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September 07, 2013

7 Comments and 33 Shares

Before you get mad, I'm a vegetarian. Just like Einstein. Also Hitler.
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pablote86
3874 days ago
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Buenos Aires, Argentina
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6 public comments
pbackx
3871 days ago
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The choices people have to face these days ... agonizing.
Ghent, Belgium
diannemharris
3872 days ago
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yikes!
CallMeWilliam
3871 days ago
And its absolutely true, and there is value in diversity of existence. But, there's not a need for near so many angus cows as do exist. Eat less meat, not no meat.
kazriko
3873 days ago
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Mwahaha.
Colorado Plateau
denubis
3873 days ago
hehehhe, yes
teh_g
3874 days ago
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Stop the genocides!
Roseville, CA
Romanikque
3874 days ago
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Hilarious
Baltimore, MD
zippy72
3874 days ago
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Not Hitler, actually. Common misconception. Sorry.
FourSquare, qv
satadru
3874 days ago
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_Hitler_and_vegetarianism

06.12.2013

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Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
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pablote86
3960 days ago
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Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Sunset on the British Empire

7 Comments and 28 Shares

Sunset on the British Empire

When (if ever) did the Sun finally set on the British Empire?

—Kurt Amundson

It hasn't. Yet. But only because of a few dozen people living in an area smaller than Disney World.

The world's largest empire

The British Empire spanned the globe. This led to the saying that the Sun never set on it, since it was always daytime somewhere in the Empire.

It's hard to figure out exactly when this long daylight began. The whole process of claiming a colony (on land already occupied by other people) is awfully arbitrary in the first place. Essentially, the British built their empire by sailing around and sticking flags on random beaches.[1]This makes it hard to decide when a particular spot in a country was "officially" added to the Empire.

The exact day when the Sun stopped setting on the Empire date of the Empire's final sunset depends on when Australia was finally added, but it was probably sometime in the late 1700s or early 1800s, when the first Australian territories were added. 1800s. [2]

The Empire largely disintegrated in the early 20th century, but—surprisingly—the Sun hasn't technically started setting on it again. set on it yet.

Fourteen territories

Britain has fourteen overseas territories, the direct remnants of the British Empire.[3]

(Many newly-independent British colonies joined the Commonwealth of Nations. Some of them, like Canada and Australia, have Queen Elizabeth as their official monarch. But they are independent states which happen to have the same queen; they are not part of any empire that they know of.)

The Sun never sets on all fourteen British territories at once (or even thirteen, if you don’t count the British Antarctic Territory). However, if the UK loses one tiny territory, it will experience its first Empire-wide sunset in over two centuries.

Every night, around midnight GMT, the Sun sets on the Cayman Islands, and doesn't rise over the British Indian Ocean Territory until after 1:00 AM. For that hour, the little Pitcairn Islands in the South Pacific are the only British territory in the Sun.

The Pitcairn Islands have a population of a few dozen people, the descendants of the mutineers from the HMS Bounty. The islands became notorious in 2004 when a third of the adult male population, including the mayor, were convicted of child sexual abuse.[4][5]

As awful as the islands may be, they remain part of the British Empire, and unless they're kicked out, the two-century-long British daylight will continue.

Will it last forever?

Well, maybe.

Four Two hundred years from now, in April of 2432, the island will experience its first total solar eclipse since the mutineers arrived.[6]

Luckily for the Empire, the eclipse happens at a time when the Sun is over the Cayman Islands in the Caribbean. Those areas won't see a total eclipse; the Sun will even still be shining in London.

In fact, no total eclipse for the next thousand years will pass over the Pitcairn Islands at the right time of day to end the streak. If the UK keeps its current territories and borders, it can stretch out the daylight for a long, long time.

But not forever. Eventually—many millennia in the future—an eclipse will come for the island, and the Sun will finally set on the British Empire.

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pablote86
3966 days ago
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Buenos Aires, Argentina
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7 public comments
Michdevilish
3969 days ago
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The mermaids concur:
Rule, Britannia! rule the waves...
Canada
MSex
3969 days ago
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Taí uma coisa útil para se saber!
galmeida
3968 days ago
esse 'what if?' costuma publicar muita coisa útil
skorgu
3969 days ago
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"Two hundred years from now, in April of 2432"

Did I miss something (or two hundred somethings)?
grammargirl
3969 days ago
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NO FLAG, NO COUNTRY.
Brooklyn, NY
rclatterbuck
3969 days ago
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.
toddgrotenhuis
3969 days ago
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"NO FLAG NO COUNTRY"
Indianapolis
Andi_Mohr
3969 days ago
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This could be my favourite What If? ever, mainly for "British Emergency"
rjstegbauer
3969 days ago
Whatever happened to "Keep calm. Carry on."
tdarby
3969 days ago
"...repeat, this has been a British Emergency. Had this been an actual emergency, you would not have heard the gentle shatter of fine china against the floor."

Windows, Stop and Take a Few Deep Breaths

1 Comment and 2 Shares
Windows, Stop and Take a Few Deep Breaths

Submitted by: Unknown (via Geeks Are Sexy)

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pablote86
3976 days ago
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Gordos gnu FTW!!
Buenos Aires, Argentina
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May 24, 2013

3 Comments and 10 Shares

Really been enjoying Junior Scientist Power Hour comics.
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pablote86
3977 days ago
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Buenos Aires, Argentina
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3 public comments
Michdevilish
3979 days ago
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forarmwarned
Canada
zelig2
3979 days ago
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They had some nice arms back in the day...