Received: from were.tapestrybenefit.com ([92.223.59.132]:15763) by stodi.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.92) (envelope-from ) id 1jHU46-0002PK-TR for lojban@lojban.org; Thu, 26 Mar 2020 08:05:04 -0700 DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha1; c=relaxed/relaxed; s=kao9; d=tapestrybenefit.com; h=Message-ID:Reply-To:From:Subject:MIME-Version:To:Content-Type:Date; i=notouch.temps@tapestrybenefit.com; bh=C9KU/PimwhcPJNTstrLeu7ANNiI=; b=OjdpXEW76PBTYU4cTJZBtm/t3OK1CSHJgHrxBg6UFpi2AXi6fR0IttoilYzjrMXjrudt71ecaeZe 5DgyiZfQlNEFm4Ry44azBaFgWrH+v86D6t9XanKHqZBPaiyCT757Z5TXtVxO5LeJXSFi4gO27fWA TrqfqKcnc01dGvfLfYs= Message-ID: <54.772570247106515720747398287.026274814.cjmjX.U8dmTfR0G.jE4jSlBdydw10qi0F@were.tapestrybenefit.com> Reply-To: notouch.temps@tapestrybenefit.com From: NoTouch Temps Subject: Take someone's temp without ever touching a human body. Just point and shoot MIME-Version: 1.0 To: lojban@lojban.org Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="38982814821104054972711050957870=ZWxWb=?" Date: Thu, 26 Mar 2020 11:05:19 -0400 X-Spam-Score: -2.1 (--) X-Spam_score: -2.1 X-Spam_score_int: -20 X-Spam_bar: -- --38982814821104054972711050957870=ZWxWb=? Content-type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" Content-transfer-encoding: 8bit Lojban we do have options open still, just have to figure out the best way to go about iti also believe in the good intention of your average american. don?t let the vocal minority take that away from you. if you grew up on a farm in indiana you?d have no idea what life is like growing up in a poor intercity neighborhood in a huge city. just like i grew up in a small town with little diversity but i never saw racism running rampant in my community. it?d be hard for someone in la or ny to know what life was like for the poor white working cl of the appalachian mountains. streets lined with closed businesses, old mill ** STAY SAFE------------------------------------------------------------ (http://www.tapestrybenefit.com/garlic-pills/health) freaking british school and had been in english cles since they were 4 ? they were super cool and explained it to me, but they did say because they are truly bilingual that they do sometimes flip languages when changing thoughts lol well you are not wrong. my first language is spanish but i think in english all the time cause i've been in the u.s for some long. lol i thought the same thing... that everyone thought in english no matter what language they spoke. so nice to see i wasn't the only one who thought this. i thought that english was the "default" language, because every other language was translated into english in movies and stuff. i thought french was the default language! growing up, we weren't allowed to speak english at school except in english cl (which started in grade 4 and continued until grade 12). i always found it really dumb because i'm sure people in english schools can talk to eachother in whichever language they wanted. it really contributed to the mentality that english was a "bad" language used by "bad" people. but anyway, i thought french was the "default" language and that english was the language of the people who were too dumb or too mean to speak french. yes, i know that's terrible lol quebec? no, i don't think they're nearly as strict about this in qu?bec. this was in ontario. the french schools in my city are very proud to speak english. they used to tell us a story about how it was made illegal to teach in french at one point and french elementary school students fought off police officers by throwing school supplies at them, but i have no idea how much of that story is true. that story alsohttp://ww1.tapestrybenefit.com/192839/202933/3828238 * Symptoms (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/about/symptoms.html) * What to do if you are sick (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/if-you-are-sick/steps-when-sick.html) * Frequently asked questions (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/faq.html) * Get your home ready (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prepare/get-your-household-ready-for-COVID-19.html) http://home.tapestrybenefit.com/questions-about/kids --38982814821104054972711050957870=ZWxWb=? Content-Type: text/html; charset="UTF-8" Content-transfer-encoding: 8bit
Lojban we do have options open still, just have to figure out the best way to go about it i also believe in the good intention of your average american. don?t let the vocal minority take that away from you. if you grew up on a farm in indiana you?d have no idea what life is like growing up in a poor intercity neighborhood in a huge city. just like i grew up in a small town with little diversity but i never saw racism running rampant in my community. it?d be hard for someone in la or ny to know what life was like for the poor white working cl of the appalachian mountains. streets lined with closed businesses, old mill

STAY SAFE

 

freaking british school and had been in english cles since they were 4 ? they were super cool and explained it to me, but they did say because they are truly bilingual that they do sometimes flip languages when changing thoughts lol well you are not wrong. my first language is spanish but i think in english all the time cause i've been in the u.s for some long. lol i thought the same thing... that everyone thought in english no matter what language they spoke. so nice to see i wasn't the only one who thought this. i thought that english was the "default" language, because every other language was translated into english in movies and stuff. i thought french was the default language! growing up, we weren't allowed to speak english at school except in english cl (which started in grade 4 and continued until grade 12). i always found it really dumb because i'm sure people in english schools can talk to eachother in whichever language they wanted. it really contributed to the mentality that english was a "bad" language used by "bad" people. but anyway, i thought french was the "default" language and that english was the language of the people who were too dumb or too mean to speak french. yes, i know that's terrible lol quebec? no, i don't think they're nearly as strict about this in qu?bec. this was in ontario. the french schools in my city are very proud to speak english. they used to tell us a story about how it was made illegal to teach in french at one point and french elementary school students fought off police officers by throwing school supplies at them, but i have no idea how much of that story is true. that story also


--38982814821104054972711050957870=ZWxWb=?--