I certainly hope not. I really wish no one were fighting off the Russians on home turf, but there Ukraine is and if Putin has his way, it's just the next step.This is not Red Dawn and you are not going to be fighting off the Russians on home turf.
Honestly, I contemplated posting a variety of things I can make with literally what I have in my house right now and a couple of hours. But I don't want to end up on an FBI watch list.
Seriously, yes. I can make several things that would be very effective outside. You're talking about toxic gases, but you seem to be completely overlooking flammable and explosive options.
True Story: I worked in a photo lab for a bit in college. I got hired on the spot during the interview, because they showed me the equipment room, and I said "Hey, are you aware that you've got a strong base with a tap stored directly above a strong acid with a tap, and if those mix they will at minimum damage property... and very likely harm your employees?"
Oh, I don't think either Emily or I were thinking we could take down an entire army or even a battalion. But I'm pretty sure we could do some damage. It doesn't have to be high tech stuff. I have a pretty good idea of what is easily flammable. I mean, do you have any idea what kind of damage one could do in an enclosed space with 10 lbs of flour, a fan ---and a match? Granted not every scenario I am thinking of would mean me surviving but a girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do.Honestly, I contemplated posting a variety of things I can make with literally what I have in my house right now and a couple of hours. But I don't want to end up on an FBI watch list.
Seriously, yes. I can make several things that would be very effective outside. You're talking about toxic gases, but you seem to be completely overlooking flammable and explosive options.
I'm questioning having enough materials at hand to make meaningful flammable/explosive options. There are a few flammables around here that could certainly be turned into molotovs, but energetic chemicals aren't things one tends to keep around in quantity.
"Girl power. My bitches!" - BertaOh, I don't think either Emily or I were thinking we could take down an entire army or even a battalion. But I'm pretty sure we could do some damage. It doesn't have to be high tech stuff. I have a pretty good idea of what is easily flammable. I mean, do you have any idea what kind of damage one could do in an enclosed space with 10 lbs of flour, a fan ---and a match? Granted not every scenario I am thinking of would mean me surviving but a girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do.Honestly, I contemplated posting a variety of things I can make with literally what I have in my house right now and a couple of hours. But I don't want to end up on an FBI watch list.
Seriously, yes. I can make several things that would be very effective outside. You're talking about toxic gases, but you seem to be completely overlooking flammable and explosive options.
I'm questioning having enough materials at hand to make meaningful flammable/explosive options. There are a few flammables around here that could certainly be turned into molotovs, but energetic chemicals aren't things one tends to keep around in quantity.
Your argument from ignorance is unconvincing.Honestly, I contemplated posting a variety of things I can make with literally what I have in my house right now and a couple of hours. But I don't want to end up on an FBI watch list.
Seriously, yes. I can make several things that would be very effective outside. You're talking about toxic gases, but you seem to be completely overlooking flammable and explosive options.
I'm questioning having enough materials at hand to make meaningful flammable/explosive options. There are a few flammables around here that could certainly be turned into molotovs, but energetic chemicals aren't things one tends to keep around in quantity.
Gold Bond or Baby Powder are even more effective. Talcum is even more flammable than flour.Oh, I don't think either Emily or I were thinking we could take down an entire army or even a battalion. But I'm pretty sure we could do some damage. It doesn't have to be high tech stuff. I have a pretty good idea of what is easily flammable. I mean, do you have any idea what kind of damage one could do in an enclosed space with 10 lbs of flour, a fan ---and a match? Granted not every scenario I am thinking of would mean me surviving but a girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do.Honestly, I contemplated posting a variety of things I can make with literally what I have in my house right now and a couple of hours. But I don't want to end up on an FBI watch list.
Seriously, yes. I can make several things that would be very effective outside. You're talking about toxic gases, but you seem to be completely overlooking flammable and explosive options.
I'm questioning having enough materials at hand to make meaningful flammable/explosive options. There are a few flammables around here that could certainly be turned into molotovs, but energetic chemicals aren't things one tends to keep around in quantity.
Okay. So... back that same concept up and consider bleach and ammonia. Fingernail polish remover and many glass cleaners have ammonia in them, I happen to have much stronger ammonia on hand that my husband uses for something with RC cars.True Story: I worked in a photo lab for a bit in college. I got hired on the spot during the interview, because they showed me the equipment room, and I said "Hey, are you aware that you've got a strong base with a tap stored directly above a strong acid with a tap, and if those mix they will at minimum damage property... and very likely harm your employees?"
Yikes!
Oh. So you were trolling with your title, then.My thread title is screaming, over-the-top satire.Would you mind explaining "expels"?
Ukraine is not expelling anybody, it is allowing women and children to leave.
Men are not staying because they want 'combat to themselves'; they are staying because they are forbidden from leaving.
That is very true. Talc isn't nearly as easily available as they have linked its use to some kinds of cancer. Example: Women used to be told to use a little baby powder/talc on their diaphragms after thoroughly washing, and drying them, before storing them in their case. So, yeah, women were told to place a birth control device sprinkled with what is now recognized as a potential carcinogen right next to their cervix.Gold Bond or Baby Powder are even more effective. Talcum is even more flammable than flour.Oh, I don't think either Emily or I were thinking we could take down an entire army or even a battalion. But I'm pretty sure we could do some damage. It doesn't have to be high tech stuff. I have a pretty good idea of what is easily flammable. I mean, do you have any idea what kind of damage one could do in an enclosed space with 10 lbs of flour, a fan ---and a match? Granted not every scenario I am thinking of would mean me surviving but a girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do.Honestly, I contemplated posting a variety of things I can make with literally what I have in my house right now and a couple of hours. But I don't want to end up on an FBI watch list.
Seriously, yes. I can make several things that would be very effective outside. You're talking about toxic gases, but you seem to be completely overlooking flammable and explosive options.
I'm questioning having enough materials at hand to make meaningful flammable/explosive options. There are a few flammables around here that could certainly be turned into molotovs, but energetic chemicals aren't things one tends to keep around in quantity.
I'm certain some men are not willing to stay and would leave if they could. I see stories about people, men, women, young, old, returning to Ukraine to fight for their country.Oh. So you were trolling with your title, then.My thread title is screaming, over-the-top satire.Would you mind explaining "expels"?
Ukraine is not expelling anybody, it is allowing women and children to leave.
Men are not staying because they want 'combat to themselves'; they are staying because they are forbidden from leaving.
If it were "satire" you would have put in in the humor section.
No. To troll people is to make claims you don't believe just to shit stir. That is not what I am doing.Oh. So you were trolling with your title, then.My thread title is screaming, over-the-top satire.Would you mind explaining "expels"?
Ukraine is not expelling anybody, it is allowing women and children to leave.
Men are not staying because they want 'combat to themselves'; they are staying because they are forbidden from leaving.
If it were "satire" you would have put in in the humor section.
Oh, I don't think either Emily or I were thinking we could take down an entire army or even a battalion. But I'm pretty sure we could do some damage. It doesn't have to be high tech stuff. I have a pretty good idea of what is easily flammable. I mean, do you have any idea what kind of damage one could do in an enclosed space with 10 lbs of flour, a fan ---and a match? Granted not every scenario I am thinking of would mean me surviving but a girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do.Honestly, I contemplated posting a variety of things I can make with literally what I have in my house right now and a couple of hours. But I don't want to end up on an FBI watch list.
Seriously, yes. I can make several things that would be very effective outside. You're talking about toxic gases, but you seem to be completely overlooking flammable and explosive options.
I'm questioning having enough materials at hand to make meaningful flammable/explosive options. There are a few flammables around here that could certainly be turned into molotovs, but energetic chemicals aren't things one tends to keep around in quantity.
Okay. So... back that same concept up and consider bleach and ammonia. Fingernail polish remover and many glass cleaners have ammonia in them, I happen to have much stronger ammonia on hand that my husband uses for something with RC cars.True Story: I worked in a photo lab for a bit in college. I got hired on the spot during the interview, because they showed me the equipment room, and I said "Hey, are you aware that you've got a strong base with a tap stored directly above a strong acid with a tap, and if those mix they will at minimum damage property... and very likely harm your employees?"
Yikes!
Now add a mason jar.
Also... jellied gasoline.
No, Home Alone. I would like to point out that in each of these films, the defenders were victorious.Gospa moja you are like 14 year old boys who have just watched Red Dawn and Toy Soldiers on VHS.
Yes, it's different for Andriy. Other men don't have mothers.Andriy (not his real name) thought the major change in his life would be his gender transition from female to male. But when the Russian bombs started to fall on Kyiv, Ukraine, he was forced to embark on another journey — from a citizen of Ukraine to a war refugee.
Like the 2 million Ukrainian refugees who woke up one day to the terrifying sound of shelling, Andriy, 19, realized that Putin's invasion of his homeland meant the end of his life as he knew it.
"It doesn't matter whether you are trans or not. The war is scary for everybody. I know even strong, big men who are afraid when they hear bombing," Andriy told Insider.
"I had a nice job, goals, plans, apartment, but I just can't think about Kyiv under Russia or Putin as our president," he said. "I didn't know how I could stay in Kyiv during the war. We haven't been living. We were surviving — always hiding, checking the news, hearing sirens."
As Andriy and his mother took cover in a Kyiv subway station for three nights, he had the first thought of any war refugee: "Where will we live? Where are we going go?"
But as a transgender man — a man assigned female at birth — different questions raced through his mind about leaving his homeland. Andriy is a pseudonym used to protect his identity.
He read the news that all men in Ukraine ages 18 to 60 were not permitted to leave the country and obligated to serve in the military.
He told Insider he needed to stay with his mother and care for her. Leaving her to flee Ukraine alone just was not an option.
Achievement unlocked: biological woman passes as woman!With the dangers that come with being transgender and forced into a military draft in an active war zone, he felt he had only one option.
Andriy decided to join the river of desperate refugees flowing West but needed help from someone who understood his specific situation.
"How do I show my passport as a man with a female passport? Will they let me through the border as a man?" he said.
On March 3, he got in touch via Instagram with the London activist and model Rain Dove Dubilewski, who is leading an effort to get trans people (and other vulnerable people, including people who are older or have a disability) out of Ukraine.
Dubilewski has amassed a team of 50 volunteers, including caseworkers, to support people forced to flee.
In the messages between Andriy and Dubilewski, who is also trans, the conversation quickly turned from "hello" to Andriy's anatomy.
"Have you had top or bottom surgery," Dubilewski asked. Andriy hadn't. They also needed to know if Andriy had his old female passport.
Quick-thinking mom saves the day
Dubilewski told Andriy he needed to hide his ID — to tell border enforcement later that he lost it — and go as soon as possible.
The two-day journey to the border with his mom was sleepless and filled with high anxiety, Andriy said. The first stop was the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, as well as its central station of confusion and chaos heaving with mothers and children, foreigners and students just trying to get home, and older and vulnerable people.
After seven hours, they found a place on a train bound for the border with Poland. But first came the dreaded document checks.
"I was so scared. My head was messed up, and I was so tired. Thankfully, Mom told them that we've lost all the documents and have only a copy of my female ID. The conductor looked at me closely, asked me to take off my hat, and then she let us on the train," he said.
They were then on their way to the crossing point Przemysl, Poland, and Andriy had to revert to being a person he was not — a shadow of the person he was before — a painful, gender dysphoria-inducing process.
"We decided I had to whisper so that nobody would notice my deep voice," Andriy said. "I even painted my nails violet and wore Mom's shirt to look more girly."
Andriy and his mother's train crawled to safety, and it took 15 hours to travel 50 miles. The carriage was filled with the sound of weeping, and some became angry, he said. Water ran short.
"I was shaking and couldn't sleep until I crossed the border. But at the border, nobody checked our documents, the train continued moving," he told Insider. "When we arrived at Przemysl, we had to pass through customs control. It didn't take even three minutes.
"I've never been so happy and exhausted."
"If the border force saw him as a man, he would have to stay in Ukraine and not care for his mother," Dubilewski said. "It was very painful for him to dress up as a woman, wear his mother's makeup, but it would have been more painful to leave her in a foreign country to start her life over."