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stratosranger · M
Yup. It’s how new pathogens are born. 99.9% of the competition is wiped off the playing field, allowing the .1% to survive. It’s why staph infections that were easy to kill 75 years ago now need to be aggressively treated with several potent antivirals. And even then your chances of survival are a coin toss…
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stratosranger · M
@SinlessOnslaught Yowza. Sounds like a nervous habit.
SinlessOnslaught · 26-30, M
@stratosranger Yep, I have PTSD.
stratosranger · M
Ah. An interesting video on that:
[media=https://youtu.be/dpN6bAc0T40]@SinlessOnslaught
And part two
[media=https://youtu.be/finylyh1NE0]
[media=https://youtu.be/dpN6bAc0T40]@SinlessOnslaught
And part two
[media=https://youtu.be/finylyh1NE0]
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SW-User
That's the best way to get people to buy the product without telling them it might not kill all germs
use them more often for a better safer environment.
imagine you are that one percent, what sort of change would happen(:
Valerian · 100+, M
That last 0.1% is hiding under the bodies of its brethren trying to survive long enough to make a Kabillion copies of itself. Survival of the Fittest or Luckiest.
Yup, on their 🦠 scale, your skin, is really decent environment, since even a mirror finish stainless steel tabletop has canyons to hide from
Yup, on their 🦠 scale, your skin, is really decent environment, since even a mirror finish stainless steel tabletop has canyons to hide from
Ontheroad · M
Never thought of it that way... I'm a glass 99.9% full sort of guy. 🤣