lol. i was wondering what happened to you..
3728 new

Well at least it's one less thread for the crazy liberals to spam.
2 less.. surprisingly, the flock’s roost is locked now too, probably temporarily tho.

Well at least it's one less thread for the crazy liberals to spam.
2 less.. surprisingly, the flock’s roost is locked now too, probably temporarily tho.
Yes three very large threads becoming locked within off topic, two climate and a pandemic thread. If wishing to apply finer points of site rules 1001 reasons to lock them for years, but ... why now.

Just a random comment, mods choose to close some politicking threads, such as drill baby drill for example. So we must stay clear of these matters.

oh yea, the kinda randomness found in the everett interpretation. lol. or.. i really don’t care, do you?

Theoretical physics and quantum mechanics perhaps for another forum. Any entirely random comments may be associated (by coincidence) with current events.
Blocking high with still conditions in the UK going on a couple of weeks, and forecast at least another ten days. The brave new world of windmill power appears to have become stuck for the moment the sails not turning, therefore imported fossil fuels the deal. The poor UK consumers among the worlds highest household energy prices.
During my September digital detox, the thread I had checked for following produced three thousand seven hundred and twenty eight posts over the 30 days, although became locked 6 days ago, therefore say 25 days averaging around 150 posts per day, no doubt the busiest thread on the site. Must have given mods a headache having to follow the parlay.
But ... why the lock? may perhaps remain a matter of speculation; did the op @sludge ask for the lock, busy threads attract bad actor elements one of the alarmists @festering being very childish for many months making posts designed to provoke the mods.
But ... where should I vent about the UK household energy prices, already among the world highest going up another 10% today. Much of the 10% attributed to policy matters, example huge sums allocated for building windmills. Leave it in the ground appears the current mantra, all very well however unfortunately at the same time needing to import massive amounts of fuel at much higher prices than might be the case with a home grown self sufficiency approach. The UK seems to be trying to bankrupt itself.