Danny-Dynamita
Danny-Dynamita t1_j4zv04l wrote
Reply to Family Dynamics and Doctors' Emotions Drive Useless End-of-Life Care. Surveys repeatedly indicate that nearly all people would rather die peacefully at home, yet painful, long-shot treatments remain common, and efforts to reduce usage have failed by Wagamaga
From the comments I’m reading, you’re all trying to explain something that can not be explained, only learned through experience.
I lost my mom a few weeks ago in a matter of 24h. I would do anything to go back and send her to the hospital a day before, just so that she could endure a life-saving procedure to live a few more years, even if with some discomfort. Why? Because of how I lived the situation.
It’s a matter of perspective. You can’t teach what’s RIGHT or WRONG, because no one knows that, we can only say that we feel in a certain way because of our past experiences.
Danny-Dynamita t1_ir38121 wrote
Reply to comment by herrscherofchicken in what goes around comes around by sometimesisleeptoo
He retracts his legs at the perfect time while conserving his momentum and puts them back in place very neatly.
No jump done at all, it’s not gravity but rather himself who drives his legs “down”. It also shows a level of precision worthy of a fucking atomic clock.
Danny-Dynamita t1_j5xcx3o wrote
Reply to A small modular nuclear reactor just got US approval — a big milestone. by Natural_Dark_2387
The best thing I see about this idea is the possibility of creating nuclear energy in a more granular temporality and budget.
Instead of spending 26b$ and 10 years in one big reactor, we can spend a quarter of that money and time in these smaller reactors. If we see the need to keep expanding nuclear power, we could do so very easily while we would be able to see the benefit of each project in just a few years. A big grid of these would be just the same as multiple big reactors, no extra difficulty is added, but you can expand it at will in small increments that are doable within one democratic term (oh god, that’s so important nowadays!).