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@skanman that's not a bad price. Can I use my frequent flyer miles? I don't know who you think I am, but if you saw my drive you would know that I am not in need of rocket propelled anything to hit a ball of that moon :ablobderpy:

@skanman I didn't think escape velocity on the moon was that high! Thanks for the lesson. The trip there is more expensive, but when you are spending a few billion, whats a couple hundred million more?

@skanman a diamond golf ball may survive. You buying? Ironically, i was a golf professional for 17 years 😂

@skanman Well I was referring to you and me, but if your busy, whatever I guess. I suggest ankle weights over golf shoes. I expect to have some problems keeping your back foot down on the thru swing.

obi 🍍 boosted

"Server admins can read your private DMs so Mastodon is bad" boy howdy do I have some bad news about Twitter, Discord, Instagram, Facebook, Google Chats, Skype, IRC, AIM, MSN messenger, ICQ, SMS, Email,

I can't believe we are finally landing on the Moon :ablobgrimace:

@apinae @Chl0e_Girard Quote posting is available on qoto.org web, with little quote icons below the post. Qoto is a fork of Mastodon, so nearly all other instances do not provide this feature. I don't believe there are any apps that take qoto's fork into consideration, so the feature is only available on the web as far as I know.

obi 🍍 boosted

CW Long post. Original content.

How Covid curbs on church-going harmed public health

During the Covid-19 pandemic, people were barred in many countries from attending religious worship for long periods, and nowhere more so than in Ireland. When they were not barred, severe restrictions were put on the numbers who could attend. But strictly from a public health perspective, was it worth it? An important new study (sciencedirect.com/science/arti) suggest it was not, and the restrictions may have done more public health harm than good.

The research, just published in the European Economic Review is based on a nationally representative sample of over 100,000 responses from 52,459 individuals in the United States. It was carried out during the period from March 2020 to May 2021, when most American States limited the number who could attend a house of worship.

A crucial finding of the study is that the severe restrictions on religious worship do not seem to have slowed the spread of the virus.

It says: “there is no statistically or economically significant association between restrictions on houses of worship and either COVID-19 infections or deaths regardless of how restrictions are measured”. (p. 12)

The article concludes that “there is almost no evidence that the restrictions had a positive effect on public health, consistent with a growing body of evidence that has evaluated the launch of State quarantine policies.” (p. 12)

But the restrictions or ban on public worship did harm the mental health of some worshippers.

The author focuses on two variables: current life satisfaction and self-isolation.

The study confirmed that religious people have higher level of current life satisfaction overall, compared to the rest of the population. This is partly achieved by being part of a religious community. Therefore, it is no surprise that is also found a “strong negative association between state restrictions and current life satisfaction, particularly for religious adherents.” (p. 6).

If one of the main sources of their wellbeing was removed, how could it be otherwise?

The author notes that going to a church, or attending any other religious venue, offers people the opportunity to forge relationships and grow stronger in their faith. The survey established that the restrictions had “a disproportionate impact on self-isolation among religious adherents.” (p. 7)

Self-isolation among religious people increased by more than among their non-religious counterparts. This is one of the reasons why their well-being suffered more as a result of the pandemic.

The decline in well-being was stronger in Catholic than in Protestant congregations, and non-existent among Mormons, who are concentrated in Utah where no significant restrictions were put into place.

The main result of the study is that “religious adherents experienced systematically lower levels of well-being and isolation following the adoption of such restrictions.” (p. 11)

The study focuses on the United States only. It would be interesting to see such research extended to other countries, particularly to Ireland that had the longest period of worship restrictions in Europe.

@findingdeefish now I'm remembering the details more of the original. The leaped indivdual, when being replaced, goes back to Sam's lab, right? In the new one that's not the case. Didn't even think about that. @Mundon

@findingdeefish This raises more questions than it answers tho! ugggghhh @Mundon

@findingdeefish Interesting. I assumed just the consciousness leaped , and seeing himself differently in mirrors was just his brain interpreting it as himself @Mundon

@ynb I definitely wouldn't describe him as an idiot. But that's just me.

@derickflorian I have no opinion of him one way or another, except for a positive one for his ultimate goal/dream of Mars colonization. I think he is fairly criticized sometimes, but unfairly more often. Either way, he is a memelord.

@yatil Not gonna like, when I saw this post I instantly read "Meh" as "Meth" and my understanding of your situation took a tangent.

@freemo If there was a hard limit, the same rule would most likely apply to follows as well, right. I know Gargron is at 217K follows, so following that many accounts seems nearly impossible @bibliolater

@derickflorian Yup. St. Bonaventure is right down the road from my in Allegany. Shinglehouse is about 40mins east.

obi 🍍 boosted

Don’t say, “I didn’t do it” to the person. Who knows how to get into the logs.

@derickflorian I'm about 3.5hrs away from you in Olean. I'm in the SUNY system. No bueno.

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