Japan says 'Thank You'...



The Japanese are great and truly the only other civilization which matches up (and sometumes exceeds) the best of the west.
 
Those Japs are some resilient fuckers. They get nucked, earthquaked, tsunamied and they keep on going, wtf are they made of?! Damn.
 
You picked the worst part of America to compare to Japan.

Dude 80% of the States is the worst part.

Think about it...bible belt = trash
Kentucky
Ohio

trash


California, kind of OKAY
Washington, kind of OKAY
NY, kind of OKAY

There you have three States that same redeeming qualities. The rest are filled with mostly idiots.
 
The Japanese are great and truly the only other civilization which matches up (and sometumes exceeds) the best of the west.



The Japanese are superior to the west, sometimes the west rises and meets or exceeds the Japanese. But usually we just shit the bed and smear it on our faces.

I think if Japan wants to compete with America, they need a little more diversity to really help their country become a gigantic pile of shit, like America.
 
Those Japs are some resilient fuckers. They get nucked, earthquaked, tsunamied and they keep on going, wtf are they made of?! Damn.

The composition of the human body can be looked at from several different points of view.

By mass, human cells consist of 65–90% water (H2O). Oxygen therefore contributes a majority of a human body's mass. Almost 99% of the mass of the human body is made up of the six elements oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorus.

About 0.85% is composed of only five elements: potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine, and magnesium. All are necessary to life. The remaining elements are trace elements, of which more than a dozen are thought to be necessary for life, or play an active role in health (e.g., fluorine, which hardens dental enamel but seems to have no other function).

Note that not all elements which are found in the human body in trace quantities play a role in life. Some of these elements are thought to be simple bystander contaminants without function (examples: caesium, titanium), while many others are thought to be active toxins, depending on amount (cadmium, mercury, radioactives). The possible utility and toxicity of a few elements at levels normally found in the body (aluminum) is debated. Trace amounts of cadmium and lead have had functions suggested, but are almost certainly toxic in amounts normally found in the body. There is evidence that one element normally thought a toxin (arsenic) is essential in ultratrace quantities, even in mammals. Some elements that are clearly used in lower organisms and plants (arsenic, silicon, boron, nickel, vanadium) are probably needed by mammals also, but in far smaller doses. Two halogens used abundantly by lower organisms (fluorine and bromine) are presently known to be used by mammals only opportunistically. However, a general rule is that elements found in active biochemical use in lower organisms are often eventually found to be used in some way by higher organisms.

The average 70 kg adult human body contains approximately 6.7 x 1027 atoms and is "composed of" 60 chemical elements. In this sense, "composed of" means that a trace of the element has been identified in the body. However, at the finest resolution, most objects on Earth (including the human body) contain measureable contaminating amounts of all of the 88 chemical elements which are detectable in nearly any soil on Earth. The number of elements thought to play an active positive role in life and augmentation of health in humans and other mammals, is about 24 or 25.

The relative amounts of each element vary by individual. The numbers in the table are averages of different numbers reported by different references.
The human body is ~70% water, and water is ~11% hydrogen by mass but ~67% hydrogen by atomic percent.
 
Dude 80% of the States is the worst part.

Think about it...bible belt = trash
Kentucky
Ohio

trash


California, kind of OKAY
Washington, kind of OKAY
NY, kind of OKAY

There you have three States that same redeeming qualities. The rest are filled with mostly idiots.

Every country has the same as the above.

It's people, that's the problem, people.
 
The composition of the human body can be looked at from several different points of view.

By mass, human cells consist of 65–90% water (H2O). Oxygen therefore contributes a majority of a human body's mass. Almost 99% of the mass of the human body is made up of the six elements oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorus.

About 0.85% is composed of only five elements: potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine, and magnesium. All are necessary to life. The remaining elements are trace elements, of which more than a dozen are thought to be necessary for life, or play an active role in health (e.g., fluorine, which hardens dental enamel but seems to have no other function).

Note that not all elements which are found in the human body in trace quantities play a role in life. Some of these elements are thought to be simple bystander contaminants without function (examples: caesium, titanium), while many others are thought to be active toxins, depending on amount (cadmium, mercury, radioactives). The possible utility and toxicity of a few elements at levels normally found in the body (aluminum) is debated. Trace amounts of cadmium and lead have had functions suggested, but are almost certainly toxic in amounts normally found in the body. There is evidence that one element normally thought a toxin (arsenic) is essential in ultratrace quantities, even in mammals. Some elements that are clearly used in lower organisms and plants (arsenic, silicon, boron, nickel, vanadium) are probably needed by mammals also, but in far smaller doses. Two halogens used abundantly by lower organisms (fluorine and bromine) are presently known to be used by mammals only opportunistically. However, a general rule is that elements found in active biochemical use in lower organisms are often eventually found to be used in some way by higher organisms.

The average 70 kg adult human body contains approximately 6.7 x 1027 atoms and is "composed of" 60 chemical elements. In this sense, "composed of" means that a trace of the element has been identified in the body. However, at the finest resolution, most objects on Earth (including the human body) contain measureable contaminating amounts of all of the 88 chemical elements which are detectable in nearly any soil on Earth. The number of elements thought to play an active positive role in life and augmentation of health in humans and other mammals, is about 24 or 25.

The relative amounts of each element vary by individual. The numbers in the table are averages of different numbers reported by different references.
The human body is ~70% water, and water is ~11% hydrogen by mass but ~67% hydrogen by atomic percent.
This nigga got scientific with it, lol...
 
Dude 80% of the States is the worst part.

Think about it...bible belt = trash
Kentucky
Ohio

trash


California, kind of OKAY
Washington, kind of OKAY
NY, kind of OKAY

There you have three States that same redeeming qualities. The rest are filled with mostly idiots.

In my part of Ohio ,it isn't bad at all.

Murder rate is .65 per 100k capita, and most of the people in my town band together during a emergency (tornadoes ,ect).

7 years ago, a oil well on the property my family rented failed. It filled the house with poisonous gas and at a moment's notice we had to move out. We had no less than 3 families offer us a place to stay. One family let us use one of their apartments rent free for 4 months while we figured out what to do. I've known similar situations happen to other people in my area and the results were the same.

Just because you live in a area surrounded by idiots or whatever low class you deem doesn't mean that every area is like that.