent that is frequently used for broadcasts that are intended for a wider or international audience.
@@riccardozanoni2531 lol Oh God, he doesn't know. Have you visited the deep south? Been to any Islands? You can NOT tell an "American" accent. You can tell many American accents. Many share more in common with British, Irish, Spanish, Italian, German, Slavic, etc, and are extremely difficult to place. For an example, consider Gullah. Remember also that Puerto Ricans, Hawaiians, and American Samoans are also "American." This is similar to saying people who speak one of the London accents sound British... just like those from the most isolated Welsh or Scottish community. Er, no. I think you are more thinking of what many consider the "standard" American accent, or midwestern accents, which to most Americans sounds unaccented and flat. Could be? Edited: I do want to note that I recognize that while a Chicago accent is very different from a Floridian, they both sound "American" to non-Americans. I am only pointing out that you can't tell *all* American accents are from the US, as even many from the US don't recognize them unless from there or with some specific experience of them. Here in NY (state), for example, we have whole villages that speak only, or mainly, German or Polish. Their accents do *not* sound "American."
@@SplotPublishing it still doesn't change what i said, the majority of american accents (not including american languages that are not part of american english, in case that was not clear enough) share common traits.
Also, as an italian, no your dialects have nothing to do with italian i can assure you. Some americans can speak italian, but they mostly do so with a very recognizable american accent.😉 And considering immigrants' accents as part of american dialects is disingenuous. There's plenty of american immigrants in italy too, but i wouldn't say that italian can sound like american english just because of them lol.
Fun fact: Palaeontologists earlier this year released a report on an even larger prehistoric snake.
19:40 in year 5 I was learning about the colonisation of Australia (I’m also Australian) and I said “Wait it was the British who colonised? I thought you said it was the Europeans?”. I asked it so confidently, and the whole class laughed at me 💀
I've got bad news for the dinosaurs didn't exist person who believes women really came from a rib. The word used in that passage was used several times in the old testament texts and it never, ever means rib anywhere else. It means side or half. That passage was intentionally mistranslated to diminish women. The metaphor in that story was supposed to be that an equal, or an other half, was created.
Oooo I haven’t heard that before! Very interesting. I do always think it’s fun when people latch on to one specific word in the Bible but refuse to believe that in order to read it most need to read the translation. Translation is an art and a science and context is so important when doing so. Context can be very difficult to get on a document as old as the bible that has been edited and used for political purposes more than once.
Have I ever been confidently wrong about something?
Well, I did confidently claim to be a boy/man for over 30 years just to have the truth (I am a woman) finally realized 1 year ago 😭💕
Congrats! 🩵🩷🤍🩷🩵
If I had a dollar for every time someone confused a theory and a hypothesis, anti-evolutionists would have paid for my gender affirming surgeries by now
Yeah, Louis Pasteur's method was to heat liquids until the germs died. Heating it to make it safe is the essence of pasturisation. If you're boiling, you're going beyond pasturisation protocols applied in any country I know of.
11:00 exactly! My science teacher explained that even gravity is a theory. This is because can’t actually see gravity but we can observe it’s effect on objects in the universe. Needless to say, just because theories aren’t 100% proven, doesn’t mean they can’t have overwhelming evidence.
2:17 Malapropism Ahoy!
"Constipating the marriage" reminds me of the _actual_ Mrs. Malaprop saying, "Standing ovulations!" instead of _ovations._ 🤣
The reason the sun looks yellow despite being white is that the sun shines white light, but the short-wavelength photons (blue light) get scattered in the atmosphere, making the sky blue. Since the blue has been scattered, the sun itself looks yellow-ish from the earths surface. If the sun is in the horizon, the more the light from the sun has to travel through the atmosphere to reach your eyes, so more blue light as well as some green light is scattered to the point where the sun appears orange or even red at sunsets.
Dinos didn't exist??? Wow!! I guess all those bones are from dragons then?? 😂
Yes..... That is what some genuinely believe.... I know u probably said this as "what a wacky scenario that isn't real".
... But no..... It is genuinely what some people believe....
I've been told by some Christians that fossils were planted on the earth by God to test our faith.
She was dead serious.
@@aleksabanjevic8316 I believe you!!! Quite amazing people think like that
@@PJAC1 hm?
11:08 did he mean mavity? never heard of "gravity" lmao
Claiming the game where you can survive any fall as long as its under a bit of hay, the Assassin and Templars are constantly fighting for the discovery of Pieces of Eden which are basically god magic technology AND you revisit past Assassins via a past life machine is "Striving for historical realism" is wild to me!
I don't play the game, but isn't there magic in the game?
I remember someone (either on Tumblr or reddit) posted a story their teacher told of a kid who played a ton of AC2 and was able to successfully lead a tour group through (was it Rome or Italy, I forget) through back alleyways and side streets to the church they were heading to because they played the game and the developers had apparently just made an interactive map.
BTW, the group had a tour guide, and the kid stepped in when the tour guide got lost.
@@kaelin_cherise Ahh.... Though even if thats true it doesnt change the many many parts of the game that lead into supernatural and scif elements though. The game might have accurate map structure but doesnt mean that someone is right that they strayed from realism cuz queer people were present in the game
@@aleksabanjevic8316 yup! theres aliens in it and anything they do is considered "magic" because theyre just that powerful and godlike
@@aleksabanjevic8316I believe it has super science that is functionally no different from magic.
i have a suspicion that maybe jamie snacks on mice..
Umm
I guess I need to finish the video
1:22 lmao 😅
Why
It may be because he has cats! 😀
Perchance 🧐
The awkward thing about the "Titanboa" post is that it's called Titanoboa, not Titanboa, and it lived millions of years after dinosaurs went extinct!
The lack of macropredatoes (as well as a hot wet environment) is literally what allowed it to be so big
Didn't expect to see you here. Started watching you via Dapper
@@samanthagibson5791 Oh hi thanks for enjoying my stuff lol
1:10
"To you, that snake sees you the same way we would see a mouse. Just a little snack (I don't eat mice-)"
XDddd
We had goats growing up and pasteurized the milk you heat it to just shy of boiling to a specific temperature for a length of time needed to kill bacteria. If they believe pasteurizing ruins the milk then fully boiling it would make it worse. Actually boiling does change it that's why to pasteurize you don't heat it to boiling.
11:55 Pasteurisation means heating to at least 72°C for at least 15 seconds to deactivate microorganisms. So yes, boiling IS pasteurising. At home.
Literally commented on a post about check vs cheque like 15 minutes ago. "People Incorrectly Correcting Other People" is a fun Facebook group for these things.
“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.” -mt
13:40 i feel like this could just be chalked up to them getting more sensitive to light lmao
i would know, ive gone through that, i used to be able to look at any flashing lights without a second thought, but now it gives me intense headaches after a bit too long.
"it cant be that im aging and my sight is changing, it has to be LED LIGHTS REPLACING THE SUN, SON, GIVE ME MY TINFOIL HAT"
The Bible doesn't deny dinosaurs.
True. The bible didn't know about them at all, afaik.
i mean, a guy creating all species of animals at the same time in the span of a day is pretty much against any current evidence, so... maybe let's just not consider the bible for anything but religious doctrine
@@paulhammond6978 care to elaborate?
@@daynal9594 It's an old book, from before humans came up with the idea that dinosaurs existed. And therefore, I don't think there can possibly be anything about dinosaurs in the bible, pro- or anti-.
Smart, funny post.
I once confidently claimed "mustachioed" was not a real word. Amazingly, it is.
(9:54) APOLLO WAS BI. ancient Greece was gay. Your right
Artemis and Hestia were aroace too
Athena is also ace, but not aro
@@_StarlightRose_ oh yeah. Thank you for adding that. I completely forgot and agree with you❤
The UK just confuses a lot of people...
Just yesterday someone posted on the subreddit that the UK isn't a country... they got shut down by pretty much everyone and just started insulting people... It was kinda funny but also sad.
The UK confuses a lot of people... sometimes even its own people...
I must admit I also thought the UK was not a country, just a collection of 4 countries. But I checked and supposedly it is a country, but also 4 countries? So yeah, pretty confusing. It's extra confusing because my own country (the Netherlands) is also part of a kingdom consisting of 4 countries, but I don't think I've ever heard anyone refer to our kingdom as a whole as a single country. So now I'm wondering whether our kingdom would be considered a country as well.
yeah that's what so confusing about it XD
0:57 no, they were speaking "Irish" (or at least a part of them). Scottish Gaelic, together with Manx and Irish, is a Goidelic language and developed out of Old Irish. The Scots then eventually moved over from Ireland towards Scottland (this is why I said that at least a part of them spoke "Irish". The Scots probably, though this is just my guess, mixed with the other people that lived there).
Welsh, meanwhile, is a Brittonic language, together with Cornish and Breton. These developed out of Common Brittonic.
These two groups are part of the larger Insular Celtic group within the Celtic branche of the Indo-European language family.
1:37 There's actually one more facepalm here: Dinosaurs are also reptiles, and many of them were bigger than the _Titanoboa._
Also, while fact-checking, I discovered that actually, the Titanoboa evolved after the dinosaurs died out.
That's what I was saying. This has layers
I thought dinosaurs weren't classified as reptiles anymore since they're more closely related to birds. Or are they fairly closely related to both?
I don’t like calling dinosaurs reptiles, because I think it’s useful to classify birds as “not reptiles” and I’m not sure how to include dinosaurs while excluding birds. I want there to be a different word that encompasses the non-mammalian terrestrial vertebrates.
@@joelpartee594 I mean but there were lots of dinosaurs that didn't resemble birds at all and looked more like snakes, lizards, etc. The scaly skin lots of them had is not something I could ever find myself relating to birds. The dinosaurs that had feathers and/or wings, sure. But the other types, not so much. I'd more so say that there were some dinosaurs that we could classify as reptiles and some others we could classify as birds. Just my opinion.
@@BeautyMonster1000 That's not how classification works, in the phylogenetic perspective dinosaurs and birds are one and the same since both of them have the same ancestor, in the Linnaean system birds are classified as warm blooded vertebrates with feathers, since we know dinosaurs had feathers and were warm blooded, even if they had scales they are still birds
I LOVE the revelation of 'alpha males' being a first draft. Perfect description for the underdeveloped personalities thag identify themselves that way....yet still hopeful for the possibility they can grow and impeove with a bit more editing
in regards to Titanoboa, there's been an even larger snake found! Vasuki Indicus. i really do encourage you to read up on it!! it's so so cool :D
„Alpha males are just the buggy prototype men“ omg 😭 i will always say that now
Oh, the woes of a modern age!
18:00 50 years ago, this would have such a great opportunity for Jamie to explain "quarter" by using Pounds, Shillings and Pence... and all the other peculiar peculiarities that used to be the British currency.
Oh, how the mighy have fallen!
(Just kidding: I'm German, we've had decimal currency since the 19th century. Which is still lagging behind.)
I've had people insist that a word doesn't exist or use the wrong word and yet get mad when I correct them and call them ignorant. And they yell at me because I call them on their crap.
What non scientists call a 'theory' is called a hypothesis by scientists. A scientific theory has been proven so many times that it can be taken as a fact. If disproven, it's no longer a theory.
Dinosaurs still exist! Theropods never went fully extinct, we’ve still got birds.
This is always a fun loophole to me because it means that the ppl saying "whales aren't fish, they are mammals"..... Are technically wrong in the first part. Whales are mammals, mammals are synapsids, who evolved from early reptiles, who evolved from early amphibians, who evolved from lobe finned fish..... Who are a kind of fish..... So yeah, if birds are still counted as dinosaurs, then all tetrapods still count as fish, including whales. Like, whales being mammals is more important than them having fish as oooooold ancestors, but it's still a funny loophole
@@aleksabanjevic8316 I still consider mammals lobe-finned fish as well, but admittedly birds are far, far closer to other coelurosaurs than a whale is to a lungfish.
Laughed so hard at "Schroedinger's milk" that the dog being walked outside my window started barking. Dogs know when it's funny. Thanks, Jamie. I needed that.
Tomorrow it’s time, it’s time for my family and I to travel the United Kingdom. It’s going to fun, except for the fact that we’re going to the Harry Potter museum, and I unfortunately have to go with them. Because leaving me, a neurodivergent 23 year old alone in a hotel room for a whole afternoon is not a good idea.
You're 23, and you play gacha life? No offense, but that's kinda hard to believe.
@@doggycatalanLiking Gacha has no age limit. Besides, it’s not my fault I discovered/got into Gacha when I was 18.
I watch Bluey, are you gonna say that’s also weird for a 23 year old to do?
oof
@alicebthegachaweirdo8378
I like Bluey as well. I don't know why Gacha feels different. It's just a stigma in my mind since you're basically playing online with mostly 6-10 yr olds, and the game has a history of creepy stuff and weird role-plays.
@@alicebthegachaweirdo8378but yeah like what you like, it just seems odd to me.
Yes pasteurization is heating the milk enough to kill bacteria. So he's pasteurizing his raw milk 😂
working in forensics one of the first things we covered in my more specialised training was a definition of "death" was, along with "natural" vs "non-natural". We do this because the terminology is incredibly important and different ideas of what "death" is can seriously mess up a case. But yeah, it's a weird thing to think about having a definition outside of that context
i understand the confusion with the clock thing. a quarter past or a half past felt vague and confusing as they were not accurate to what the people would say. i kept saying "use numbers! they are on the clock!"
The paycheck/paycheque thing.
Spotted the arrogantly incorrect American! 😂
lol I read a lot of fanfics written by people using British spelling so my own grasp on what is British vs American spelling is trash. I usually just rely on my American-English autocorrect/spell check to catch me. I still think grey should be spelled “grey” and I think that’s British…ugh. I don’t particularly like it when people who are so strict on spelling to use it as a “got ya” moment, especially when things like autocorrect and typing on a phone keyboard with big fingers is a thing (my thumbs are not accurate) and completely forget that different dialects spell things differently.
One time, my brother had a history teacher who told his class that Anne Boleyn was Hitler's girlfriend. I wonder how she's doing.
*facepalm* I had a substitute teacher who was confidently incorrect on my name to the point of screaming at me “Jessica! Answer me when I’m talking to you!” 6 year old me was so terrified it took a classmate to say “that’s Rebecca, we don’t have a Jessica in this class”
I'll give my own little confidently incorrect moment I had as a kid! I tend to learn words through reading first before hearing them in sentences, so of course I'd end up making my own pronunciations about them. Most of the time I changed my pronunciation when told the proper pronunciation, but one time I pronounced Hyrule as 'Her-gull'. How I got to that pronunciation, I have NO clue, but I was SO confident that I refused to listen to anybody. It took me watching the Zelda cartoon for me to go "Ohh. Hi-rule. Hyrule." and realize how horribly incorrect I was. I still like to fondly remember going "HERGULL" when talking about Zelda. XD
lol my most memorable moment was when I thought my grandmas name was the city she lived in because my mom would say we are going to visit your grandma in City. So everyone would ask me what my grandmas name was and I would say the city and think they were idiots because I had already told them that like 10 times.
Ancient Greece was centuries before christianity
"Does the tri in field trip..."
TRI AND TRIP ARE DIFFERENT WORDS, AND THE TRI IN TRIP IS NOT A FUCKING PREFIX!
Why do some of these commenters spend so much time being so upset at strangers on message boards tho? Sincerely, I want to read studies on the psychology of that
I wonder if the "the sun is orange" person grew up in a city or a valley and never left. Because, yeah, in the smog-infested inland Southern California of my childhood, the sunsets were spectacular with a lot of weird reds and oranges. Less so now. But there's also a lot less smog and other particulate matter in the air now than there used to be due to efforts to reduce air pollution. Except during fire season. Then all those nostalgic sunsets with their wild, pollution-infused colors pop right back.
Edit: LOL. I commented before the punchline. Oh well.
Jamie’s lack of confidence in his answer is very PhD of him 😂
10:30 The theory of germs is also still only a theory, and the theory of gravity (objects move when pushed by another force) also is just a theory. Also, in scientific terms, theory means something different than just "we think this because of a few small details we found", the theories in science have a crap ton of evidence, including observable evidence.
"I know ancient greece followed christianity"
GREEK GODS: um... what?
YIPPEEEEEE I was supposed to go to a pride parade today so my mom dropped me off with my dad and my twin, but it was the wrong day so we had to walk 3 miles home😭
I don't know you, but here's a hug for you friend. 🫂 Hope it gets better for you soon 😢
10:04 Why I care: though it varies by state/county, some law firms are pro-bono on the fifth Tuesday. Which fifth Tuesday? Whenever there is one.
THere were six artificial suns in orbit around the (dwarf) planet Pluto in an old Doctor Who episode, to make it possible for humans to live there.
Could someone just say "25 is a quarter of 100, 15 is a quarter of 60" at some point?
I've had someone who was a gay man who apparently dated a lot trans mascs confidently tell me that estrogen will make my voice higher and wouldn't back down despite the answer being a quick Google search
something i was once confidently incorrect on was "foxes aren't dogs". i only looked at the "vulpes" part of the scientific name and didn't bother reading forward to where it said "canidae". this had to be when i was in, like, my early- to mid-20s (i'm 32 now) and i look back with shame 🤣
I once heard somewhere that foxes were more closely related to cats than dogs. No idea where I came across this information, but at least I was among friends when my "confidently incorrect" moment was shot down in flames... 😂
I suppose it depends on how you define "dog"? Usually when people say "dog" they're specifically referring to Canis Lupus Familiaris, which does not include foxes. But yeah, the much broader clade Canidae can also be referred to as "dogs", so by that definition foxes would indeed be dogs.
"Holy crapoli" 😂! Love these videos, was happy to see the notification!
About being incorrect: for the longest time i thought reindeers were made up. You know, fantasy creatures like dragons or unicorns. (Probably because of rudolph). But turns out their actual animals in our actual world. Wild! 😂
Same! I also thought narwhals were fake. I mean come on, a unicorn whale? How is that real!?
Smog was making the sun appear orange, there is less smog in the lower atmosphere in the last 25 years than there has been since the late 18th century.
9:42 ohhhh my sweet sweet, STUPID summer child, that's when Sappho lived ffs
In Grade 8 (so about 13 years old) I was *supremely* confident that the word "orgasm" was just a mispronounciation of the word "organism" 🤦
I even told my classmates so, with an extreme air of superiority. D'oh!
Mmmm human being made from spare ribs... time to order a takeaway and put it to the test
Okay. As someone who has worked on a farm. Pasteurisation is when you take milk from multiple animals and "standardise" it. Usually by putting into large vats, and warming it up until the curds and wey seperate out. Almost all store bought milk has been pasteurised. What they might be referring to is Lactose Free. Lactose is a common side effect of the pasteurisation technique and is less present in skim or lactose free milk which is processed differently.
I didn’t know that about lactose! I have studied biochem so I always just think of lactose as milk-sugar, is it not present in raw milk? Because I would think it would be because sugars are good energy sources for developing babies (calves in this case). But like I said, I am only vaguely familiar due to biochemical pathways. If you have the time to explain that would be cool!
@@rebeccajesse4604 Nah, see it took a little while for it to happen but over the past two decades there has been a mishmash of ways to counter lactose intolerance. The initial attempt was releasing bottles of unpasturized milk. This stuff had been heat treated but still had lumpy creame in it. Such milk was often advertized as "Lactose Free". Since then they have developed a similar process that instead of using a wheet by product they use a rice bypodict.
What happens is this, during homogonization and pasturization, "Chaff" is added to the boiling milk. The majority of the fat from the beef milk attaches to the chaff, making it easier to scoop up. This becomes Cheese! But the excess sugars from the chaff are transfered into the milk. These sugars are the same kind that cause gluten intolerance, but they instead bind to the lactase.
Lactase is not the same as lactose. Lactase is a compound found in diary that, honestly human's aren't meant to digest at all. As you grow out of toddler age, your body forgets how to handle lactase cause this is the problem.
If Lactase binds with sugars in your body it can be carried into your blood stream. This is why people say lots of dairy makes you fat.
People who have a lactose intolerance are people who can't process the sugar enriched lactase (lactose). Usually cause they have week stomach linings.
A lot of modern lactose free milk uses a Chaff made from Rice, which does not produce lactose during the pasturization process.
My uncle ran a dairy farm for 30 years and I learnd a lot while I was helping on the farm.
As someone with a theology degree I can assure you ancient Greece and it's religion was very gay
The only gods that weren't gay were athena, artemis and hestia.... Cuz they were aro/ace
11:40 I actually grew up on unpasteurized milk. We lived in the countryside. Once or twice a week, we'd go to our neighbor (a dairy farmer) and fill up a churn of milk to take home. (If you're wondering "what's a churn?" That's a big metal milk can.) The milk was only refrigerated, not pasteurized. Fresh, unpasteurized milk can be kept for a few days to a week as long as it's kept refrigerated. Pasteurized milk can be kept for much, much longer.
I want to jump on the Scottish/not British one because as a Scot, I don't think the first one was about geography, because yes, Scotland is geographically part of Britain. It is common in English media to portray famous Scots as 'British' when they are in favour and 'Scottish' when they are out of favour. (Take tennis player Andy Murray for example. British when he is winning. Scottish when he is losing.)
Many Scots feel frustrated that our Scottish representation? culture? achievements? seems to be being taken away from us and being claimed as English (as that is usually the default assumption for 'British'), and "They are not British. They're Scottish." is a common objection to someone claiming a famous Scot as 'British'.
Have i ever been confidently incorrect? Absolutely. Would i ever in a million years put it online for all to see? Never.
Schrodinger's milk
1:12 the kid wanting to touch the sculpture! I wish I had this courage on my childhood. 😂
PET THE DANGER NOODLE 🐍
Wierd Person: "Dinosaurs didn't exist, read the Bible!"
Me: What version were you reading?!?! O_o The Bible doesn't say that... like anywhere in it.
Wheelchair ramps weren't in the Bible so they must not exist🤨
@@Bunny_Bill Neither are pandas, guess they are just figments of our imagination 😂
@@ShadowAnimeation Don't give the conspiracy theorists any ideas lol
The comment about Ancient Greece caused actual pain. Literally inflicted psychic damage. My breath punched out from throat like I had the wind knocked out of me, just before I dropped my head to cradle it in my hands.
Ow.
Hello people. Things are going very well here now. I am out to both of my parents, and both are extremely supportive. I was able to get my nails done yesterday and am going to buy clothes later today :3
Edit: I got a dress!! :3
That’s awesome, congrats :D
Congratulations!
yay! congrats!
😅, I’m jealous , coming out to my parents is not an option
Congrats, girl!
I feel like a lot of the quarter of an hour being 25 minutes confusion comes from the fact that when learning fractions in school the 1/4 is read as a fourth, not a quarter. But when they do currency then a quarter is a specific coin worth 25 cents. The other coins (dime, nickel, penny) have specific values but arbitrary names. They are not taught to draw the connection that 25 cents IS a quarter (fourth) of a dollar. It's just a quarter because that's what they're told it is.
It's mostly the education system to blame for this.
However I was only in school once so obviously can't speak for every school in the country.
I think you hit the nail on the head, it may be hard for some people to draw that connection because of the different words and contexts used :-)