Astroglaid92
Astroglaid92 t1_j5fo4ep wrote
Reply to comment by 22wwc in A woman who got wasted at a Marilyn Manson concert blew up $15 million worth of property. She's suing the company that served her. by end_of_rainbow
Yep. Garnished wages should be in her future.
Astroglaid92 t1_j5f9ly3 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in A woman who got wasted at a Marilyn Manson concert blew up $15 million worth of property. She's suing the company that served her. by end_of_rainbow
It’s not a valid excuse, but the vast majority of cities and towns in the US were designed with the intention that most transportation would happen via private vehicles. Public transportation is neglected, and accommodations for pedestrian access are poor or non-existent. It’s so bad that apparently the fatality rate for walking home drunk is worse than for driving home drunk.
Astroglaid92 t1_j5f8s0z wrote
Reply to comment by StreetofChimes in A woman who got wasted at a Marilyn Manson concert blew up $15 million worth of property. She's suing the company that served her. by end_of_rainbow
I imagine like carpet bombing? Just cover every square inch (or mm) of the ground beneath you in lawsuits.
Astroglaid92 t1_isad23u wrote
Reply to comment by Ademoney in What is actually preventing our teeth from falling out? by tikkymykk
There’s a lot of stuff going on physiologically when you put a constant force on a tooth, but that mostly involves gradually breaking down and rebuilding - or “remodeling” - the tooth socket walls. The periodontal ligament (PDL) fibers don’t do much themselves during tooth movement other than compress or relax and resist displacement of the tooth from the original center of the tooth socket. It’s actually a bit of a problem, because their natural rate of turnover (replacement of old fibers with new fibers) is slow and because tooth movement doesn’t seem to accelerate the rate of turnover for many of the PDL fiber components. That means that the fibers that were stretched during tooth movement will remain stretched and continue to apply a force that would return the tooth to its original position. This is one of the primary reasons for relapse following orthodontic treatment (in addition to continuous forces applied by the cheeks, lips, tongue, and jaws), and it’s why retainers are almost always recommended following orthodontic treatment.
For an idea of the timescale over which PDL and gingival fibers experience turnover, consider that the biological half-life of collagen fibers is about 9 weeks and that the half-life for elastin fibers is over 70 years! Meanwhile, bone can begin remodeling in as little as a week following force application to a tooth.
Interestingly, it’s the most accessible fibers around the neck of the tooth (just under the surface of the gums) that seem to provide the bulk of the relapse force discussed above, while the deeper fibers seem to remodel into more relaxed conformations within several months. So one method to reduce relapse - particularly for previously severely rotated teeth - is to sever those “supracrestal fibers” by cutting straight down through the gingival sulcus (gum pocket) to about the level of bone with either a scalpel or a laser. This is called a circumferential supracrestal gingival fiberotomy.
Astroglaid92 t1_jclhufk wrote
Reply to comment by eyeCinfinitee in Grad Student Explores Ancient Warfare With Naval Ram Project by kratos2025
What game in your view has the best naval combat?