[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

"They dont think it be like it is, but it do."

[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 1 points 9 months ago

As Gandalf said:
"If you compare an Ant to a Level, a Human will go its whole life thinking the Earth is flat."

[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 2 points 9 months ago

You are lucky this is all the Gore i can sustain.

[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Com desenhos feitos por crianças no cartão.

[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 1 points 1 year ago

Economicamente, acabas-te de provar que nunca poderemos ter nada barato.

Se poucos usam, tem que ser caro...porque poucos usam....se muitos usam...manter os preços para fazer lucro....ai mas espera....manter preços 😆 esquecime da inflação, guerra da ucrania e taxas de juro...manter preços 😆

Viva ao dinheiro e a todos os capazes de fazer tudo por ele.

[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 2 points 1 year ago

Scholarships are socialism...

[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Pelo que vejo no dia a dia, os portugueses roubam-se a eles mesmos.
Fugir a impostos devia ser desporto nacional...e depois queixam-se do estado das coisas...quando querem contribuir o menos possível para o Estado.

A classe política/empresarial não nasceu em laboratório. São portugueses...se temos muitos empresarios e políticos corruptos...então somos um povo corrupto.

Edição: tenho colegas de direita, que criticam a corrupção na esquerda, fogem ao fisco e defendem que se fuja ao fisco...especialmente se forem empresas....mas não deviam ser da ala da responsabilidade financeira?

[-] PeregrinoCinzento@lemmy.pt 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Portugal here.

Safe to drink tap water everywhere, as far as I know, and public fountains (they usually have a metal sheet saying if it is potable or "not tested regularly".
Depends on the Municipality/Town Halls.
Where I live we have like 5 or 6 public fountains per square km, some with public tanks to wash clothes like old school).

Story time tough, and applicable to the conversation:

I went through a Leukemia and the marrow transplant.
5 months after the transplant I went to Lisbon (I live in the north) to see family.
I took a shower after arriving, and my skin reacted very poorly.
The reaction was so strong, the transplant almost didn't take.
I had to take high doses of cortisol (and other treatments) that fucked up my bones (3 protheses now. Right elbow and the 2 femur heads)

The doctors in IPO (oncology hospital) explained that the skin is the biggest organ in the body and where i live the terrain is more Granitic in nature, my skin was used to water here in the north, and the further south you go in Portugal, the more Calcaric (limestone/calcário) it is.
People in Lisbon have to use "Calgon" (product) in the washing machines, to clean the build up of limestone.
But they themselves are used to it.

People of the north (of course it depends on the person) showering in the south, tend to have dry skin and hair after the shower.

I'm sorry for the testament.
But it's knowledge.
Stay safe.

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PeregrinoCinzento

joined 1 year ago