MNK99
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 4,978
I should be up like 80kusd if not more like 150-200k from like 2000 2500 cad. Better risk mgmt. anyways UPTOBER. I am not up that much anywhere near that. I WILL make a lot back but am not rushing it.
LOW LEVERAGE and hedge trades are good i can ignore em... if they were all 2k 3k 5k trades/ idk i'd still ignore em, bc I gotta make carnivore work and or add my dex, test cream... maybe coffee.
I NEED IT. I NEED SMTHING. EVEN if perfect again, asking an ADHDer to not have nicotine, coffee, dex etc (i realize this is all me and not u guys lol), is hard. Torture.
OH THE NY NEWS is about OYSTERCATCHERS.. what the fuck BIng/microsoft. Micropenis-soft. Idiots.
A war on some fucking fisherman?? Idk even know bc I am not reading it. A war against birds, that eat oysters?
Yeah I am not siding with the west, fuck this.
11h • 2 min read
New York on alert: war rages in the city's skies
© unsplash
Quad-engine drones on one side, American oystercatchers on the other: a new battle between man and nature has just begun.
The New York sky has become the scene of a new war (one that we could have done without). Since police drones were deployed, particularly along the seashore, to help swimmers in distress and monitor the presence of sharks, American oystercatchers, a species of bird with a long orange beak and black and white plumage, have been living under threat. As Korii points out, the technology of the sky, being capable of dropping buoys to swimmers in difficulty, has not yet saved any lives but has indeed attracted the wrath of American oystercatchers.
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David Bird, professor of wildlife biology at McGill University in Montreal, is rather alarming. He explains, among other things, that drones could cause “a stress reaction” in the long-beaked birds and disrupt or even modify their behavior. Frightened, they could “flee the beach and abandon their eggs, as several thousand elegant terns did after a drone crash recently in San Diego,” reports the AP news agency, relayed by Korii. It's worth noting that the American oystercatcher is an endangered species.
According to the professor of wildlife biology, if the birds “abandon their nests because of drones, it would be a disaster.” If American oystercatchers have, to date, only swooped down on police drones, much more serious situations could be to be deplored.
(MH with AsD - Source: Korii - Illustration: Unsplash)
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LOW LEVERAGE and hedge trades are good i can ignore em... if they were all 2k 3k 5k trades/ idk i'd still ignore em, bc I gotta make carnivore work and or add my dex, test cream... maybe coffee.
I NEED IT. I NEED SMTHING. EVEN if perfect again, asking an ADHDer to not have nicotine, coffee, dex etc (i realize this is all me and not u guys lol), is hard. Torture.
OH THE NY NEWS is about OYSTERCATCHERS.. what the fuck BIng/microsoft. Micropenis-soft. Idiots.
A war on some fucking fisherman?? Idk even know bc I am not reading it. A war against birds, that eat oysters?
Yeah I am not siding with the west, fuck this.
11h • 2 min read
New York on alert: war rages in the city's skies
© unsplash
Quad-engine drones on one side, American oystercatchers on the other: a new battle between man and nature has just begun.
The New York sky has become the scene of a new war (one that we could have done without). Since police drones were deployed, particularly along the seashore, to help swimmers in distress and monitor the presence of sharks, American oystercatchers, a species of bird with a long orange beak and black and white plumage, have been living under threat. As Korii points out, the technology of the sky, being capable of dropping buoys to swimmers in difficulty, has not yet saved any lives but has indeed attracted the wrath of American oystercatchers.
Glyphosate Blowout Sale - Glyphosate Clearance
www.temu.com
Glyphosate Blowout Sale - Glyphosate Clearance
Ad
David Bird, professor of wildlife biology at McGill University in Montreal, is rather alarming. He explains, among other things, that drones could cause “a stress reaction” in the long-beaked birds and disrupt or even modify their behavior. Frightened, they could “flee the beach and abandon their eggs, as several thousand elegant terns did after a drone crash recently in San Diego,” reports the AP news agency, relayed by Korii. It's worth noting that the American oystercatcher is an endangered species.
According to the professor of wildlife biology, if the birds “abandon their nests because of drones, it would be a disaster.” If American oystercatchers have, to date, only swooped down on police drones, much more serious situations could be to be deplored.
(MH with AsD - Source: Korii - Illustration: Unsplash)
Be sure to read all our articles on MSN by subscribing to our content. Click on 'follow', next to our logo above.