My niece is Australian and she is not a cuntwat or whatever, so I don’t believe it to be a nationalistic birthright.
We’ve had plenty of autists that have been able to post on this web sight (albeit terribly) through the years such as Shawn Hunter blind dog devine and Taques
With the way how Australians are treated on this forum, I think I now know what it feels like to be an African American in police custody.
maybe because you're comparing ppl being mean on a message board to police brutality against people of color in an attempt to justify your little mini-outburst?
The dickhead never did. But instead he showed a pm that i sent him. What a dumb piece of shit bertwing is That's what i learnt
I learned that there are some people in here that don't realise that they are fucking around a bit too much.
I learned that this is very funny https://www.instagram.com/reel/Ctij5ayvZTR/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA== Joe root getting hit in the nuts in the last ashes series Cricket's on tonight ch9 for all those other aussies
Other than Humans - Bears and Baboons are the only other species to experience tooth decay. Because they eat human's trash/discarded food.
I learned that the British people over in England are the biggist bunch of cry babies when they lose games of cricket. Currently the Aussies are playing England over there in the Ashes test series and all we're hearing is every british person known to cricket whinging about the game.
This isn’t true unless you have some obscure definition of tooth decay. Woolly mammoths, and all elephants have 6 sets of teeth (like we have two, our baby teeth and adult teeth) and they need 6 sets because their teeth wear out (decay) from eating 300-500 lbs of grass a day and grinding the grass up with their teeth so they could digest it.
is that wear and tear or decay? bc i always equated tooth decay with bacteria and sugary/processed foods breaking down enamel and causing rot - not just wear and tear from grinding stuff
TIL about the 1st diagnosed case of Autism In 1933, Donald Triplett was born into a well-off family in the small town of Forest, Mississippi. His parents quickly noticed something was different about him. Spoiler He seemed to function in a separate world, Donald’s parents said. He’d repeat actions or words and displayed intense interest in things like number patterns and music notes. He showed no interest in playing with other children, and if anyone interrupted his rituals, he’d have a meltdown. He’d also display acts of intelligence that were unusual for his age. At age one, his father recalled, "He could hum and sing many tunes accurately.” By two, he could recite Biblical texts from memory. He could answer advanced multiplication questions without hesitation. The behavior baffled his parents. In 1937, just before Donald turned four, his parents sent him to a state-run children’s institution, only to pull him out after a year. They then took him to see one of the country’s most renowned child psychiatrists, Leo Kanner. Kanner was born in Austria in 1894. He dreamed of becoming a poet, but when no one would publish his poetry, he pursued a medical degree instead. That decision eventually led him to the US in 1924, where he found work at a mental hospital in South Dakota – and likely avoided death as a Jew in World War II Europe. Kanner focused on children’s mental health. His research soon caught the eye of Johns Hopkins Medical School, one of the world’s top medical institutes, where he transferred and established the US’ first child psychiatry clinic. At Johns Hopkins, Kanner’s research turned into social activism. He said he was concerned that people treated mentally ill children as objects rather than human beings. He called for changing a society that ''causes the intellectual haves to look down on the intellectual have-nots.” In 1937, Donald’s parents brought him to Kanner. When Kanner first met Donald, he didn’t know how to describe his condition but found it similar to behaviors he had seen in 10 other patients. In 1943, Kanner wrote a paper based on those children with a new diagnosis: Autism. The very first diagnosis went to “Case 1” – Donald Triplett. Dr. Kanner noted the children all exhibited obsessive repetitive habits, “excellent rote memory,” and an inability to relate “in the ordinary way” to other people. This condition, he noted, differed “markedly and uniquely from anything reported so far.” He took an empathetic approach to care: ''With these extremely detached children,'' he wrote, ''you must give them the chance to relate to a limited number of people and to come into the world - to thaw out.” That paper built the foundation of what is known today as “autism spectrum disorder” and how to care for those affected by it. After the diagnosis, Donald returned to life in Forest and appeared to live remarkably better. While he continued to exhibit his obsessive, repetitive behaviors, he built a life not too dissimilar from others around him, graduating from high school and college. Triplett later worked as a bookkeeper in Forest and became a beloved member of his community. Donald passed away last month, on June 15, from cancer at age 89. Donald’s life and diagnosis has helped define autism research and care ever since. Donald “left an indelible mark on our understanding of autism” as “something to be included, not ‘othered,’” the president of the US non-profit Autism Speaks recently said. Today around one in 36 children in the US are diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. While many questions about it remain, much of the care the children receive traces back to the work of Dr. Kanner and his very first patient, Donald Triplett.