Tokaido is kinda like that. It's not hugely deeply complex or anything, but it has two simple rules that together create really emergent gameplay. 1) On your turn, you can move however far foward you like and 2) Whoever is in the rear most position on the board takes the next turn.
Women are around twice as likely to attempt suicide than men in western countries, but men are more likely to succeed by a large margin. It's scary
Archaea and Everything Else (I can't remember the other domain)
In terms of presentation, move around between 4, 5 and 6
I think that's just you. I'm like the exact opposite of that
It's entirely possible to host an instance that doesn't require emails to sign up. Blahaj lemmy and piefed don't for example. We don't have a spam problem though, because we require manual approvals of new accounts. Lack of email verification is only a problem when it's combined with open signup
I make an exception to that rule for the /c/superbowl. I love seeing a bunch of owls suddenly appear in my feed :)
Can I ask why? In theory they'd make my life easier, but I feel like they're also a disaster waiting to happen
because studies range from showing HRT helps a little to not at all at preventing suicide.
No they don't. There are a couple of studies that are deliberately misrepresented by transphobes to imply this, and they often get passed around as fact, by people who aren't familiar with the studies in question.
Firstly, there was this Finnish one https://mentalhealth.bmj.com/content/27/1/e300940
You can see more about the hatchet job that the New York Post did on that one here https://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/56772/does-gender-transitioning-do-nothing-to-help-suicidal-ideation
Then there is this one https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3043071/. It's older, and it is misrepresented to claim that the suicide rate of trans folk doesn't change after transition. The thing about that study is that doesn't even assess the impact of transition. The entire cohort of trans people in the study were post transition, and questions were asked about their lifetime suicide attempts, without comparing before/after transition data. So because 41% of trans people in that study had made at least one suicide attempt at some point in their lives, the claim was made that transition doesn't help, because "41% of post op trans people have attempted suicide". The lead author of this particular study has spoken out several times on the misuse of the study by transphobes with an agenda, but to this day, it keeps happening...
So, let me give you the actual data...
This is a consolidation of the findings of research on trans health care, and the impact of transition on the well being of trans folk. To summarise, they looked at 55 studies on the impact of transition. 51 of those found transition to be beneficial, and 4 of them contained mixed findings.
You've stumbled on one of the tools that transphobes use. Deliberate misrepresentation of the facts, so that they can push for trans folk to be cut off from transition related healthcare, all whilst sounding reasonable, and sometimes even supportive. That, and trans people in sports, were the two main wedge tactics that they used to open the door to the wave of transphobia now sweeping the world.
A week? Those are rookie numbers!
Hey, you. You’re finally awake. You were trying to cross the border, right?
There's no one size fits all answer. Sometimes yes, sometimes no.